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* In ''WebComic/GuildedAge'', [[spoiler:when the reality-destroying monster attacks the World's Rebellion, [[AntiVillain Penk]] sends a child who idolizes him to go get [[MagicMusic his drum]] while he and Magda fight the monster. When the child and his friend find it, the monster catches up to them. It's not shown on screen, but when we return to them, we learn that the monster got him.]] [[TearJerker His friend takes it very hard.]]

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* In ''WebComic/GuildedAge'', [[spoiler:when the reality-destroying monster attacks the World's Rebellion, [[AntiVillain Penk]] sends a child boy who idolizes him to go get [[MagicMusic his drum]] while he and Magda fight the monster. When the child boy and his friend sister find it, the monster catches up to them. It's not shown on screen, but when we return to them, we learn that the monster got him.]] [[TearJerker His friend sister takes it very hard.]]
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* In ''WebComic/GuildedAge'', [[spoiler:when the reality-destroying monster attacks the World's Rebellion, [[AntiVillain Penk]] sends a child who idolizes him to go get [[MagicMusic his drum]] while he and Magda fight the monster. When the child and his friend find it, the monster catches up to them. It's not shown on screen, but when we return to them, we learn that the monster got him.]] [[TearJerker His friend takes it very hard.]]
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* AdamWarlock (or rather his SuperPoweredEvilSide, the Magus) weaponizes this by possessing the bodies of children so that the avengers wouldn't dare to attack him.

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* AdamWarlock (or rather his SuperPoweredEvilSide, the Magus) weaponizes this by possessing the bodies of children so that the avengers Avengers wouldn't dare to attack him.him.
* Defied in ''ComicBook/TheWickedAndTheDefied''. The entire point of the recurrence is that the gods are incarnated into teenagers, who will die within two years. Everybody will be dead before they're twenty. Minerva, the youngest, will be dead before she's ''fourteen''.
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* In one issue of ''TheAuthority'', the villains blow up a maternity ward full of babies, failing to get a specific baby that they were too lazy to check was there.

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* In one issue of ''TheAuthority'', ''ComicBook/TheAuthority'', the villains blow up a maternity ward full of babies, failing to get a specific baby that they were too lazy to check was there.
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* {{Filmation}}, of all studios, has been known to avert this trope (see the ''Star Trek'' example above, plus ''WesternAnimation/BraveStarr'' and ''Fat Albert And The Cosby Kids'').
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* In MarvelComics ''{{Captain Mar-Vell}}'' series, Genis time-travels to the future and meets his own evil, power-mad son, Ely. To defeat him, Genis [[spoiler:time-travels again and murders his son in the cradle.]]

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* In MarvelComics ''{{Captain Mar-Vell}}'' ''ComicBook/CaptainMarVell'' series, Genis time-travels to the future and meets his own evil, power-mad son, Ely. To defeat him, Genis [[spoiler:time-travels again and murders his son in the cradle.]]
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Whether or not this extends to pregnant women is a toss-up; fetuses have more relative protection than dogs, but less than already-born infants. Except in series where StatusQuoIsGod, because then the ConvenientMiscarriage will rear its ugly head. On the other hand, the death of a pregnant woman or one trying to get pregnant is often seen as infinitely worse than the death of a woman with no intention of reproducing. Also, watch the pro-life/anti-abortion MoralGuardians.

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Whether or not this extends to pregnant women is a toss-up; fetuses have more relative protection than dogs, but less than already-born infants. Except in series where StatusQuoIsGod, because then the ConvenientMiscarriage will rear its ugly head. On the other hand, the death of a pregnant woman or one trying to get pregnant is often seen as infinitely worse than the death of a woman with no intention of reproducing. Also, watch the pro-life/anti-abortion MoralGuardians.
head.
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* Averted ''hard'' by the opening chapter of ''Fanfic/MirrorsImage''. Poor [[spoiler:Twilight Sparkle.]]

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* Averted ''hard'' by the opening chapter of ''Fanfic/MirrorsImage''. Poor [[spoiler:Twilight Sparkle.]]
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* In [[Fanfic/TheDearSweetieBelleContinuity "Dear Scootaloo"]], it is mentioned that three of the youngest foals in the Cloudsdale Home for Wayward Pegasi perished from smoke inhalation after an arson (read:turning clouds into smoke) attack.

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* In [[Fanfic/TheDearSweetieBelleContinuity "Dear Scootaloo"]], it is mentioned that three of the youngest foals in the Cloudsdale Home for Wayward Pegasi perished from smoke inhalation after an arson (read:turning "arson" (turning clouds into smoke) attack.
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** Also averted later on, when [[CompleteMonster Talonhoof]] [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast The Reviled]] makes an "example" of a pony one of his soldiers spared previously.

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** Also averted later on, when [[CompleteMonster Talonhoof]] Talonhoof [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast The Reviled]] makes an "example" of a pony one of his soldiers spared previously.
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* In [[Fanfic/TheDearSweetieBelleContinuity "Dear Scootaloo"]], it is mentioned that three of the youngest foals in the Cloudsdale Home for Wayward Pegasi perished from smoke inhalation after an arson (read:turning clouds into smoke) attack.
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* DoubleSubverted in NeilGaiman's run on ''The Eternals''. Zuras kills [[spoiler:Sprite for erasing all the Eternals' memories & almost destroying the world as part of his quest to BecomeARealBoy. Though it worked & he is physically an eleven-year-old human child, when Sprite weakly tries to wheedle out of his execution by bringing this up, Zuras dryly reminds him that that still doesn't change the fact that he's a million years old & hasn't been a child for a very long time.]]

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* DoubleSubverted in NeilGaiman's run on ''The Eternals''.''ComicBook/TheEternals''. Zuras kills [[spoiler:Sprite for erasing all the Eternals' memories & almost destroying the world as part of his quest to BecomeARealBoy. Though it worked & he is physically an eleven-year-old human child, when Sprite weakly tries to wheedle out of his execution by bringing this up, Zuras dryly reminds him that that still doesn't change the fact that he's a million years old & hasn't been a child for a very long time.]]

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* A notable example of real-life infant immortality was just recently in the news. A baby stroller got nicked by a ''train''. The stroller was pushed at least ''20 feet away''. The mother and others went running up to the baby expecting the worst only to see the baby only slightly injured.

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* A notable example of real-life infant immortality was just recently in the news. A baby stroller got nicked by a ''train''. The stroller was pushed at least ''20 feet away''. The mother and others went running up to the baby expecting the worst only to see the baby only slightly injured.


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* In 1993, Music/MeatLoaf had a song titled "Objects In The Rear View Mirror May Appear Closer Than They Are". The first verse is about his childhood friendship with a boy named Kenny (no, not [[Series/SouthPark that one]]) and his early death. The music video shows he died when he took a plane for a joyride and crashed.


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[[folder:PSAs]]
* A PSA for AIDS prevention had a woman talking about how her husband died from AIDS. She didn't realize he'd passed the virus onto her until their baby was born with it. As she reveals this last part, she walks over to an empty crib.
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* ''Way'' averted in ''{{WebComic/Homestuck}}''; [[spoiler: Equius, Vriska, Eridan, Tavros, Nepeta, and Feferi are all KilledOffForReal (though they can potentially reappear due to how ghosts and the afterlife work in the ''Homestuck''-verse)]]. A lot of kids definitely died when [[spoiler: Sburb ravages a planet with meteors, not to mention how pretty much ''all'' trolls died when the Great Glub occurred]]. It's also shown in Vriska's backstory that her lusus killed a bunch of troll children (specifically it [[AbusiveParents forced Vriska to lure other kids in for it to eat; if she refused it would try to kill her]]).
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* FanFic/ABriefHistoryOfEquestria: In one chapter, Smart Cookie mentions in a letter to her husband that of the seven fillies she gave birth to, only four managed to survived to adulthood. Naturally, this is going to happen in a pre-industrial society with limited medical knowledge. Then remember Smart Cookie is one of the better off ponies of her day, and what that means for the average pony.
** Also averted later on, when [[CompleteMonster Talonhoof]] [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast The Reviled]] makes an "example" of a pony one of his soldiers spared previously.
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* Averted in ''Fanfic/{{Ferris}}''. The first chapter ends with Eamon and the readers learning that HYDRA killed a kid, and in the Moscow Terror Mission, [[spoiler:an entire school is attacked and implanted by Chryssalids.]]
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* Averted ''hard'' by the opening chapter of ''Fanfic/MirrorsImage''. Poor [[spoiler:Twilight Sparkle.]]
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*** What? If being survived by more than two was unusual, with all the food and resources available to noblemen, the poor would have likely had fewer unless they somehow managed to consistently pop out twenty-something babies per woman. The English population would have probably decreased if this were true, which was far from the case as it more than tripled.

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* Seemingly averted in ''Punisher MAX''. Amoral, tough thug Barracuda is holding a gun to the head of Frank's infant daughter. But Frank calls his bluff: not even Barracuda would shoot a baby, right? [[spoiler: Oops, HE JUST DID. So much for Barracuda's last shred of human decency....or so we're meant to think. In the next issue it turns out that what he shot was just a doll, and the real baby is safe after all. Still, Frank didn't know that, and he was not well-pleased.]]

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* Seemingly averted in ''Punisher MAX''.''ComicBook/ThePunisherMAX''. Amoral, tough thug Barracuda is holding a gun to the head of Frank's infant daughter. But Frank calls his bluff: not even Barracuda would shoot a baby, right? [[spoiler: Oops, HE JUST DID. So much for Barracuda's last shred of human decency....or so we're meant to think. In the next issue it turns out that what he shot was just a doll, and the real baby is safe after all. Still, Frank didn't know that, and he was not well-pleased.]]



* {{Punisher}} villain [[spoiler:General Zakharov]]. It's revealed in a flashback that [[spoiler:in order to draw an enemy force out of hiding, Zakharov THREW A BABY OFF A CLIFF]].
** In another story arc mafia boss Nicky Cavella killed a rival boss' two young sons and fed them to him.

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* {{Punisher}} villain [[spoiler:General Zakharov]]. ''ComicBook/ThePunisherMAX''
**
It's revealed in a flashback that [[spoiler:in [[spoiler:General Zakharov, in order to draw an enemy force out of hiding, Zakharov THREW A BABY OFF A CLIFF]].
** In another story arc mafia boss Nicky Cavella killed a rival boss' two young sons son and fed them him to him.
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* Averted hard in FanFic/TheConversionBureauTheOtherSideOfTheSpectrum-

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* Averted hard in FanFic/TheConversionBureauTheOtherSideOfTheSpectrum-
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* In a more recent example, about 20 children were shot dead at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newton, Connecticut on December 14, 2012.

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* In the {{Ravenloft}} Gazetteers from Arthaus, the narrator S adopts an orphaned infant, only to offer it to the banshee Tristessa in exchange for free passage through her domain, Keening. The insane banshee is obsessed with her long-dead infant son, and attempts to "care for" babies in the deluded belief they're hers; as Tristessa can't feed them or keep them warm enough, they inevitably perish from neglect.

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* In the {{Ravenloft}} TabletopGame/{{Ravenloft}} Gazetteers from Arthaus, the narrator S adopts an orphaned infant, only to offer it to the banshee Tristessa in exchange for free passage through her domain, Keening. The insane banshee is obsessed with her long-dead infant son, and attempts to "care for" babies in the deluded belief they're hers; as Tristessa can't feed them or keep them warm enough, they inevitably perish from neglect.



** Young Dragons (as young as the newly hatched "wyrmling" stage) have continued to be statted out as killable targets in the third and 4th editions, as well as {{Pathfinder}}.

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** Young Dragons (as young as the newly hatched "wyrmling" stage) have continued to be statted out as killable targets in the third and 4th editions, as well as {{Pathfinder}}.TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}.
* Speaking of TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}, this is actually averted in a number of occasions in the lore. The very first adventure contains an encounter where a goblin tries to eat a small child (though this one is played straight, the kid still has notable bitemarks and would have died if not for his father's last-second rescue) and contained details on the [[MotherOfAThousandYoung corrupt fertility goddess Lamashtu]], whose lore involves gaining power over births by ripping out and eating her uterus, then devouring babies to magically regenerate it, and who frequently has children sacrificed to her. The third adventure involves the party exploring the hut of a group of [[HillbillyHorrors ogrekin]] called the Grauls, where one room contains the bones of all of the incestuous clan matriarch's female offspring, murdered at birth to avoid being "competition" for her. Things just keep going from there.
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* Cruelly subverted in ''[[Fanfic/AceCombatEquestriaChronicles Ace Combat: Wings of Unity]]''; the town of New Saddle is attacked and almost completely destroyed in the first chapter and a baby pony is one of many victims.
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* KevinSmith's run on ''{{Daredevil}}'' was advertised with the image of DD carrying a baby as he engaged in his usual rooftop-jumping. The baby, whom he believed was either the second coming of Christ or the AntiChrist, did come along on some patrols for a while, and the adventure ended with him unharmed.

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* KevinSmith's Creator/KevinSmith's run on ''{{Daredevil}}'' ''Comicbook/{{Daredevil}}'' was advertised with the image of DD carrying a baby as he engaged in his usual rooftop-jumping. The baby, whom he believed was either the second coming of Christ or the AntiChrist, did come along on some patrols for a while, and the adventure ended with him unharmed.
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--> '''Infant's Spirit:''' That's it? That's all I get?
--> '''Death:''' I'm afraid so.

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[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
* The Death Note from, well, ''Manga/DeathNote'' has as one of its lesser-known rules that it cannot kill anyone less than 780 days old, or about two years and change. Two other rules exempt people over 124 years of age, and people destined to die within 12 minutes.
** Also, the Death Note cannot be directly handed to a human under 6 years of age.
* Babies don't show up in ''Manga/DragonBall'' and its sequels all that often, but the Cell saga featured Bulma and Vegeta's infant son, Trunks, alongside his FutureBadass self that came back to SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong. The one time baby Trunks is in mortal danger, Future Trunks jumps in to save him and his mom. On the other hand, Dende, who is roughly the Namek equivalent of a five-year-old at the time, is brutally murdered because Frieza doesn't want him using his HealingHands to help the heroes--and this is ''after'' Frieza jumped the MoralEventHorizon by murdering Dende's entire village, including his brother. Later on, seven-year-old Goten and eight-year-old Trunks are killed when Majin Buu blows up the Earth and three-year-old Marron is turned into chocolate and eaten along with her parents and the other side characters. (This is the poster series for DeathIsCheap...)
** There is a filler scene in the original ''Manga/DragonBall'' where Snow, the girl from Jingle Village, grabs a rifle from a fallen King Castle soldier and takes aim at Piccolo Daimao as his back is turned, but gives up. Piccolo then turns right around and fires eye-lasers in her direction. When the smoke clears, we're relieved to see that he wasn't aiming for Snow at all, but another soldier directly behind her. This scene sort of doubles as an example of MenAreTheExpendableGender.
*** Why? I could see if she was a grown woman, but the person killed in place of her was not just an adult, but a soldier, too. It's not like a bunch of boys from her village were being killed, too.
** It is however, averted when Vegeta and Nappa first arrive on Earth. Nappa's first action is to blow up the entire city they've landed in--- which does include some children seen in the background. And the kicker? Unlike most ordinary civilian casualties, in the series they ''don't'' get brought back by the titular MacGuffin... Except in the dubbed version where they write the whole thing off as {{Conveniently Empty Building}}s.
* The Mazinger trilogy (''MazingerZ'', ''GreatMazinger'', ''UFORoboGrendizer'') both plays straight and averts the trope. Some children manage keep alive despite being TooDumbToLive, but the series did not shy either from showing dead children. In particular, two instances in the ''UFORoboGrendizer'' GoNagai manga were sheer horror.
* ''{{Daimos}}'': Daimos averts the trope as soon as the SECOND episode. A kid spends a short while egging [[TheHero Kazuya]] and [[TheWoobie Erika]] on to kiss. Later, when the enemy attacks, an explosion destroys the greenhouse had gone into. Kazuya and Erika bolt to the place and find him lying between the rubble. The kid opens his eyes and asks Kazuya if he "got lucky" before dying as Kazuya is holding him in arms.
* ''{{Zambot3}}'': This series is notorious -among other reasons- because it averted the trope. AnyoneCanDie. It does not matter if you are a kid; it does not matter if you are a kid and a secondary character; it does not matter if you are a kid [[spoiler:and a MAIN character.]] Given this is a show produced by YoshiyukiTomino (as well known as KillEmAll), it should not be shocking.
* ''GunSmithCats 1''-ups ''MadMax'' in one particularly memorable chase scene. A girl runs out into the middle of the road, Bean Bandit (who has a soft-spot for kids) and Rally Vincent (hotshot bounty hunter pursuing him) avoid hitting the girl by running their cars into each other and driving simultaneously on two wheels, forming a triangle over her.
* We know from when it's first found that the abandoned baby in ''TokyoGodfathers'' will survive anything.
** It's implied in the movie that the baby is getting protected by ''God Himself'', with a nice analogy to the infant Jesus. [[spoiler:This is probably most apparent during the climax, when the baby and Hanna fall off of a building and are saved by a ''huge gust of wind''.]]
* One would think that this would be horribly averted in ''Anime/CodeGeass'', but it's actually played straight for the most part if the viewer has a sharp eye. Even through throngs of crying babies that are the children of the Elevens/Japanese, all of them seem to live. In the R1 episode [[spoiler:"Bloodstained Euphie"]], [[spoiler:Euphemia]] [[MoreDakka guns down a large throng of Japanese]]. Among the survivors are some elderly folks and [[PetTheDog thank goodness]], a baby.
* In ''Manga/OnePiece'', a young boy finds out that the King of Alabasta attacking Nanohana is actually an impostor, and then gets caught by Mr. 1 and Miss Doublefinger. While in most cases, it would [[HeKnowsTooMuch seal his fate]], they injure him and leave him for dead, enabling him to expose the truth after Crocodile's defeat.
** [[spoiler: Averted with Sabo's death. The fact that we never saw his body led some to believe that he was still alive, but WordOfGod confirms that he's dead.]]
** Averted in the case that was orchestrated by the World Government [[spoiler: where they ordered that every infant ''including ones not yet born'' that could be related to Roger to be ''killed on sight'' - including the mother and anyone related to her.]]
* Averted to some degree in ''KarakuriCircus''. Children (particularly Masaru) are shown to be terribly injured on occasion...and then the French village gets attacked by the evil circus.
* Averted in ''Manga/ReikoTheZombieShop'' by child murdering psychopath Saki Yurikawa. Introduced in the first volume, Saki's a teenage serial killer who has murdered over twenty little girls. She initially takes an interest in them being her "little sister", and when they refuse she snaps and utterly butchers them. Even after [[spoiler: her death and zombification by titular heroine Reiko]] children still die in this series.
* Subverted in ''Manga/YuYuHakusho''. Hiei, minutes after birth was thrown off a floating island, into a demon infested forest. Luckily, he survived. And what's worse, it was all because he was a male.
** The Ice Maidens are some kinda cold blooded to have zero pity for an infant, indeed.
** The very first episode shows Yusuke [[HeroicSacrifice sacrificing himself]] to save a child from a car accident. It's later revealed that [[ShootTheShaggyDog said child was supposed to survive the accident unharmed]] because the ball he was holding would absorb the impact.
* Mao-chan in ''Manga/ChibiDevi''
* The backstory arc in ''Franchise/WhenTheyCry'' has a reporter with a pregnant wife, who he left behind to cover Himezawa. He's told that by doing so, he'll come to regret it. His wife dies while he's away. [[spoiler:In the TimeSkip, we learn that they saved the baby.]]
* Both invoked and averted in ''Anime/ScienceNinjaTeamGatchaman''. A child or children directly involved with the main cast in some way will survive. The nameless, faceless children either unseen or briefly seen on the streets when a mecha comes stomping through are screwed.
* Both played straight and subverted in ''BlackLagoon''. Played straight with Garcia and Fabiola.. for now; subverted with [[spoiler: Hansel and Gretel, and the orphans they used as decoys]].
* In {{Gaiking}}, the trope is zigzagged. The TagalongKid of the crew is put in serious danger ''several times'' and yet he lives through, and the little brother of a crewmember ([[spoiler: Peter's brother Tom]]) is taken hostage and also survives... but the younger brother of ''another'' Space Dragon crew-member ([[spoiler: Fan Lee]]) dies in the arms of his sibling after being shot InTheBack, and in one of the earliest episodes a little girl named Lisa is shot to death because her father didn't want to join the BigBad's forces.
* ''Nasty'' aversion in {{Ideon}}. [[spoiler: The deaths of the kids in the KillEmAll movie are among the most ''gruesome'' in the Ideon media... like, um, the little girl [[OffwithHisHead who gets beheaded BY A FREAKING GUNSHOT]]?]]
* ''ViolenceJack'' averts this to harsh effects. No one is safe from being graphically killed.
[[/folder]]

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[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
[[index]]
* The Death Note from, well, ''Manga/DeathNote'' has as one of its lesser-known rules that it cannot kill anyone less than 780 days old, or about two years and change. Two other rules exempt people over 124 years of age, and people destined to die within 12 minutes.
** Also, the Death Note cannot be directly handed to a human under 6 years of age.
InfantImmortality/AnimeAndManga
* Babies don't show up in ''Manga/DragonBall'' and its sequels all that often, but the Cell saga featured Bulma and Vegeta's infant son, Trunks, alongside his FutureBadass self that came back to SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong. The one time baby Trunks is in mortal danger, Future Trunks jumps in to save him and his mom. On the other hand, Dende, who is roughly the Namek equivalent of a five-year-old at the time, is brutally murdered because Frieza doesn't want him using his HealingHands to help the heroes--and this is ''after'' Frieza jumped the MoralEventHorizon by murdering Dende's entire village, including his brother. Later on, seven-year-old Goten and eight-year-old Trunks are killed when Majin Buu blows up the Earth and three-year-old Marron is turned into chocolate and eaten along with her parents and the other side characters. (This is the poster series for DeathIsCheap...)
** There is a filler scene in the original ''Manga/DragonBall'' where Snow, the girl from Jingle Village, grabs a rifle from a fallen King Castle soldier and takes aim at Piccolo Daimao as his back is turned, but gives up. Piccolo then turns right around and fires eye-lasers in her direction. When the smoke clears, we're relieved to see that he wasn't aiming for Snow at all, but another soldier directly behind her. This scene sort of doubles as an example of MenAreTheExpendableGender.
*** Why? I could see if she was a grown woman, but the person killed in place of her was not just an adult, but a soldier, too. It's not like a bunch of boys from her village were being killed, too.
** It is however, averted when Vegeta and Nappa first arrive on Earth. Nappa's first action is to blow up the entire city they've landed in--- which does include some children seen in the background. And the kicker? Unlike most ordinary civilian casualties, in the series they ''don't'' get brought back by the titular MacGuffin... Except in the dubbed version where they write the whole thing off as {{Conveniently Empty Building}}s.
InfantImmortality/{{Film}}
* The Mazinger trilogy (''MazingerZ'', ''GreatMazinger'', ''UFORoboGrendizer'') both plays straight and averts the trope. Some children manage keep alive despite being TooDumbToLive, but the series did not shy either from showing dead children. In particular, two instances in the ''UFORoboGrendizer'' GoNagai manga were sheer horror.
InfantImmortality/{{Literature}}
* ''{{Daimos}}'': Daimos averts the trope as soon as the SECOND episode. A kid spends a short while egging [[TheHero Kazuya]] and [[TheWoobie Erika]] on to kiss. Later, when the enemy attacks, an explosion destroys the greenhouse had gone into. Kazuya and Erika bolt to the place and find him lying between the rubble. The kid opens his eyes and asks Kazuya if he "got lucky" before dying as Kazuya is holding him in arms.
InfantImmortality/LiveActionTV
* ''{{Zambot3}}'': This series is notorious -among other reasons- because it averted the trope. AnyoneCanDie. It does not matter if you are a kid; it does not matter if you are a kid and a secondary character; it does not matter if you are a kid [[spoiler:and a MAIN character.]] Given this is a show produced by YoshiyukiTomino (as well known as KillEmAll), it should not be shocking.
* ''GunSmithCats 1''-ups ''MadMax'' in one particularly memorable chase scene. A girl runs out into the middle of the road, Bean Bandit (who has a soft-spot for kids) and Rally Vincent (hotshot bounty hunter pursuing him) avoid hitting the girl by running their cars into each other and driving simultaneously on two wheels, forming a triangle over her.
* We know from when it's first found that the abandoned baby in ''TokyoGodfathers'' will survive anything.
** It's implied in the movie that the baby is getting protected by ''God Himself'', with a nice analogy to the infant Jesus. [[spoiler:This is probably most apparent during the climax, when the baby and Hanna fall off of a building and are saved by a ''huge gust of wind''.]]
* One would think that this would be horribly averted in ''Anime/CodeGeass'', but it's actually played straight for the most part if the viewer has a sharp eye. Even through throngs of crying babies that are the children of the Elevens/Japanese, all of them seem to live. In the R1 episode [[spoiler:"Bloodstained Euphie"]], [[spoiler:Euphemia]] [[MoreDakka guns down a large throng of Japanese]]. Among the survivors are some elderly folks and [[PetTheDog thank goodness]], a baby.
* In ''Manga/OnePiece'', a young boy finds out that the King of Alabasta attacking Nanohana is actually an impostor, and then gets caught by Mr. 1 and Miss Doublefinger. While in most cases, it would [[HeKnowsTooMuch seal his fate]], they injure him and leave him for dead, enabling him to expose the truth after Crocodile's defeat.
** [[spoiler: Averted with Sabo's death. The fact that we never saw his body led some to believe that he was still alive, but WordOfGod confirms that he's dead.]]
** Averted in the case that was orchestrated by the World Government [[spoiler: where they ordered that every infant ''including ones not yet born'' that could be related to Roger to be ''killed on sight'' - including the mother and anyone related to her.]]
* Averted to some degree in ''KarakuriCircus''. Children (particularly Masaru) are shown to be terribly injured on occasion...and then the French village gets attacked by the evil circus.
* Averted in ''Manga/ReikoTheZombieShop'' by child murdering psychopath Saki Yurikawa. Introduced in the first volume, Saki's a teenage serial killer who has murdered over twenty little girls. She initially takes an interest in them being her "little sister", and when they refuse she snaps and utterly butchers them. Even after [[spoiler: her death and zombification by titular heroine Reiko]] children still die in this series.
* Subverted in ''Manga/YuYuHakusho''. Hiei, minutes after birth was thrown off a floating island, into a demon infested forest. Luckily, he survived. And what's worse, it was all because he was a male.
** The Ice Maidens are some kinda cold blooded to have zero pity for an infant, indeed.
** The very first episode shows Yusuke [[HeroicSacrifice sacrificing himself]] to save a child from a car accident. It's later revealed that [[ShootTheShaggyDog said child was supposed to survive the accident unharmed]] because the ball he was holding would absorb the impact.
* Mao-chan in ''Manga/ChibiDevi''
* The backstory arc in ''Franchise/WhenTheyCry'' has a reporter with a pregnant wife, who he left behind to cover Himezawa. He's told that by doing so, he'll come to regret it. His wife dies while he's away. [[spoiler:In the TimeSkip, we learn that they saved the baby.]]
* Both invoked and averted in ''Anime/ScienceNinjaTeamGatchaman''. A child or children directly involved with the main cast in some way will survive. The nameless, faceless children either unseen or briefly seen on the streets when a mecha comes stomping through are screwed.
* Both played straight and subverted in ''BlackLagoon''. Played straight with Garcia and Fabiola.. for now; subverted with [[spoiler: Hansel and Gretel, and the orphans they used as decoys]].
* In {{Gaiking}}, the trope is zigzagged. The TagalongKid of the crew is put in serious danger ''several times'' and yet he lives through, and the little brother of a crewmember ([[spoiler: Peter's brother Tom]]) is taken hostage and also survives... but the younger brother of ''another'' Space Dragon crew-member ([[spoiler: Fan Lee]]) dies in the arms of his sibling after being shot InTheBack, and in one of the earliest episodes a little girl named Lisa is shot to death because her father didn't want to join the BigBad's forces.
* ''Nasty'' aversion in {{Ideon}}. [[spoiler: The deaths of the kids in the KillEmAll movie are among the most ''gruesome'' in the Ideon media... like, um, the little girl [[OffwithHisHead who gets beheaded BY A FREAKING GUNSHOT]]?]]
* ''ViolenceJack'' averts this to harsh effects. No one is safe from being graphically killed.
[[/folder]]
InfantImmortality/VideoGames
[[/index]]



[[folder:Film]]
* Averted in ''Film/LittleSweetheart''. [[spoiler:Or not.]]
* ''Film/TwoThousandTwelve'' - Nothing bad will happen to you, so long as you keep hold of one or more children, or the dog. The Russian trophy wife learned this lesson the hard way.
* ''Film/{{Armageddon}}'': Many people die in the opening cataclysm. A small pug is spared.
* Taken to semi-extremes in ''Film/{{Blade}} Trinity''. Dracula kidnaps an infant, and threatens to throw it off a skyscraper. He doesn't though, but instead tosses it in the air, letting it fly for roughly twenty feet, and then is caught hard by Blade. The infant survives all of this.
* In the 80's, uber low-budget yet oddly entertaining Mexican supernatural slasher titled ''Cementerio del Terror'', various characters are introduced, and ultimately twelve of them are put in the path of the psychotic killer and his army of zombies. They are three male college students and their three girlfriends out partying, five children out on a dare (the oldest being of about 14 years old and the youngest about 8), and a Dr. Loomis-esque doctor in search of the sadistic killer. Now, take three guesses as to which five characters survive the killer's rampage.
* ''Film/{{Cube}}'' [[spoiler:is an example of a mentally handicapped adult being the only survivor of the nastiness.]] If one takes ''Film/CubeZero'' into account, [[spoiler:it's very likely he too was murdered.]]
* In the disaster movie ''Film/DantesPeak'', the dog (an adorable Picardy Shepherd) disappears about halfway through the movie, while the family are escaping from the erupting volcano. At the end, it turns up alive and unharmed about of ''absolutely nowhere''. This is the film that gave Grandma third-degree burns with sulphuric acid.
* [[TheFilmOfTheBook The movie version]] of Creator/StephenKing's ''Film/{{Cujo}}'' ends, well, differently to the book.
* The titular monster of the BMovie ''Film/TheGiantGilaMonster'' gets a lot less scary when it completely fails to catch and eat a crippled nine-year old.
** Which is a shame, as Giant Gila Monsters are so inherently terrifying.
* ''Film/HardBoiled'': An extreme case - A baby rescued by the hero not only avoids blowing up or getting shot at, he saves the hero's life by putting out his pants, which caught on fire.
** Especially considering that ''adult'' innocents get shot and killed with disturbing regularity.
* ''HellboyIITheGoldenArmy'' had Hellboy fighting a monster while jumping around on a building, all the while juggling a baby. Most people would set it down or hand it over to the numerous bystanders for safekeeping but thanks to this trope, heroes are free to engage in these theatrics without ever actually harming a child.
** Done in the first ''Film/{{Hellboy}}'' film as well, only this time with a box full of kittens. Baby + Cat= Immortality
* In ''Film/IndependenceDay'', both the child and the dog of the protagonist survive all of the events, including a ridiculous scene where the dog manages to leap out of the way of a nuclear blast wave just in the nick of time.
* Also averted in ''Film/{{M}}'', the plot of which revolves around a child murderer. This was a departure for Creator/FritzLang's films in general, which would often put children into dangerous situations but always save them.
* Everyone remembers the tragic aversion in Frank Darabont's ''TheMist''.
* ''WomanInTheMoon'' includes a young stowaway on the moon rocket who doesn't get injured during liftoff in spite of his lack of restraints, and is narrowly missed during a gunfight.
* ''Film/{{Metropolis}}'' features a ''horde of children'' trapped in a flooding underground city, '''all''' of whom are saved at the very last minute. (In the book, however, it's implied that at least a few of them drown.)
* ''Film/MadMax'': there is a high-speed car chase and a baby wanders onto the road. After playing the suspense for all it's worth, both cars miss the child by ''centimeters''. Later in the movie, a mother and her 3-5-year old are brutally run down off-screen.
* Played with in ''Film/MenInBlack'', in which James Edwards, in a live-fire exercise with other potential MIB trainees, shoots a cardboard cutout of a little girl instead of the scary aliens. In a subversion, he justifies this by claiming one alien was simply exercising on a streetlight, the other was sneezing, and the little girl was out late at night, eight years old, with a college-level textbook in her arms, so she was up to something bad.
** And, judging that he was chosen to join the organization, this reasoning was absolutely correct.
* Despite decorating his boiler room with dismembered dollies and crushed tricycles, infamous dream-haunting child murderer [[Franchise/ANightmareOnElmStreet Freddy Krueger]] was never shown on screen in the act of killing a child. Menacing them, yes, and their apparent ghosts do turn up in dream scenes, but actual murders were confined to teenagers and adults.
* Almost averted in ''Film/{{Orphan}}'' although originally Daniel was supposed to die after Esther smothered him with a pillow.
* In ''Film/{{Predator 2}}'', the eponymous alien bounty hunter spares a pregnant cop, and later lowers his sights on a child with a plastic gun after realising the harmless nature of the kid's "weapon." This is [[JustifiedTrope justified]] by the creature's personality as an honour-bound warrior; there's no challenge or sport in killing unarmed children.
* Averted in ''Film/RoboCop2'', in which the child gangster Hob, for once a deliberately unlikeable underage character, seems to be on his way to a redemption storyline (Robocop cannot bring himself to shoot Hob, even as the kid fires on him with an SMG, because he resembles Alex Murphy's son)...[[spoiler:until the titular "Robocop 2", a hulking war machine, guns the kid and all his goons down with a minigun.]]
* ''Film/{{Scarface 1983}}'': Tony Montana fails to kill one of his enemies after seeing his little kids in the back seat of his car. Tony "never fucked over anyone who didn't have it coming to him".
-->''"I don't need this shit in my life!"''
* In the classic ''Film/TheShapeOfThingsToCome'', during the prelude to war, the young son of one of the main characters is shown marching and playing his toy drum. As the war breaks out, we see the same boy lying dead amid the rubble, still wearing the toy drum.
* In ''Film/ShootEmUp'', Paul Giamatti's AffablyEvil villain Hertz has no qualms about killing babies if that's what he's been told to do, and seems to gleefully enjoy running over his target in his car. He's then {{Squick}}ed out when he discovers that the "baby" he ran down was only a decoy. (The real baby, meanwhile, survives being in the thick of gun battles over and over without so much as a scratch.)
* In the famous [[MemeticMutation "Garbage Day" Rampage]] in ''Film/SilentNightDeadlyNightPart2'', Ricky shoots a bunch of people, but spares a little girl with a speech impediment on a tricycle.
* ''Film/SnakesOnAPlane'': the baby is saved from the vicious snakes despite being a handy size and ending up on the opposite side of the plane from the last time we saw it. The person that saved the baby is shortly rewarded with death (and it was her [[{{Retirony}} last day on the job]], too). It's then subverted with a man throwing an annoying dog at a snake to save himself; he's also promptly rewarded with death and [[AssholeVictim as he was such an ass nobody cared]].
* In ''Film/{{Speed}}'', it looks like the bus is going to hit a baby carriage, and it does. It turns out [[spoiler:the carriage is full of cans.]]
* ''Film/StarTrekGenerations'' -- Spot the cat survived the crash of the USS Enterprise (much to the distaste of the actor Brent Spiner, who played Data (the cat's owner) and who in real life hates cats).
* In ''{{Film/Volcano}}'', all the small children survive. And so does a small Jack Russell named Bill. Just in case that wasn't enough to assure you no innocents were harmed there is even a brief news report on vets setting up an emergency pet shelter.
* This trope (especially as it applies to dogs) was identified by RogerEbert in his review of (the 2005 TomCruise version of) ''Film/TheWarOfTheWorlds''.
* Subverted and played straight in ''Film/TheWitches'', the Grand Head Witch (as is the case with any witch) hates children and wishes to ride the world of them. While they seem to never kill children outright though, they still have no problem [[ImAHumanitarian turning kids into food to be eaten]], [[TakenForGranite turning them into stone]], [[BalefulPolymorph turning them into animals that will be killed soon after]], or [[AndIMustScream trapping them in paintings]]. The book also implies that several transformed children (including two frogs and [[spoiler:Bruce]]) would be killed shortly after in various ways and the Witches' main plan in the book and movie involves turning children into mice so that they will be killed by their parents and teachers. On the other hand, the main character survives and the movie has a scene in which the Grand Head Witch seems quite taken with an infant in a carriage - before pushing it down the hill. The hero saves it (justified in that it was mainly to serve as a distraction, rather than trying to kill it).
* Kids in {{Marvel}} movies can count on StanLee to pull them out of harm's way. (Lee, in turn, can count on [[{{Daredevil}} Matt Murdock]].)
* Averted (though not shown) by Fat Bastard in the 2nd ''Film/AustinPowers'' movie to show just how bad he is:
--> Well listen up, Sonny Jim - [[EatsBabies I ATE A]] ''[[EatsBabies BABY!]]'' Ohh, aye, baby - the ''other'' other white meat! Baby - it's what's for ''dinner!''
* Averted in ''Film/TheWayBack''. Out of a group of eight gulag escapees, only half of them survive, and [[spoiler:the sole young girl isn't one of them. She doesn't just die, either; she dies horribly of heatstroke and dehydration in the desert.]]
* Brianna in ''Film/MysteryTeam''. She barely appears once the film grows darker and the conflict more dangerous, preventing her from being kidnapped by either Leroy or [[spoiler: Roger]]. A more literal example with Eric, who has apparently been shot three times.
* Lampshaded in the film of ''Literature/{{Inkheart}}''. When they are captured, Mortimer tells his daughter, Meggie, to pretend she is in a book, since "children always survive in books." She then reminds him that the rule doesn't always apply, such as in "Literature/TheLittleMatchGirl".
* In ''Film/HalloweenII1981'', Michael Myers ignores a maternity ward filled with sleeping babies, instead choosing to kill the doctors, nurses, and security guards. On the other hand, one has to imagine that the explosion at the end of the film [[FridgeHorror couldn't have been good for those sleeping babies]].
* Brazilian horror icon ''Zé do Caixão'' aka ''Coffin Joe'' tends to be a vicious sadistic against adults, but won't tolerate any harm inflicted to children, whom he sees as the hopes for a better (or, [[NietzscheWannabe in his case]], I'd rather say ''superior'') world.
* ''Film/BabysDayOut''. A bloody ''construction site''.
* In ''MidnightMovie'' the only survivor is the Bridget's little brother named...Timmy.
* Played straight in ''Film/ConAir''. It seems like Garland Greene, who is tauted as a horrific serial killer, is about to kill the little girl he runs into near the abandoned airfield, but he doesn't.
* Averted in the Feast trilogy. I think the second film. CrowningMomentOfFunny.
** The first one too. In the introductions, a child is left by his mother in the bar, watching TV. When she runs up the stairs, she doesn't see him, not to reveal he was hiding in the closet. As they have joyous reunion, [[spoiler: the beast comes through the window nearby and swallows the kid whole before ripping off his shoes, foot and all.]]
* Played straight with Jonesy the Cat in ''Film/{{Alien}}'', in the Animal Immunity version of this trope. Ripley leaves Jonesy behind when the Alien surprises her, and it curiously looks at the cat as if it's about to eat it. When Ripley gets back the Cat is unharmed.
* Averted with the [[EnfantTerrible little brat]] in the film version of ''TheDayOfTheLocust''.
* ''Film/IronMan2'' : [[{{LikeYouWouldReallyDoIt}} Did anyone really think that hammer drone would kill that kid?]]
* In all the zombie attacks in Film/WorldWarZ not a single child is bitten, nor is a child zombie shown. [[spoiler: Tomas survives improbably even after his parents are turned]] and a young boy in Israel who is seemingly doomed [[spoiler: is spared as the zombie horde ignores him due to their inability to see the sick.]]
** Of course, [[spoiler: the kid is terminally ill and we never see him get treatment. SubvertedTrope ?]]
* Averted in ''Film/PitchBlack''. One of the first victims is a youngster.
* Completely ignored in Film/GraveEncounters2, where, during a scene, the undead satanic doctor slices a baby and spills its blood all over a tied up patient. While you don't see the wound on the baby itself, it's still very visceral from the angle it's shot.

to:

[[folder:Film]]
[[folder:Newspaper Comics]]
* Averted in ''Film/LittleSweetheart''. [[spoiler:Or not.]]
* ''Film/TwoThousandTwelve'' - Nothing bad will happen to you, so long as you keep hold of one or more children, or
Max Allan Collins, the dog. The Russian trophy wife learned this lesson second ''ComicStrip/DickTracy'' writer (a longtime fan, he inherited the hard way.
* ''Film/{{Armageddon}}'': Many people die in the opening cataclysm. A small pug is spared.
* Taken to semi-extremes in ''Film/{{Blade}} Trinity''. Dracula kidnaps an infant, and threatens to throw it off a skyscraper. He doesn't though, but instead tosses it in the air, letting it fly for roughly twenty feet, and then is caught hard by Blade. The infant survives all of this.
* In the 80's, uber low-budget yet oddly entertaining Mexican supernatural slasher titled ''Cementerio del Terror'', various characters are introduced, and ultimately twelve of them are put in the path of the psychotic killer and his army of zombies. They are three male college students and their three girlfriends out partying, five children out on a dare (the oldest being of about 14 years old and the youngest about 8), and a Dr. Loomis-esque doctor in search of the sadistic killer. Now, take three guesses as to which five characters survive the killer's rampage.
* ''Film/{{Cube}}'' [[spoiler:is an example of a mentally handicapped adult being the only survivor of the nastiness.]] If one takes ''Film/CubeZero'' into account, [[spoiler:it's very likely he too was murdered.]]
* In the disaster movie ''Film/DantesPeak'', the dog (an adorable Picardy Shepherd) disappears about halfway through the movie, while the family are escaping
job from the erupting volcano. At the end, it turns up alive and unharmed about of ''absolutely nowhere''. This is the film Chester Gould) recounts that gave Grandma third-degree burns with sulphuric acid.
* [[TheFilmOfTheBook The movie version]] of Creator/StephenKing's ''Film/{{Cujo}}'' ends, well, differently to
after reading the book.
* The titular monster of the BMovie ''Film/TheGiantGilaMonster'' gets a lot less scary when it completely fails
story where Gould allowed Junior's innocent little girlfriend Model to catch and eat a crippled nine-year old.
** Which is a shame, as Giant Gila Monsters are so inherently terrifying.
* ''Film/HardBoiled'': An extreme case - A baby rescued by the hero not only avoids blowing up or getting shot at, he saves the hero's life by putting out his pants, which caught on fire.
** Especially considering that ''adult'' innocents
get shot and killed with disturbing regularity.
* ''HellboyIITheGoldenArmy'' had Hellboy fighting a monster while jumping around on a building, all the while juggling a baby. Most people would set it down or hand it over to the numerous bystanders for safekeeping but thanks to this trope, heroes are free to engage
die, he realized AnyoneCanDie in these theatrics without ever actually harming a child.
** Done
''Tracy.'' So when Tracy's infant daughter is kidnapped not long after, and then abandoned in the first ''Film/{{Hellboy}}'' film as well, only this time with a box full of kittens. Baby + Cat= Immortality
* In ''Film/IndependenceDay'', both the child and the dog of the protagonist survive all of the events, including a ridiculous scene where the dog manages to leap out of the way of a nuclear blast wave just in the nick of time.
* Also averted in ''Film/{{M}}'', the plot of which revolves around a child murderer. This was a departure for Creator/FritzLang's films in general, which would often put children into dangerous situations but always save them.
* Everyone remembers the tragic aversion in Frank Darabont's ''TheMist''.
* ''WomanInTheMoon'' includes a young stowaway
woods, on the moon rocket who doesn't get injured during liftoff in spite verge of his lack dying of restraints, and is narrowly missed during a gunfight.
* ''Film/{{Metropolis}}'' features a ''horde of children'' trapped in a flooding underground city, '''all''' of whom are saved at
exposure, with wild animals closing in, the very last minute. (In tension for the book, however, it's implied that at least a few of them drown.)
* ''Film/MadMax'': there is a high-speed car chase and a
reader was much realer than it otherwise would have been. The baby wanders onto the road. After playing the suspense for all it's worth, both cars miss the child by ''centimeters''. Later ''does'' get rescued in the movie, a mother and her 3-5-year old are brutally run down off-screen.
* Played with in ''Film/MenInBlack'', in which James Edwards, in a live-fire exercise with other potential MIB trainees, shoots a cardboard cutout of a little girl instead of the scary aliens. In a subversion, he justifies this by claiming one alien was simply exercising on a streetlight, the other was sneezing, and the little girl was out late at night, eight years old, with a college-level textbook in her arms, so she was up to something bad.
** And, judging that he was chosen to join the organization, this reasoning was absolutely correct.
* Despite decorating his boiler room with dismembered dollies and crushed tricycles, infamous dream-haunting child murderer [[Franchise/ANightmareOnElmStreet Freddy Krueger]] was never shown on screen in the act of killing a child. Menacing them, yes, and their apparent ghosts do turn up in dream scenes,
time but actual murders were confined to teenagers and adults.
* Almost averted in ''Film/{{Orphan}}'' although originally Daniel was supposed to die
only after Esther smothered him with a pillow.
* In ''Film/{{Predator 2}}'', the eponymous alien bounty hunter spares a pregnant cop, and later lowers his sights on a child with a plastic gun after realising the harmless nature of the kid's "weapon." This is [[JustifiedTrope justified]] by the creature's personality as an honour-bound warrior; there's no challenge or sport in killing unarmed children.
* Averted in ''Film/RoboCop2'', in which the child gangster Hob, for once a deliberately unlikeable underage character, seems to be on his way to a redemption storyline (Robocop cannot bring himself to shoot Hob, even as the kid fires on him with an SMG, because he resembles Alex Murphy's son)...[[spoiler:until the titular "Robocop 2", a hulking war machine, guns the kid and all his goons down with a minigun.]]
* ''Film/{{Scarface 1983}}'': Tony Montana fails to kill one of his enemies after seeing his little kids in the back seat of his car. Tony "never fucked over anyone who didn't have it coming to him".
-->''"I don't need this shit in my life!"''
* In the classic ''Film/TheShapeOfThingsToCome'', during the prelude to war, the young son of one of the main characters is shown marching and playing his toy drum. As the war breaks out, we see the same boy lying dead amid the rubble, still wearing the toy drum.
* In ''Film/ShootEmUp'', Paul Giamatti's AffablyEvil villain Hertz has no qualms about killing babies if that's what he's been told to do, and seems to gleefully enjoy running over his target in his car. He's then {{Squick}}ed out when he discovers that the "baby" he ran down was only a decoy. (The real baby, meanwhile, survives being in the thick of gun battles over and over without so much as a scratch.)
* In the famous [[MemeticMutation "Garbage Day" Rampage]] in ''Film/SilentNightDeadlyNightPart2'', Ricky shoots a bunch of people, but spares a little girl with a speech impediment on a tricycle.
* ''Film/SnakesOnAPlane'': the baby is saved from the vicious snakes despite being a handy size and ending up on the opposite side of the plane from the last time we saw it. The person that saved the baby is shortly rewarded with death (and it was her [[{{Retirony}} last day on the job]], too). It's then subverted with a man throwing an annoying dog at a snake to save himself; he's also promptly rewarded with death and [[AssholeVictim as he was such an ass nobody cared]].
* In ''Film/{{Speed}}'',
white-knuckle fake-out where it looks like the bus is going to hit a baby carriage, and it does. It turns out [[spoiler:the carriage is full of cans.]]
* ''Film/StarTrekGenerations'' -- Spot the cat survived the crash of the USS Enterprise (much to the distaste of the actor Brent Spiner, who played Data (the cat's owner) and who in real life hates cats).
* In ''{{Film/Volcano}}'', all the small children survive. And so does a small Jack Russell named Bill. Just in case that wasn't enough to assure you no innocents were harmed there is even a brief news report on vets setting up an emergency pet shelter.
* This trope (especially as it applies to dogs) was identified by RogerEbert in his review of (the 2005 TomCruise version of) ''Film/TheWarOfTheWorlds''.
* Subverted and played straight in ''Film/TheWitches'', the Grand Head Witch (as is the case with any witch) hates children and wishes to ride the world of them. While they seem to never kill children outright though, they still
wolves have no problem [[ImAHumanitarian turning kids into food to be eaten]], [[TakenForGranite turning them into stone]], [[BalefulPolymorph turning them into animals that will be killed soon after]], or [[AndIMustScream trapping them in paintings]]. The book also implies that several transformed children (including two frogs and [[spoiler:Bruce]]) would be killed shortly after in various ways and the Witches' main plan in the book and movie involves turning children into mice so that they will be killed by their parents and teachers. On the other hand, the main character survives and the movie has a scene in which the Grand Head Witch seems quite taken with an infant in a carriage - before pushing it down the hill. The hero saves it (justified in that it was mainly to serve as a distraction, rather than trying to kill it).
* Kids in {{Marvel}} movies can count on StanLee to pull them out of harm's way. (Lee, in turn, can count on [[{{Daredevil}} Matt Murdock]].)
* Averted (though not shown) by Fat Bastard in the 2nd ''Film/AustinPowers'' movie to show just how bad he is:
--> Well listen up, Sonny Jim - [[EatsBabies I ATE A]] ''[[EatsBabies BABY!]]'' Ohh, aye, baby - the ''other'' other white meat! Baby - it's what's for ''dinner!''
* Averted in ''Film/TheWayBack''. Out of a group of eight gulag escapees, only half of them survive, and [[spoiler:the sole young girl isn't one of them. She doesn't just die, either; she dies horribly of heatstroke and dehydration in the desert.]]
* Brianna in ''Film/MysteryTeam''. She barely appears once the film grows darker and the conflict more dangerous, preventing her from being kidnapped by either Leroy or [[spoiler: Roger]]. A more literal example with Eric, who has apparently been shot three times.
* Lampshaded in the film of ''Literature/{{Inkheart}}''. When they are captured, Mortimer tells his daughter, Meggie, to pretend she is in a book, since "children always survive in books." She then reminds him that the rule doesn't always apply, such as in "Literature/TheLittleMatchGirl".
* In ''Film/HalloweenII1981'', Michael Myers ignores a maternity ward filled with sleeping babies, instead choosing to kill the doctors, nurses, and security guards. On the other hand, one has to imagine that the explosion at the end of the film [[FridgeHorror couldn't have been good for those sleeping babies]].
* Brazilian horror icon ''Zé do Caixão'' aka ''Coffin Joe'' tends to be a vicious sadistic against adults, but won't tolerate any harm inflicted to children, whom he sees as the hopes for a better (or, [[NietzscheWannabe in his case]], I'd rather say ''superior'') world.
* ''Film/BabysDayOut''. A bloody ''construction site''.
* In ''MidnightMovie'' the only survivor is the Bridget's little brother named...Timmy.
* Played straight in ''Film/ConAir''. It seems like Garland Greene, who is tauted as a horrific serial killer, is about to kill the little girl he runs into near the abandoned airfield, but he doesn't.
* Averted in the Feast trilogy. I think the second film. CrowningMomentOfFunny.
** The first one too. In the introductions, a child is left by his mother in the bar, watching TV. When she runs up the stairs, she doesn't see him, not to reveal he was hiding in the closet. As they have joyous reunion, [[spoiler: the beast comes through the window nearby and swallows the kid whole before ripping off his shoes, foot and all.]]
* Played straight with Jonesy the Cat in ''Film/{{Alien}}'', in the Animal Immunity version of this trope. Ripley leaves Jonesy behind when the Alien surprises her, and it curiously looks at the cat as if it's about to eat it. When Ripley gets back the Cat is unharmed.
* Averted with the [[EnfantTerrible little brat]] in the film version of ''TheDayOfTheLocust''.
* ''Film/IronMan2'' : [[{{LikeYouWouldReallyDoIt}} Did anyone really think that hammer drone would kill that kid?]]
* In all the zombie attacks in Film/WorldWarZ not a single child is bitten, nor is a child zombie shown. [[spoiler: Tomas survives improbably even after his parents are turned]] and a young boy in Israel who is seemingly doomed [[spoiler: is spared as the zombie horde ignores him due to their inability to see the sick.]]
** Of course, [[spoiler: the kid is terminally ill and we never see him get treatment. SubvertedTrope ?]]
* Averted in ''Film/PitchBlack''. One of the first victims is a youngster.
* Completely ignored in Film/GraveEncounters2, where, during a scene, the undead satanic doctor slices a baby and spills its blood all over a tied up patient. While you don't see the wound on the baby itself, it's still very visceral from the angle it's shot.
gotten her!



[[folder:Literature]]
* Elizabeth Vaughan tells of turning in a manuscript in which an infant died midway through. Her publisher sternly counseled her that "In romance, ''you can't kill a baby''." She had to rework the entire plot to accommodate the infant's survival.
* While the [[DragonridersofPern Pern]] colonists' first encounter with Thread gruesomely killed several adults and at least one young girl, ''Dragonsdawn'' does honor this trope with babies. Two infants were the only survivors of the colony's Tuareg nomad camp, having been sealed inside a Thread-proof metal cabinet by their doomed parents, and a house in which a woman is giving birth was instinctively protected by hundreds of the settlement's fire-lizards.
* The very premise of Literature/HarryPotter, who is ''The Boy Who Lived'' because the evil overlord wanted to kill a baby but wasn't able to. "Trying to kill a baby but not being able to" is probably the most pathetic thing a villain can do. It's hard to think of things that ''couldn't'' kill a baby, but apparently Voldy just had to get cute with the killing curse, instead of just going the much more reliable ''kick to the head''.
** In fairness to Voldemort, Harry is the ''only'' survivor in the spell's history and ''only'' because of a peculiar set of circumstances [[spoiler:both times]]. Nobody, under the circumstances, could have expected failure - but the consequences for Voldemort the first time were such that he had no opportunity to rectify the situation.
** Voldemort manages to kill two children (and their mom) while searching for a wand-maker in ''Deathly Hallows''. Many teenagers die through the series, but only a few (Moaning Myrtle and [[spoiler:Colin Creevey]], plus Ariana Dumbledore in the backstory) were under 17, and thus minors.
* Lampshaded up the wazoo by the ''[[Literature/TheAdventuresOfSamuraiCat Samurai Cat]]'' books, in which [[GenreSavvy Shiro the homicidal kitten]] '''revels''' in his Baby+ Cat Immortality, gleefully rushing into meat-grinder battles in the smug confidence that [[BreakingTheFourthWall the author wouldn't dare kill him]]. Eventually this trope was averted in ''Samurai Cat Goes To Hell'', but only as a plot device to send his uncle to retrieve the bloodthirsty little creep.
* Played straight in ''[[Literature/{{Twilight}} Breaking Dawn]]''. While all of the Volturi converge to kill [[spoiler:Bella and Edward's daughter Renesmee]], they all instantly become captivated by her charm when they see her, quickly realize that they were wrong, and go home without a fight. Yes, that was the climax.
** Did you actually read it? Even after it was proven that Renesmee wasn't a danger, the Volturi still tried to find an excuse to kill her and thus provoke the Cullens AND they still started a fight...well, attempted to, anyway.
** Averted by the Volturi. Their only reason for killing a little kid was because they don't give second chances.
* In Creator/StephenKing's ''TheStand'', many of the main characters die, but Kojak the dog survives.
** Averted in the case of one woman whose twin children were born dead. She went nuts and blamed the superflu, though other characters believed that it being a twin birth and her being a ''heavy smoker'' were the real causes.
** And averted again by the description of one toddler falling into a well and dying there. Also Baby Petey (one of the "no great loss" examples in the extended edition).

to:

[[folder:Literature]]
[[folder:Radio]]
* Elizabeth Vaughan tells of turning in In the AudioPlay/BigFinishDoctorWho audio drama ''Bloodtide'', the bad guys release a manuscript in which an infant died midway through. Her publisher sternly counseled her virus that "In romance, ''you can't will only kill a baby''." She had to rework the entire plot to accommodate the infant's survival.
* While the [[DragonridersofPern Pern]] colonists' first encounter with Thread gruesomely killed several adults and at least one young girl, ''Dragonsdawn'' does honor this trope with babies. Two infants were the only survivors of the colony's Tuareg nomad camp, having been sealed inside a Thread-proof metal cabinet by their doomed parents, and a house
''adult'' humans. Subverted in which a woman is giving birth was instinctively protected by hundreds of the settlement's fire-lizards.
* The very premise of Literature/HarryPotter, who is ''The Boy Who Lived'' because the evil overlord wanted to kill a baby but wasn't able to. "Trying to kill a baby but not being able to" is probably the most pathetic thing a villain can do. It's hard to think of things
that ''couldn't'' kill a baby, but apparently Voldy just had to get cute with the killing curse, instead of just going the much more reliable ''kick to the head''.
** In fairness to Voldemort, Harry is the ''only'' survivor in the spell's history
bad guys [[spoiler: are [[ImAHumanitarian humanitarians]]]], and ''only'' because of a peculiar set of circumstances [[spoiler:both times]]. Nobody, under the circumstances, could have expected failure - but the consequences for Voldemort the first time were such that he had no opportunity to rectify the situation.
** Voldemort manages to kill two children (and their mom) while searching for a wand-maker in ''Deathly Hallows''. Many teenagers die through the series, but only a few (Moaning Myrtle and [[spoiler:Colin Creevey]], plus Ariana Dumbledore in the backstory) were under 17, and thus minors.
* Lampshaded up the wazoo by the ''[[Literature/TheAdventuresOfSamuraiCat Samurai Cat]]'' books, in which [[GenreSavvy Shiro the homicidal kitten]] '''revels''' in his Baby+ Cat Immortality, gleefully rushing into meat-grinder battles in the smug confidence that [[BreakingTheFourthWall the author wouldn't dare kill him]]. Eventually this trope was
later averted in ''Samurai Cat Goes To Hell'', but only as a plot device to send his uncle to retrieve the bloodthirsty little creep.
* Played straight in ''[[Literature/{{Twilight}} Breaking Dawn]]''. While all of the Volturi converge to kill [[spoiler:Bella and Edward's daughter Renesmee]], they all instantly become captivated by her charm when they see her, quickly realize
that they were wrong, and go home without a fight. Yes, that was the climax.
** Did you actually read it? Even after it was proven that Renesmee wasn't a danger, the Volturi still tried
good guys [[spoiler: simply abandon them to find an excuse to kill her and thus provoke the Cullens AND they still started a fight...well, attempted to, anyway.
** Averted by the Volturi. Their only reason for killing a little kid was because they don't give second chances.
* In Creator/StephenKing's ''TheStand'', many
[[FridgeLogic die of the main characters die, but Kojak the dog survives.
** Averted in the case of one woman whose twin children were born dead. She went nuts and blamed the superflu, though other characters believed that it being a twin birth and her being a ''heavy smoker'' were the real causes.
** And averted again by the description of one toddler falling into a well and dying there. Also Baby Petey (one of the "no great loss" examples in the extended edition).
inevitable starvation]]]].



[[folder:Live Action TV]]
* Doubly subverted in ''Series/{{Angel}}''. Darla, his sire, wants to make sure that he is still soulless, so she leads him to a crib with a baby that she had kidnapped, and tells him to drink its blood (though not in so many words). Courtesy of DramaticIrony, the audience knows Angel is ensouled. Angel then rescues the child.
* In ''Series/BeingHuman'', this trope is played with when a young boy who Mitchell befriended is hit by a car and critically injured. It is left for the mother to decide if he dies...or takes another way out. [[spoiler:They play it straight and have Mitchell turn the boy into a vampire.]]
** The plot of Season 4 revolves around a prophecy in which [[spoiler:George and Nina's baby]] must die to save humanity from global vampire rule.
* ''BoyMeetsWorld'': the sight of an empty hospital bassinet fails to evoke our fears that premature Joshua did not survive, thanks to this trope and the fact that it's a friggin TGIF sitcom. Sure enough, when we pan over, the baby is in mom's arms.
* ''{{ER}}'' tried to pull this too. When Abby and Luka's baby was born prematurely, a scene ended with the baby flatlining in surgery. The next scene indicated that several months had passed and featured staff members quietly discussing the couple's need for privacy. Cut to an empty crib. . .and pan to Abby holding her son. Another example, one of {{ER}}'s most famous episodes, ''Love's Labor Lost'' comes very close to averting this when Dr. Green mishandles a routine birth, and up until the final moments of the episode, it seemed very likely that the baby would die, only for him to survive while his mother did not.
** However, they heartbreakingly averted this trope when Dr. Carter's son was stillborn at seven months. The horrifying reality of this ruined his relationship with the mother.
* ''Series/{{Charmed}}'': Piper's unborn baby is impossible to kill due to the magical lineage of the baby; any fireballs or missiles that flew in Piper's direction were nullified by a glowing barrier orb around pregnant Piper. It is even hinted that the unborn fetus is consciously providing the magical protection. This protection lasts long after his birth. Many episodes featured the villain trying to grab the kid and getting blasted across the room.
** Although this takes a darker turn when they realize why the child [[SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong would have]] gone evil in the future - trauma over someone capturing him and trying for weeks to figure out a way to kill him.
* ''Series/DoctorWho'': in the episode "[[Recap/DoctorWho2006CSTheRunawayBride The Runaway Bride]]", most of the Racnoss's laser beams whip around quickly -- except for one heading towards a little girl, which moves ''sloooooowly'' enough for someone to grab her and run to safety.
** Averted in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoNSS3E8HumanNature Human Nature]]"/"[[Recap/DoctorWhoNSS3E9TheFamilyOfBlood The Family of Blood]]", when little Lucy Cartwright is [[spoiler:killed and has her body taken over by a member of the family]].
** Dead straight in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS32E3TheCurseOfTheBlackSpot The Curse of the Black Spot]]", in which a child is vaporized by the villain... and the Doctor suddenly knows all's not what it seems. With ''no'' in-story reason to think this ''at all'', the Doctor soon decides that the alien may only be moving people, not killing them, and he is soon proven right.
* In ''HarpersIsland'', it was ''very'' unnerving that they had [[spoiler: Madison]], who ''[[UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom got people killed because of her withholding information]]'', and [[spoiler: her annoying Mom Shea]] live, while [[spoiler: the father, Richard]] bought it. 99% of the show's fans wish that they both died.
* In the ''InspectorMorse'' episode "Dead on Time", we are shown the death of a baby in flashback sequence. And through the series, several children are killed off at various times.
* In Japanese ''[[Series/SpiderManJapan Spider-Man]]'', in which adult characters are rarely spared from tragic deaths for the hero to angst over, one can always be sure that cute kids whose lives are in danger will always be spared. Moreover, one episode featured a heroic dog who was [[ShootTheDog shot]] and [[SlowMotionFall fell hundreds of feet]] off a dam. Cut to [[Film/OldYeller tearjerker scene]] of the dog lying in the river... his owner calls and the dog struggles to his feet and limps over... and five minutes later, the dog is completely well again.
* Elsewhere in the {{Toku}}satsu genre, the earlier ''Series/KamenRider'' series, which had far less problem offing random civilians in good-sized numbers to show how bad the MonsterOfTheWeek and his plan are than more recent series, have so many instances of death - in ''so'' many scary-despite-[[SpecialEffectsFailure Special-Effects-Failure]] forms - instantly taking adults but only hovering menacingly in the direction of children (who are snatched out of the way by Riders) it's hard to pick the best. However, one time in ''Series/KamenRiderSkyrider,'' a child infected by something that had disintegrated everyone else affected by it [[WhatHappenedToTheMouse is not seen after]] the woman who'd been carrying her a second ago was kidnapped. By all rights that means she's dead, but we didn't see it.
* [[WordOfGod It's been confirmed by Damon Lindelof]] that Vincent the dog will survive through the entirety of ''Series/{{Lost}}''.
** Also, [[spoiler:when young Ben is shot by Sayid, he survives...in a way that makes him "lose his innocence".]]
** Also, it was kind of obvious that they were never going to kill [[spoiler: Walt]].
* In the AnimalPlanet show ''LostTapes'', anytime there's a child involved, they will be ensured to survive. Most egregious example is in the Thunderbird episode, where a boy with a broken leg is picked up by a massive raptor. The end narration says they found him the next morning with minor scrapes and bruises, meaning the giant bird of prey didn't so much as nibble the boy, and carried him in its talons with the utmost care.
* In the series epilogue of ''PrisonBreak'', [[spoiler: Sara Trancredi]] is sent to prison and later physically assaulted by female correctional officers for her role in the Fox River break out. However, they gave her the courtesy of avoiding hitting anywhere that would cause harm to her unborn child.
* [[spoiler: Subverted]] in the 2009 version of ''Series/ThePrisoner''. A character's toddler daughter rides her tricycle through a gate that has carelessly been left open, in the direction of a bottomless pit. She rides closer and closer to the chasm at full speed, until, at the last minute, [[spoiler: she falls the fuck in, head-first, tricycle and all, on camera, never to be seen again.]]
* On an episode of ''CSIMiami'' the team has been searching for a kidnapped baby. When Horatio finds the guy he tries to escape by driving away with the baby in the car. After a car chase through an airport the bad guy's car flips repeatedly and both he and the baby survive without serious injury [[spoiler: until Horatio shoots the guy]].
** On the original ''CSI'', the roller coaster "Pharaoh's Fever" was considerate enough of this trope to wait to fail until ''after'' a Mom with her kids had disembarked and an all-adult group of riders had gotten on board.
* ''Series/StarTrekVoyager''. Naomi Wildman. Sort of. See, on the day of her birth she [[spoiler: is killed...and survives a horrible menace. At the same time. Yes, it is confusing. As usual, in horrible deaths, Harry Kim is part and parcel of it]].
** [[SFDebris Poor, dumb Harry.]]
** [[spoiler: The ship is split into two identical Voyagers. The Harry and Naomi from one die, but the Harry and Naomi of the Voyager that eventually gets kaboom'd manage to survive and join the Voyager crew that lost theirs.]]
* Averted in HBO's ''ThePacific'', with the mother on Okinawa, an involuntary suicide bomber, who tries and fails to hand off her baby before she blows up.
** However, Hoosier does save the dog in Part Two.
* ''Series/TheWalkingDead'':
** The very first zombie kill by Rick Grimes is of a small child, who as part of the zombie transformation had to die first.
** In one second season scene, [[GentleGiant T-Dog]] is searching through cars for supplies, and then he searches through one car with a baby seat in the back. The seat is coated with blood and bits of flesh. He's as freaked out by this sight.
** Averted later in season 2 with [[spoiler: Sophia, who gets lost and is found later as a walker]].
** Rather brutally averted in the season 4 mid-finale when [[spoiler: Meghan is bit after accidentally finding one buried in the mud she was playing in]].
* In ''Series/TheWire'' [[spoiler: Stray bullets kill a child midway through a gang war, and a preschooler is killed to send a message]]
* ''Series/TheXFiles'' occasionally killed kids, including Scully's alien hybrid daughter.
** They killed a toddler in "The Calusari." Perhaps the threshold is learning to walk?
** They buried a baby alive in "Home", and the uncensored version has it ''screaming the whole time''.
** Played with strangely in "Invocation". It turns out the child was still dead...so it was his ghost?
** Played straight with Baby William at every turn. Either Scully is attacked by a giant slug that threatens to abort him ("Roadrunners"), Scully has a placental abruption ("Empedocles"), somebody wants to make sure he isn't born ("Deadalive"), someone evil wants to kidnap him at birth for evil purposes ("Essence/Existence"), a crazy cult actually ''does'' kidnap him ("Provenance/Providence"), or he's injected with an unknown substance to cure him of his alien-ness ("William"). And through all of this there's not even a scratch on him. He's one tough little guy.
** Dogs were not immune to death either: Scully's dog Queequeg was eaten by an alligator in "Quagmire", and one dog didn't make it in "Teso Dos Bichos".
* Inverted in ''Series/BabylonFive'' - the youngest character to survive an episode is a teenager: [[spoiler: Garibaldi's daughter.]]
* The dog variation is lampshaded by Dr Johnny Fever in an episode of ''WKRPInCincinnati'' in which he says "It's like in the movies, ya know? You can waste the entire Confederate army, nobody cares - hundreds of thousands of guys deader than doornails! But kill one collie, everybody collapses in grief!"
* In an episode of ''Series/StargateSG1'', a young girl is the only survivor of a plague on her planet. It is later revealed that she was turned into a bomb in order to destroy the SGC. She doesn't actually blow up, though.
* ''Series/{{Aishiteru}}'''s plot starts with the death of a seven year old boy. To make things worse, the murderer is a ten-year-old.
* Egregiously played in the National Geographic documentary ''GunsGermsAndSteel'' where a Boer family was attacked by the Zulus and we see the husband, wife, and the older son dead in the morning. However, the infant survived the attack and his cries can be heard.
* While everyone else in the McNamara family in ''NipTuck'' goes through hell and a half, the family's young daughter Annie never seems to have anything bad directly happen to her, at least in the early seasons. In fact, she is completely absent from roughly two thirds of all episodes.
* {{House}}'s PatientOfTheWeek doesn't always make it, and this has included babies.
* ''Series/HerculesTheLegendaryJourneys'' : In the very first episode [[spoiler: Hera kills Herc's wife and all three of his children.]]
* Surprisingly enough, subverted in PowerRangers (specifically, PowerRangersInSpace). Granted, it happens offscreen, but a one-shot character is mentioned to have had a 12-year-old brother who died recently. Not only is it a plot point of the episode, but she's even seen at his grave at one point. These types of occurrences are part of why PowerRangersInSpace is considered DarkerAndEdgier compared to most other Power Ranger seasons.

to:

[[folder:Live Action TV]]
[[folder:Web Comics]]
* Doubly In ''WebComic/EightBitTheater'', Black Mage has orphaned a little boy multiple times, although this has been subverted (sort of) when he spared the boy a couple times out of a sick perverse joy in ''Series/{{Angel}}''. Darla, his sire, wants seeing the mental scars he causes pile up.
** Comes back to bite him when [[spoiler:it turns out that the kid grows up to become a powerful sage, travels back in time to the start of the universe
to make sure that he is still soulless, so she leads him to a crib with a baby that she had kidnapped, it in his image and tells him prevent Black Mage from scarring him, waits for billions of years because of his future mistake of accidentally sending someone to drink its blood (though not in so many words). Courtesy of DramaticIrony, the audience knows Angel is ensouled. Angel then rescues start of the child.
* In ''Series/BeingHuman'', this trope is played with when a young boy
universe before himself, and grows up to be Sarda, who Mitchell befriended is hit by a car finds endless and critically injured. It is left for the mother to decide if he dies...or takes another way out. [[spoiler:They play it straight and have Mitchell turn the boy into a vampire.creative ways of torturing Black Mage.]]
** The plot of Season 4 revolves around a prophecy * Lampshaded in which [[spoiler:George and Nina's baby]] must die to save humanity [[http://acidreflux.ficwad.com/comic/21 this strip]] from global vampire rule.
''Acid Reflux''.
* ''BoyMeetsWorld'': the sight of an empty hospital bassinet fails to evoke our fears that premature Joshua did not survive, thanks to this trope and the fact that it's In ''Webcomic/TheAdventuresOfDrMcNinja'', a friggin TGIF sitcom. Sure enough, when we pan over, the baby is in mom's arms.
* ''{{ER}}'' tried to pull this too. When Abby and Luka's baby was born prematurely, a scene ended with the baby flatlining in surgery. The next scene indicated that several months had passed and featured staff members quietly discussing the couple's need for privacy. Cut to an empty crib. . .and pan to Abby holding her son. Another example, one of {{ER}}'s most famous episodes, ''Love's Labor Lost'' comes very close to averting this when Dr. Green mishandles a routine birth, and up until the final moments of the episode, it seemed very likely that the baby would die, only for him to survive while his mother did not.
** However, they heartbreakingly averted this trope when Dr. Carter's son was stillborn at seven months. The horrifying reality of this ruined his relationship with the mother.
* ''Series/{{Charmed}}'': Piper's unborn baby is impossible to kill due to the magical lineage of the baby; any fireballs or missiles that flew in Piper's direction were nullified by a glowing barrier orb around pregnant Piper. It is even hinted that the unborn fetus is consciously providing the magical protection. This protection lasts long after his birth. Many episodes featured the villain trying to grab the kid and getting blasted across the room.
** Although this takes a darker turn when they realize why the child [[SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong would have]] gone evil
launched in the future - trauma over someone capturing him and trying for weeks to figure out a way to kill him.
* ''Series/DoctorWho'': in the episode "[[Recap/DoctorWho2006CSTheRunawayBride
air by automated zombie quarantine wall. The Runaway Bride]]", most of the Racnoss's laser beams whip around quickly -- except for one heading towards a little girl, which moves ''sloooooowly'' enough for someone to grab her and run to safety.
** Averted in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoNSS3E8HumanNature Human Nature]]"/"[[Recap/DoctorWhoNSS3E9TheFamilyOfBlood The Family of Blood]]", when little Lucy Cartwright is [[spoiler:killed and has her body taken over by a member of the family]].
** Dead straight in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS32E3TheCurseOfTheBlackSpot The Curse of the Black Spot]]", in which a child is vaporized by the villain... and the Doctor suddenly knows all's not what it seems. With ''no'' in-story reason to think this ''at all'', the Doctor soon decides that the alien may only be moving people, not killing them, and he is soon proven right.
* In ''HarpersIsland'', it was ''very'' unnerving that they had [[spoiler: Madison]], who ''[[UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom got people killed because of her withholding information]]'', and [[spoiler: her annoying Mom Shea]] live, while [[spoiler: the father, Richard]] bought it. 99% of the show's fans wish that they both died.
* In the ''InspectorMorse'' episode "Dead on Time", we are shown the death of a baby in flashback sequence. And through the series, several children are killed off at various times.
* In Japanese ''[[Series/SpiderManJapan Spider-Man]]'', in which adult characters are rarely spared from tragic deaths for the hero to angst over, one can always be sure that cute kids whose lives are in danger will always be spared. Moreover, one episode featured a heroic dog who was [[ShootTheDog shot]] and [[SlowMotionFall fell hundreds of feet]] off a dam. Cut to [[Film/OldYeller tearjerker scene]] of the dog lying in the river... his owner calls and the dog struggles
good doctor, naturally, catches him, [[http://drmcninja.com/page.php?pageNum=49&issue=8 much to his feet and limps over... and five minutes later, the dog is completely well again.
own surprise]].
* Elsewhere Mentioned in the {{Toku}}satsu genre, the earlier ''Series/KamenRider'' series, which had far less problem offing random civilians in good-sized numbers to show how bad the MonsterOfTheWeek and his plan are than more recent series, have so many instances of death - in ''so'' many scary-despite-[[SpecialEffectsFailure Special-Effects-Failure]] forms - instantly taking adults but only hovering menacingly in the direction of children (who are snatched out of the way by Riders) it's hard to pick the best. However, one time in ''Series/KamenRiderSkyrider,'' ''WebComic/GoldCoinComics'', when Lance survived a child infected by something that had disintegrated childhood fire where everyone else affected by it [[WhatHappenedToTheMouse is not seen after]] the woman who'd been carrying her a second ago was kidnapped. By all rights that means she's dead, but we didn't see it.
* [[WordOfGod It's been confirmed by Damon Lindelof]] that Vincent the dog will survive through the entirety of ''Series/{{Lost}}''.
** Also, [[spoiler:when young Ben is shot by Sayid, he survives...in a way that makes him "lose his innocence".]]
** Also, it was kind of obvious that they were never going to kill [[spoiler: Walt]].
* In the AnimalPlanet show ''LostTapes'', anytime there's a child involved, they will be ensured to survive. Most egregious example is in the Thunderbird episode, where a boy with a broken leg is picked up by a massive raptor. The end narration says they found him the next morning with minor scrapes and bruises, meaning the giant bird of prey didn't so much as nibble the boy, and carried him in its talons with the utmost care.
* In the series epilogue of ''PrisonBreak'', [[spoiler: Sara Trancredi]] is sent to prison and later physically assaulted by female correctional officers for her role in the Fox River break out. However, they gave her the courtesy of avoiding hitting anywhere that would cause harm to her unborn child.
* [[spoiler: Subverted]] in the 2009 version of ''Series/ThePrisoner''. A character's toddler daughter rides her tricycle through a gate that has carelessly been left open, in the direction of a bottomless pit. She rides closer and closer to the chasm at full speed, until, at the last minute, [[spoiler: she falls the fuck in, head-first, tricycle and all, on camera, never to be seen again.]]
* On an episode of ''CSIMiami'' the team has been searching for a kidnapped baby. When Horatio finds the guy he tries to escape by driving away with the baby in the car. After a car chase through an airport the bad guy's car flips repeatedly and both he and the baby survive without serious injury [[spoiler: until Horatio shoots the guy]].
** On the original ''CSI'', the roller coaster "Pharaoh's Fever" was considerate enough of this trope to wait to fail until ''after'' a Mom with her kids had disembarked and an all-adult group of riders had gotten on board.
* ''Series/StarTrekVoyager''. Naomi Wildman. Sort of. See, on the day of her birth she [[spoiler: is killed...and survives a horrible menace. At the same time. Yes, it is confusing. As usual, in horrible deaths, Harry Kim is part and parcel of it]].
** [[SFDebris Poor, dumb Harry.]]
** [[spoiler: The ship is split into two identical Voyagers. The Harry and Naomi from one die, but the Harry and Naomi of the Voyager that eventually gets kaboom'd manage to survive and join the Voyager crew that lost theirs.]]
* Averted in HBO's ''ThePacific'', with the mother on Okinawa, an involuntary suicide bomber, who tries and fails to hand off her baby before she blows up.
** However, Hoosier does save the dog in Part Two.
* ''Series/TheWalkingDead'':
** The very first zombie kill by Rick Grimes is of a small child, who as part of the zombie transformation had to die first.
** In one second season scene, [[GentleGiant T-Dog]] is searching through cars for supplies, and then he searches through one car with a baby seat in the back. The seat is coated with blood and bits of flesh. He's as freaked out by this sight.
** Averted later in season 2 with [[spoiler: Sophia, who gets lost and is found later as a walker]].
** Rather brutally averted in the season 4 mid-finale when [[spoiler: Meghan is bit after accidentally finding one buried in the mud she was playing in]].
* In ''Series/TheWire'' [[spoiler: Stray bullets kill a child midway through a gang war, and a preschooler is killed to send a message]]
* ''Series/TheXFiles'' occasionally killed kids, including Scully's alien hybrid daughter.
** They killed a toddler in "The Calusari." Perhaps the threshold is learning to walk?
** They buried a baby alive in "Home", and the uncensored version has it ''screaming the whole time''.
** Played with strangely in "Invocation". It turns out the child was still dead...so it was his ghost?
** Played straight with Baby William at every turn. Either Scully is attacked by a giant slug that threatens to abort him ("Roadrunners"), Scully has a placental abruption ("Empedocles"), somebody wants to make sure he isn't born ("Deadalive"), someone evil wants to kidnap him at birth for evil purposes ("Essence/Existence"), a crazy cult actually ''does'' kidnap him ("Provenance/Providence"), or he's injected with an unknown substance to cure him of his alien-ness ("William"). And through all of this there's not even a scratch on him. He's one tough little guy.
** Dogs were not immune to death either: Scully's dog Queequeg was eaten by an alligator in "Quagmire", and one dog didn't make it in "Teso Dos Bichos".
* Inverted in ''Series/BabylonFive'' - the youngest character to survive an episode is a teenager: [[spoiler: Garibaldi's daughter.]]
* The dog variation is lampshaded by Dr Johnny Fever in an episode of ''WKRPInCincinnati'' in which he says "It's like in the movies, ya know? You can waste the entire Confederate army, nobody cares - hundreds of thousands of guys deader than doornails! But kill one collie, everybody collapses in grief!"
* In an episode of ''Series/StargateSG1'', a young girl is the only survivor of a plague on her planet. It is later revealed that she was turned into a bomb in order to destroy the SGC. She doesn't actually blow up, though.
* ''Series/{{Aishiteru}}'''s plot starts with the death of a seven year old boy. To make things worse, the murderer is a ten-year-old.
* Egregiously played in the National Geographic documentary ''GunsGermsAndSteel'' where a Boer family was attacked by the Zulus and we see the husband, wife, and the older son dead in the morning. However, the infant survived the attack and his cries can be heard.
* While everyone else in the McNamara family in ''NipTuck'' goes through hell and a half, the family's young daughter Annie never seems
appears to have anything bad directly happen died.
* ''RobAndElliot'': Rob attempts
to her, at least in the early seasons. In fact, she is completely absent from roughly two thirds of all episodes.
* {{House}}'s PatientOfTheWeek doesn't always make it, and
take this has included babies.
* ''Series/HerculesTheLegendaryJourneys'' : In the very first episode [[spoiler: Hera kills Herc's wife and all three
to it's logical extreme by making a bulletproof vest out of his children.]]
* Surprisingly enough, subverted in PowerRangers (specifically, PowerRangersInSpace). Granted, it happens offscreen, but a one-shot character is mentioned to have had a 12-year-old brother who died recently. Not only is it a plot point of the episode, but she's even seen at his grave at one point. These types of occurrences are part of why PowerRangersInSpace is considered DarkerAndEdgier compared to most other Power Ranger seasons.
live babies.



[[folder:Newspaper Comics]]
* Max Allan Collins, the second ''ComicStrip/DickTracy'' writer (a longtime fan, he inherited the job from Chester Gould) recounts that after reading the story where Gould allowed Junior's innocent little girlfriend Model to get shot and die, he realized AnyoneCanDie in ''Tracy.'' So when Tracy's infant daughter is kidnapped not long after, and then abandoned in the woods, on the verge of dying of exposure, with wild animals closing in, the tension for the reader was much realer than it otherwise would have been. The baby ''does'' get rescued in time but only after a white-knuckle fake-out where it looks like wolves have gotten her!

to:

[[folder:Newspaper Comics]]
[[folder:Web Original]]
* Max Allan Collins, In [[http://www.thatguywiththeglasses.com/videolinks/thatguywiththeglasses/ask-thatguy/521-ask-thatguy-episode-43 episode 4.3]] of the second ''ComicStrip/DickTracy'' writer (a longtime fan, ''WebVideo/AskThatGuyWithTheGlasses'' segment of ''Website/ThatGuyWithTheGlasses'', he inherited is asked what the job from Chester Gould) recounts that after reading the story where Gould allowed Junior's innocent little girlfriend Model to get shot and die, he realized AnyoneCanDie in ''Tracy.'' So when Tracy's infant daughter is kidnapped not long after, and then abandoned in the woods, on the verge plot of dying of exposure, a movie with wild animals closing in, the tension for the reader was much realer than it otherwise no cliches would be. He responds: "I would say, 2 1/2 hours of blowing up a baby. Think about it: have been. The you ever seen a baby ''does'' get rescued blow up in time but only after a white-knuckle fake-out where it looks like wolves have gotten her!movie before?"
* The child supervillain August Prince from ''Literature/{{Worm}}'' has this explicitly as his superpower; his presence renders people incapable of deliberately attacking or harming him.



[[folder:Radio]]
* In the AudioPlay/BigFinishDoctorWho audio drama ''Bloodtide'', the bad guys release a virus that will only kill ''adult'' humans. Subverted in that the bad guys [[spoiler: are [[ImAHumanitarian humanitarians]]]], and later averted in that the good guys [[spoiler: simply abandon them to [[FridgeLogic die of inevitable starvation]]]].

to:

[[folder:Radio]]
[[folder:Western Animation]]
* In How many cat attacks has [[WesternAnimation/AnAmericanTail Fievel]] survived in the AudioPlay/BigFinishDoctorWho audio drama ''Bloodtide'', movies? He even climbs back up a cat's throat in the bad guys release first movie and the sequel. His baby sister Yasha, [[WhatHappenedToTheMouse when she does actually appear]], is never put in any real danger.
* On ''WesternAnimation/{{Histeria}}!'', Big Fat Baby survives
a virus ton of abuse in The History of Poland sketch.
* On ''{{Squidbillies}}'', this trope is invoked and has a [[LampshadeHanging lampshade hung on it]], as the Sherrif [[PaperThinDisguise disguises himself as a baby]] so
that will only a pair of monsters won't kill ''adult'' humans. Subverted him. It doesn't work.
--->'''Granny''': "They hate babies! Quick, nobody dress like a baby!"
* Any cartoon with a BadlyBatteredBabysitter.
* Played for laughs
in ''WesternAnimation/TheTripletsOfBelleville''. During the [[ChaseScene car chase]] one of the Mafia's cars narrowly avoids hitting a screaming woman with a baby carriage by steering to the side and crashing. A second car does, however, impact with the baby carriage - and crumples like an accordion, while the baby carriage and its laughing occupant remains completely unscathed.
* Since Tommy and friends on ''{{Rugrats}}'' can safely pass through areas such as garages, attics, restaurants, post offices, miniature golf courses, bowling alleys, shopping malls, museums, fairs, Las Vegas, or [[TheRugratsMovie the forest]] on their own, they don't really need the "supervision"
that the bad guys [[spoiler: are [[ImAHumanitarian humanitarians]]]], they get.
* [[TheSimpsons Maggie Simpson]] has shown to survive
and later averted in evade situations that any character of an older age within the good guys [[spoiler: simply abandon them to [[FridgeLogic die series would otherwise not be as lucky in. An excellent instance is in episode "The Call of inevitable starvation]]]].the Simpsons", though there are few other similar instances.



[[folder:Video Games]]
* A blanket note for several of the examples below: While it's hard to confirm because the ESRB criteria for rating games isn't entirely transparent, a number of people have alleged that allowing the player to deliberately murder children in a game is a fast track to an Adults Only rating; this would be financial suicide for any title with a multi-million budget as all major consoles prohibit AO titles on their system and few retail stores (and no major ones) will carry them. (This may have carried less weight in the 90s, especially for PC games which got lax treatment to begin with.)
* In the second ''BaldursGate'' game, the PC frees the inmates of an asylum for those driven mad by magical power to help take on BigBad Jon Irenicus. One of these inmates is a young girl with the ability to shapeshift; she does not actually take part in the battle, in which all the other inmates die.
** Children seem to be actually "immortal" in this game, at least those playing in the streets of Athkatla.
*** Children? Immortal? What do you mean? [[VideoGameCrueltyPotential I can go around Athkatla or Baldur's Gate killing as many kids as I want]]... [[VideoGameCrueltyPunishment At least until the guards show up]].
* The first ''{{Castlevania 64}}'' game has the hero fighting horrible menaces to save a human kid named Malus. Then he sends him off into the monster-filled worlds. The remake had a different hero give a different kid a plot coupon that would protect him from said monsters.
** Subverted in Malus' case [[spoiler:since he's ''freaking Dracula reborn''. In the true ending you get to confront and kill him.]]
* No children or infants appear in the ''VideoGame/{{Crusader}}'' series of games, because with the care most players usually take to avoid killing civilians there would be frozen, burning, or gooey babies ''everywhere''. [[BlackComedy And you can't get baby out of carpet]].
* In ''VideoGame/DragonQuestV'', during the segment where your characters are children, they don't die when they hit 0 HP, but are just knocked out until the end of the battle. Actual -- if not-permanent -- death isn't an issue until your lead character is an adult.
** [[spoiler: Subverted with the PC's own children who CAN get killed in battle]]
* ''Videogame/{{Fable}}'': The only children to appear are in a town which the player cannot enter without leaving his weapons at the gate.
** You are never unarmed in ''VideoGame/FableII'', but no matter what you use, you can't kill the kids. Oddly subverted in the intro sequence, in which [[spoiler:Lord Lucien shoots dead your sister Rose, who is barely older than you are, and then shoots you with enough force to send you through a window and down a fall you only survive because of your magical heritage. Near the game's ending, Lucien will kill your spouse and children, offscreen.]]
* Averted by ''Videogame/FireEmblem''; many units are children, and they will die [[PermaDeath permanently]] if defeated in combat.
* Unlike its predecessors (see below) where killing a child would give you the very negative child killer rep, ''VideoGame/{{Fallout 3}}'' makes children completely unkillable. They'll survive mini-nukes undamaged. This restricts an Evil player's options in Little Lamplight, a town populated entirely by kids. While children are invulnerable to harm, a "[[VideogameCrueltyPotential creative]]" player will discover that you can ''enslave'' some, sell drugs and guns to them, bully them, taunt one to run away from his neglectful mother and the evil solution to the "The Power of Atom" quest ([[spoiler:detonating the atomic bomb]]) will kill the two children living in Megaton.
** It's actually still played straight during "The Power of Atom." If you [[spoiler:activate the bomb but do not detonate it,]] leave town, and come back before you finish the quest, you'll find that the two children in Megaton have mysteriously vanished.
** In addition, the company that made the game explicitly prevents discussion of game mods that allow child killing on the official forums, and has had videos of child killing mods removed from youtube by claiming copyright infringement.
** There are also points in the story where the player character is a child during the game. You however are not affected by miraculous immortality other wasteland children have and can kill a child via killing yourself.
** They've continued the policy in ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim Skyrim]]'', where again children are immune to damage.
*** Not only that, but the child seen in Helgen, the town destroyed at the beginning of the game, was specifically shown to escape the dragon and can be found later on as one of the few survivors. The Dark Brotherhood questline has one that just ''looks'' like a child, having been turned into a vampire centuries earlier, but when the [[spoiler:sanctuary is raided and destroyed]] during the questline, she is one of the survivors - and is not there ''at all'' if the player chooses to wipe it out himself instead of joining.
** ''VideoGame/FalloutNewVegas'' picks up this policy from its predecessor. The game makes a point of this feature by including a quest where one can find a range finder in order to use a prewar super weapon, the ARCHIMEDES II. However the player character needs to obtain said rangefinder from a child named Max who believes that it a toy. Max can not be killed in order to get the rangefinder off of his body, you must pay him a thousand caps (20 with a high barter skill), or pick pocket him. However Max constantly runs so it is impossible to pick pocket him unless he is asleep.
* This is applied strangely in ''[[VideoGame/FirstEncounterAssaultRecon F.E.A.R.]]'' Alma is already an ImplacableMan, but the moment you have to actually face off against her, she goes from her CreepyChild StringyHairedGhostGirl form to a teenage one. This makes absolutely no sense plot-wise, and seems to be solely so you won't have to face down and eventually shoot a little girl -- even one that's already dead.
** It does make sense in the way that Alma is [[OlderThanTheyLook actually grown-up,]] since she already [[spoiler:gave birth to the player character]]. Thus, you see her "real form" instead of the mind-projection of a little girl.
*** Canonically, she was an adult when she died [[spoiler: -- but, IIRC, only ''fifteen'' when she gave birth --]] but she was ''unconscious nearly the entire time'', and would have ''no frame of reference for herself looking like this''. It doesn't make a lot of sense that she'd psychically project herself as what is, to her, virtually a complete stranger, rather than the image she probably has of herself.
** There's also the small matter of Alma [[spoiler:raping the main character]] at the end of the second game. Doing that while she still looks like a little girl would probably cause even worse publicity than being able to shoot her.
* In ''FinalFantasy Fables: ChocobosDungeon'', the journey into people's memories starts by chasing a mysterious flying infant, worried that he'll be hurt. He somehow manages to escape the monsters unscathed, though Chocobo has a hard time finding his way through.
* ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAuto'': In a game where you can beat people to death, blow up cars, and just be an all around psychopath, there are no kids.
** It also regularly {{Lampshades}} the absence of pets.
* [[CheerfulChild Gwen]] in ''GuildWars Prophecies'' is invulnerable. When she [[SheIsAllGrownUp appears again as an adult]] in ''Eye of the North'', she [[SquishyWizard isn't]].
* Averted in ''{{Limbo}}'', seeing as nearly every reaction to you screwing up a puzzle in that game causes your protagonist (a small boy) to meet a grisly and painful death.
* The reason why there aren't any children in ''VideoGame/HalfLife2'' - so they can't be killed. The game designers turned it at their advantage though: the childless city was explained in-game by a "suppression field" which prevents certain protein chains necessary for embryonic development from forming, according to Doctor Kleiner. There's a great atmospheric moment at the start of the game, when you pass by a playground and, if you look at the deserted swing and the broken doll on the ground, you can hear a distant, fading kid's laughter.
** Amusingly lampshaded once [[spoiler: the suppression field goes down - Kleiner suggests via broadcast that, while the Citadel's reactor is going critical, "now would be an excellent time for procreation" for those who are out of the city.]]
* Depending on which games in ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'' series and how good the player is, this can either be played straight or subverted with a child Link.
** The Stalchildren and Skull Kids are what's left of [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin children]] that died or got lost. In ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOcarinaOfTime'', you even meet a teen in the Lost Woods only for him to have disappeared when you come back later. [[CreepyChild A Kokiri girl infamously explains that he's become a Skull Kid]].
* In ''VideoGame/TheSims 2'' and ''VideoGame/TheSims 3'', babies and toddlers cannot be killed in any way. If they are caught in a fire they will miraculously escape, and if their needs drop too low, a social worker will take them away. The same is true for children, except they actually can burn to death, drown, or get crushed by a satellite or meteor. They just can't get electrocuted, scared to death, or starved to death (the social worker will come first). Pregnant women also cannot die. However, ghosts in ''3'' can reproduce (with other ghosts or with living Sims), and the babies are sometimes ghosts who will then age like normal Sims.
* This is in full swing in the ''VideoGame/{{Siren}}'' series... which actually works ''against'' the player, as they enforce it by having children panic and curl into a ball before they're actually even hit, yielding a game over. If you're playing one, you're currently playing a stage where not using stealth, rather than just being dangerous and wasteful, is ''completely impossible''. If you have one with you, you have to take great care to protect it -- and a stray hit during combat that connects with them causes them to panic as well.
** Both an example and exception in ''VideoGame/{{Siren}}: Blood Curse''. On escort missions, you can hurt and kill the person you have to protect. Except 10-year-old Bella. Your weapon has no effect on her. Likewise, enemies can hurt and kill escorts... but when Bella "dies" it's by covering her head and cowering in fear. And when you play as Bella, instead of taking damage from enemy attacks and eventually dying, you cower in fear and scream "NO!" if an enemy gets too close to you, causing you to lose. Technically a way of avoiding showing Bella's obvious death. Yet, the game also creates an exception later when [[spoiler:Bella is shown later on having turned into a shibito, the zombie-like creatures in the village. The condition for becoming a shibito is to die, so obviously something happened to Bella. An earlier cutscene shows a large log rolling towards her and a quick cut to black, indicating that's what might have killed her.]]
* Tails from ''SonicTheHedgehog'' cannot die if you play as both Sonic and Tails in ''Sonic 2 and 3''.
* ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' follows this to a T. You can slaughter whole towns, but not the children in them. Apparently it's better to let the children get along without their parents that you slaughtered than to also kill them. Then again, given respawn, that's not an issue...so it raises the question of why one can't kill a level 5 child since they'd just come back anyway.
** The reason is, Blizzard doesn't want either side to seem AlwaysChaoticEvil to the other, and child murder is a good way of crossing the MoralEventHorizon. This is also lampshaded with an in-game holiday dedicated to helping the orphans in every city.
** Averted somewhat lore-wise, given the presence of [=NPCs=] such as [[http://www.wowwiki.com/Pamela_Redpath Pamela Redpath.]]
*** Even then if an undead child has to be depicted, they have to be depicted as that of a ghost. So yeah, no zombie kids for Children's Week.
* It's only to be expected that ''VideoGame/ZooTycoon'' would honor this trope, being a family game. It's worth mentioning because of how blatantly the Infant Immortality rule is applied: if predators escape or a guest ends up in their enclosures, they'll leap on and attack adult guests, while completely ignoring children. Hence, a runaway lion or tyrannosaur will charge right past a dozen kids to pounce on a grown-up.
* Subverted several times in the Zombie game ''VideoGame/TheyHunger'', sadly. In the hospital, a baby is heard crying, until it abruptly stops. The player cannot get to the nursery immediately, and when he does... There is a ribb left in the bed for newborn. And later in the mountains, the player has to kill resurrected tiny, tiny skeletons that have the hunger...
* The ''SonicBlastMan'' arcade game (as well as the SNES version) featured a stage where the player must punch out a truck that is about to cross path with a runaway carriage with a baby boy inside it. If the player fails the stage, it will show that [[spoiler:the carriage managed to get safely out of the truck's way, only for Sonic Blast Man to get run over in its place.]]
* It's a good thing this trope is in effect in ''Videogame/ShiningTheHolyArk''. When you're exploring a HauntedHouse you come across a child called Justin who is searching for his father. You've had to fight tooth and nail to get to the point where Justin is. Justin later turns up in the sequel ''Videogame/ShiningForceIII'' as one of the main protagonists. There are some allusions to one of the [[BigBad Big Bads]] [[BloodBath bathing in children's blood in order to retain her beautiful image]], but we never see it happen.
** However averted in a battle of Shining Force III where three of the five refugees you're tasked with saving are children, they have the lowest hit points in the group so the enemies will target the children over the adults. And yes, you are treated to a 3D cinematic of enemy knights slaughtering helpless civilian children.
* In ''VisualNovel/VirtuesLastReward'', Quark is the only person you will never explicitly see dead. Everyone else is fair game.
** Though it is highly unlikely he survives [[spoiler:any of the endings where the whole facility goes up in an explosion]].
* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXII,'' you will occasionally be joined by a [[FourIsDeath fourth]] party member. The only guest party member who doesn't eventually die is Larsa, who is twelve.
* In the Japanese version of ''VideoGame/{{Scribblenauts}}'', child [=NPCs=] have infinite hit points.

to:

[[folder:Video Games]]
[[folder:Real Life]]
* A blanket note for several notable example of real-life infant immortality was just recently in the news. A baby stroller got nicked by a ''train''. The stroller was pushed at least ''20 feet away''. The mother and others went running up to the baby expecting the worst only to see the baby only slightly injured.
** It happened twice on the same train line in Melbourne Australia within a year.
* Also in Canada, a couple of months ago, an elderly woman was driving recklessly and almost killed a mother with a child in a stroller, kid was pushed away just in the right moment.
* When [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afriqiyah_Airways_Flight_771 Afriqiyah Airways Flight 771]] crashed in 2010, out
of the examples below: While it's hard to confirm 104 people on board the only survivor was a 9-year-old Dutch boy. A newsperson pointed out that in most plane crashes with survivors, the survivor's been a young child. Mainly because the ESRB criteria for rating games isn't entirely transparent, a number of people have alleged that allowing luggage might be flying around, decapitating people, and the player to deliberately murder children in a game is a fast track to an Adults Only rating; this would be financial suicide for any title with a multi-million budget as all major consoles prohibit AO titles on their system and few retail stores (and no major ones) will carry them. (This may have carried less weight in the 90s, especially for PC games which got lax treatment to begin with.)
* In the second ''BaldursGate'' game, the PC frees the inmates of an asylum for those driven mad by magical power to help take on BigBad Jon Irenicus. One of these inmates is a young girl with the ability to shapeshift; she does not actually take part in the battle, in which all the other inmates die.
** Children seem
kids are too small to be actually "immortal" in this game, at least those playing in decapitated by the streets of Athkatla.
*** Children? Immortal? What do you mean? [[VideoGameCrueltyPotential I can go around Athkatla or Baldur's Gate killing as many kids as I want]]... [[VideoGameCrueltyPunishment At least until the guards show up]].
flying luggage.
* The first ''{{Castlevania 64}}'' game has the hero fighting horrible menaces to save There was one news story a human kid named Malus. Then he sends him off into the monster-filled worlds. The remake had couple years back in India, also involving a train, but in a different hero give a different kid a plot coupon that would protect him from said monsters.
** Subverted in Malus' case [[spoiler:since he's ''freaking Dracula reborn''. In the true ending you get to confront and kill him.]]
* No children or infants appear in the ''VideoGame/{{Crusader}}'' series of games, because with the care most players usually take to avoid killing civilians there would be frozen, burning, or gooey babies ''everywhere''. [[BlackComedy And you can't get baby out of carpet]].
* In ''VideoGame/DragonQuestV'', during the segment where your characters are children, they don't die when they hit 0 HP, but are just knocked out until the end of the battle. Actual -- if not-permanent -- death isn't an issue until your lead character is an adult.
** [[spoiler: Subverted with the PC's own children who CAN get killed in battle]]
* ''Videogame/{{Fable}}'': The only children to appear are in a town which the player cannot enter without leaving his weapons at the gate.
** You are never unarmed in ''VideoGame/FableII'', but no matter what you use, you can't kill the kids. Oddly subverted in the intro sequence, in which [[spoiler:Lord Lucien shoots dead your sister Rose, who is barely older than you are, and then shoots you with enough force to send you through a window and down a fall you only survive because of your magical heritage. Near the game's ending, Lucien will kill your spouse and children, offscreen.]]
* Averted by ''Videogame/FireEmblem''; many units are children, and they will die [[PermaDeath permanently]] if defeated in combat.
* Unlike its predecessors (see below) where killing a child would give you the very negative child killer rep, ''VideoGame/{{Fallout 3}}'' makes children completely unkillable. They'll survive mini-nukes undamaged. This restricts an Evil player's options in Little Lamplight, a town populated entirely by kids. While children are invulnerable to harm, a "[[VideogameCrueltyPotential creative]]" player will discover that you can ''enslave'' some, sell drugs and guns to them, bully them, taunt one to run away from his neglectful mother and the evil solution
way. A heavily pregnant woman went to the "The Power of Atom" quest ([[spoiler:detonating the atomic bomb]]) will kill the two children living in Megaton.
** It's actually still played straight during "The Power of Atom." If you [[spoiler:activate the bomb but do not detonate it,]] leave town, and come back before you finish the quest, you'll find that the two children in Megaton have mysteriously vanished.
** In addition, the company that made the game explicitly prevents discussion of game mods that allow child killing
bathroom on the official forums, and has had videos of child killing mods removed from youtube by claiming copyright infringement.
** There are also points in the story where the player character is a child during the game. You however are
train was moving (it's not affected by miraculous immortality other wasteland children have and can kill a child via killing yourself.
** They've continued the policy in ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim Skyrim]]'', where again children are immune to damage.
*** Not only that, but the child seen in Helgen, the town destroyed at the beginning of the game, was specifically shown to escape the dragon and can be found later on as one of the few survivors. The Dark Brotherhood questline has one that just ''looks'' like a child, having been turned into a vampire centuries earlier, but when the [[spoiler:sanctuary is raided and destroyed]] during the questline, she is one of the survivors - and is not there ''at all'' if the player chooses to wipe it out himself instead of joining.
** ''VideoGame/FalloutNewVegas'' picks
stated how fast). She somehow ended up this policy from its predecessor. The game makes a point of this feature by including a quest where one can find a range finder in order to use a prewar super weapon, the ARCHIMEDES II. However the player character needs to obtain said rangefinder from a child named Max who believes that it a toy. Max can not be killed in order to get the rangefinder off of his body, you must pay him a thousand caps (20 with a high barter skill), or pick pocket him. However Max constantly runs pushing so it is impossible to pick pocket him unless he is asleep.
* This is applied strangely in ''[[VideoGame/FirstEncounterAssaultRecon F.E.A.R.]]'' Alma is already an ImplacableMan, but the moment you have to actually face off against her, she goes from her CreepyChild StringyHairedGhostGirl form to a teenage one. This makes absolutely no sense plot-wise, and seems to be solely so you won't have to face down and eventually shoot a little girl -- even one that's already dead.
** It does make sense in the way that Alma is [[OlderThanTheyLook actually grown-up,]] since she already [[spoiler:gave birth to the player character]]. Thus, you see her "real form" instead of the mind-projection of a little girl.
*** Canonically, she was an adult when she died [[spoiler: -- but, IIRC, only ''fifteen'' when
hard, she gave birth --]] but right into the toilet. [[OhCrap This was one of those trains that empties right onto the tracks.]] the mother passed out from the pain. When her brother-in-law [[SomethingWeForgot finally checked up on her two hours later]], she was ''unconscious nearly found unconscious and bloody in the entire time'', bathroom. They stopped the train and would have ''no frame of reference finally recovered the infant who had been [[IncrediblyLamePun dumped]] and [[WhyWontYouDie left behind on the tracks for herself looking like this''. It doesn't over two hours]]. The baby wasn't healthy, but with hospital care she survived. Read about it [[http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-522657/Baby-survives-falling-rail-tracks-mother-gave-birth-moving-trains-toilet.html here]].
* For ''literal'' Infant Immortality, see [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brooke_Greenberg Brooke Greenberg]].
* Countries with capital punishment generally won't execute a pregnant woman so as to not
make a lot of sense that she'd psychically project herself as what is, to her, virtually a complete stranger, rather than the image she probably has of herself.
** There's also
innocent baby pay for her crime. In the small matter of Alma [[spoiler:raping 17th to 19th century in England, male jailers in women's prisons had a nice secondary income providing the main character]] at the end of the second game. Doing that while she still looks like a little girl would probably cause even worse publicity than being able to shoot her.
* In ''FinalFantasy Fables: ChocobosDungeon'', the journey into people's memories starts by chasing a mysterious flying infant, worried that he'll be hurt. He somehow manages to escape the monsters unscathed, though Chocobo has a hard time finding his way through.
* ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAuto'': In a game where you can beat people to death, blow up cars, and just be an all around psychopath, there are no kids.
pregnancies.
** It also regularly {{Lampshades}} the absence of pets.
* [[CheerfulChild Gwen]] in ''GuildWars Prophecies'' is invulnerable. When she [[SheIsAllGrownUp appears again as an adult]] in ''Eye of the North'', she [[SquishyWizard isn't]].
* Averted in ''{{Limbo}}'', seeing as
Seemingly nearly every reaction to you screwing up female receiving a puzzle death sentence in that game causes your protagonist (a small boy) to meet a grisly and painful death.
* The reason why there aren't any children in ''VideoGame/HalfLife2'' - so they can't be killed. The game designers turned it at their advantage though: the childless city was explained in-game by a "suppression field" which prevents certain protein chains necessary for embryonic development from forming, according to Doctor Kleiner. There's a great atmospheric moment at the start of the game, when you pass by a playground and, if you look at the deserted swing and the broken doll on the ground, you can hear a distant, fading kid's laughter.
** Amusingly lampshaded once [[spoiler: the suppression field goes down - Kleiner suggests via broadcast that, while the Citadel's reactor is going critical, "now
this period would be an excellent time for procreation" for those who are out of the city.]]
* Depending on which games in ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'' series and how good the player is, this can either be played straight or subverted with a child Link.
** The Stalchildren and Skull Kids are what's left of [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin children]] that died or got lost. In ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOcarinaOfTime'', you even meet a teen in the Lost Woods only for him to have disappeared when you come back later. [[CreepyChild A Kokiri girl infamously explains that he's become a Skull Kid]].
* In ''VideoGame/TheSims 2'' and ''VideoGame/TheSims 3'', babies and toddlers cannot be killed in any way. If they are caught in a fire they will miraculously escape, and if their needs drop too low, a social worker will take them away. The same is true for children, except they actually can burn to death, drown, or get crushed by a satellite or meteor. They just can't get electrocuted, scared to death, or starved to death (the social worker will come first). Pregnant women also cannot die. However, ghosts in ''3'' can reproduce (with other ghosts or with living Sims), and the babies are sometimes ghosts who will then age like normal Sims.
* This is in full swing in the ''VideoGame/{{Siren}}'' series... which actually works ''against'' the player, as they enforce it by having children panic and curl into a ball before they're actually even hit, yielding a game over. If you're playing one, you're currently playing a stage where not using stealth, rather than just being dangerous and wasteful, is ''completely impossible''. If you have one with you, you have to take great care to protect it -- and a stray hit during combat that connects with them causes them to panic as well.
** Both an example and exception in ''VideoGame/{{Siren}}: Blood Curse''. On escort missions, you can hurt and kill the person you have to protect. Except 10-year-old Bella. Your weapon has no effect on her. Likewise, enemies can hurt and kill escorts... but when Bella "dies" it's by covering
'plead her head and cowering in fear. And when you play as Bella, instead of taking damage from enemy attacks and eventually dying, you cower in fear and scream "NO!" if an enemy gets too close to you, causing you to lose. Technically a way of avoiding showing Bella's obvious death. Yet, the game also creates an exception later when [[spoiler:Bella is shown later on having turned into a shibito, the zombie-like creatures in the village. The condition for becoming a shibito is to die, so obviously something happened to Bella. An earlier cutscene shows a large log rolling towards her and a quick cut to black, indicating that's what might have killed her.]]
* Tails from ''SonicTheHedgehog'' cannot die if you play as both Sonic and Tails in ''Sonic 2 and 3''.
* ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' follows this to a T. You can slaughter whole towns, but not the children in them. Apparently it's better to let the children get along without their parents that you slaughtered than to also kill them. Then again, given respawn, that's not an issue...so it raises the question of why one can't kill a level 5 child since they'd just come back anyway.
** The reason is, Blizzard doesn't want either side to seem AlwaysChaoticEvil to the other, and child murder is a good way of crossing the MoralEventHorizon. This is also lampshaded with an in-game holiday dedicated to helping the orphans in every city.
** Averted somewhat lore-wise, given the presence of [=NPCs=] such as [[http://www.wowwiki.com/Pamela_Redpath Pamela Redpath.]]
*** Even then if an undead child has
belly'- i.e., claim to be depicted, they have to be depicted as that of a ghost. So yeah, no zombie kids for Children's Week.
* It's only to be expected that ''VideoGame/ZooTycoon''
pregnant, just in case. Even if it was unlikely, it would honor this trope, being a family game. It's worth mentioning because of how blatantly delay the Infant Immortality rule is applied: if predators escape or case for a guest ends up in their enclosures, they'll leap on and attack adult guests, while completely ignoring children. Hence, a runaway lion or tyrannosaur will charge right past a dozen kids to pounce on a grown-up.
* Subverted several times in the Zombie game ''VideoGame/TheyHunger'', sadly. In the hospital, a baby is heard crying,
few weeks until it abruptly stops. The player cannot get to the nursery immediately, and when he does... There is a ribb left in the bed for newborn. And later in the mountains, the player has to kill resurrected tiny, tiny skeletons that have the hunger...
* The ''SonicBlastMan'' arcade game (as well as the SNES version) featured a stage where the player must punch out a truck that is about to cross path with a runaway carriage with a baby boy inside it. If the player fails the stage, it will show that [[spoiler:the carriage managed to get safely out of the truck's way, only for Sonic Blast Man to get run over in its place.]]
* It's a good thing this trope is in effect in ''Videogame/ShiningTheHolyArk''. When you're exploring a HauntedHouse you come across a child called Justin who is searching for his father. You've had to fight tooth and nail to get to the point where Justin is. Justin later turns up in the sequel ''Videogame/ShiningForceIII'' as one of the main protagonists. There are some allusions to one of the [[BigBad Big Bads]] [[BloodBath bathing in children's blood in order to retain
she got her beautiful image]], but we never see it happen.
period.
** However averted in a battle of Shining Force III where three of the five refugees you're tasked with saving are children, they have the lowest hit points in the group so the enemies will target the children over the adults. And yes, you are treated to a 3D cinematic of enemy knights slaughtering helpless civilian children.
* In ''VisualNovel/VirtuesLastReward'', Quark is the only person you will never explicitly see dead. Everyone else is fair game.
** Though it is highly unlikely he survives [[spoiler:any of the endings where the whole facility goes up in an explosion]].
* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXII,'' you will occasionally
''Or'' she could be joined examined by a [[FourIsDeath fourth]] party member. The only guest party member who doesn't eventually die is Larsa, who is twelve.
* In
team of up to twelve (!) midwives, to see whether she was ''actually'' pregnant. This, sadly for the Japanese version of ''VideoGame/{{Scribblenauts}}'', child [=NPCs=] have infinite hit points.child, was not always accurate.



[[folder:Web Comics]]
* In ''WebComic/EightBitTheater'', Black Mage has orphaned a little boy multiple times, although this has been subverted (sort of) when he spared the boy a couple times out of a sick perverse joy in seeing the mental scars he causes pile up.
** Comes back to bite him when [[spoiler:it turns out that the kid grows up to become a powerful sage, travels back in time to the start of the universe to make it in his image and prevent Black Mage from scarring him, waits for billions of years because of his future mistake of accidentally sending someone to the start of the universe before himself, and grows up to be Sarda, who finds endless and creative ways of torturing Black Mage.]]
* Lampshaded in [[http://acidreflux.ficwad.com/comic/21 this strip]] from ''Acid Reflux''.
* In ''Webcomic/TheAdventuresOfDrMcNinja'', a baby is launched in the air by automated zombie quarantine wall. The good doctor, naturally, catches him, [[http://drmcninja.com/page.php?pageNum=49&issue=8 much to his own surprise]].
* Mentioned in ''WebComic/GoldCoinComics'', when Lance survived a childhood fire where everyone else appears to have died.
* ''RobAndElliot'': Rob attempts to take this to it's logical extreme by making a bulletproof vest out of live babies.

to:

[[folder:Web Comics]]
----
!!Exceptions:

[[folder:Ballads]]
* Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} #20 ''[[http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/child/ch020.htm The Cruel Mother]]'' depicts the title character murdering her newborn babies or baby, depending on the variant.
* In ''WebComic/EightBitTheater'', Black Mage many variants of Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} #106 ''Literature/TheFamousFlowerOfServingMen'', the heroine's evil mother has orphaned her baby killed.
* In Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} #21 ''[[http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/child/ch021.htm The Maid and the Palmer]]'', the palmer taunts the woman with his knowledge of where she buried the babies she has borne and murdered.
* In Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} #173 ''[[http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/child/ch173.htm Mary Hamilton]]'', Mary drowns her newborn baby. She's caught and executed.
-->''She?s tyed it in her apron\\
And she?s thrown it in the sea;\\
Says, Sink ye, swim ye, bonny wee babe!\\
You?l neer get mair o me.''
* In TomLehrer's "Irish Ballad", the heroine kills her entire family, including cutting her baby brother in half and [[HumanResources serving him to guests for dinner]] because she was ''bored''.
* The title character of the Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} [[http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/child/ch093.htm "Long Lankin"]] (#93) kills
a little boy multiple times, although lord's infant son (really very messily) either because the lord didn't pay him for building his castle, or just because he is a serial killer.
* In the horribly anti-Semitic Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} "Little Sir Hugh" (#55) the protagonist is killed by a "Jew's daughter" and thrown into a well --
this has been subverted (sort of) when he spared was a fairly recurrent medieval legend (it also appears in ''Literature/TheCanterburyTales'').
* The Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} "Captain Carr" (#178) features
the boy titular captain burning down his enemy's house, killing his wife and children (after a couple times out of lengthy siege, because the wife is a Badass).
* Erlkönig is about a farmer riding furiously through the night to get his
sick perverse joy in seeing the mental scars he causes pile up.
** Comes back to bite him when [[spoiler:it turns out
son home. The feverish young boy becomes increasingly distraught, claiming that the kid grows up to become a powerful sage, travels back in time to the start of the universe to make it in his image and prevent Black Mage from scarring him, waits for billions of years because of his future mistake of accidentally sending someone to the start of the universe before himself, and grows up to be Sarda, who finds endless and creative ways of torturing Black Mage.]]
* Lampshaded in [[http://acidreflux.ficwad.com/comic/21 this strip]] from ''Acid Reflux''.
* In ''Webcomic/TheAdventuresOfDrMcNinja'', a baby
Elf King is launched in the air by automated zombie quarantine wall. The good doctor, naturally, catches him, [[http://drmcninja.com/page.php?pageNum=49&issue=8 much to his own surprise]].
* Mentioned in ''WebComic/GoldCoinComics'', when Lance survived a childhood fire where everyone else appears to have died.
* ''RobAndElliot'': Rob attempts
trying to take this him. Whether the Elf King is really there and trying to kidnap the boy or if it's logical extreme just a fever hallucination is left ambiguous, but by making a bulletproof vest out of live babies.the time the father reaches their home the boy has died.



[[folder:Web Original]]
* In [[http://www.thatguywiththeglasses.com/videolinks/thatguywiththeglasses/ask-thatguy/521-ask-thatguy-episode-43 episode 4.3]] of the ''WebVideo/AskThatGuyWithTheGlasses'' segment of ''Website/ThatGuyWithTheGlasses'', he is asked what the plot of a movie with no cliches would be. He responds: "I would say, 2 1/2 hours of blowing up a baby. Think about it: have you ever seen a baby blow up in a movie before?"
* The child supervillain August Prince from ''Literature/{{Worm}}'' has this explicitly as his superpower; his presence renders people incapable of deliberately attacking or harming him.

to:

[[folder:Web Original]]
[[folder:Comic Books]]
* The death of Arthur Jr., Comicbook/{{Aquaman}}'s infant son during TheSeventies, who was killed in issue 60 after he was suffocated by Aquaman's nemesis, Black Manta. Notable in that the death occurred at a time when UsefulNotes/TheComicsCode of Authority's censorship standards were still rather strict.
* In [[http://www.thatguywiththeglasses.com/videolinks/thatguywiththeglasses/ask-thatguy/521-ask-thatguy-episode-43 episode 4.3]] one issue of ''TheAuthority'', the ''WebVideo/AskThatGuyWithTheGlasses'' segment of ''Website/ThatGuyWithTheGlasses'', he is asked what the plot of a movie with no cliches would be. He responds: "I would say, 2 1/2 hours of blowing up a baby. Think about it: have you ever seen a baby villains blow up a maternity ward full of babies, failing to get a specific baby that they were too lazy to check was there.
* In the current ''BoosterGold'' series, the bad guys will deal with their foes by smothering them
in the cradle. This actually befalls Rex Hunter, and requires Rip Hunter to completely conceal his origin, and Booster Gold to keep and reinforce his reputation as FunPersonified, because they know they do not have Infant Immortality.
* In MarvelComics ''{{Captain Mar-Vell}}'' series, Genis time-travels to the future and meets his own evil, power-mad son, Ely. To defeat him, Genis [[spoiler:time-travels again and murders his son in the cradle.]]
** [[spoiler:'Cause raising him not to be evil and power-mad would be too much work]]?
* Quite horrifically avoided in the series ''Crawlspace: [=XXXombies=],'' when the zombie outbreak hits
a movie before?"
maternity ward.
* The child supervillain August Prince ''{{Planetary}}'' issue introducing the {{Big Bad}}s has them disposing of the [[AlternateCompanyEquivalent local-reality analogues]] of GreenLantern, {{Superman}}, and WonderWoman before they assume their Super Hero identities. Naturally, the Superman analogue is a baby at the time, and is killed entirely offhandedly.
** And let's NOT go into how Drummer was rescued... Worst. Rescue. Ever. Indeed.
* In the "One Man's War" one-shot of ''{{Preacher}}'', a young girl gets half of her head blown off in the crossfire between special forces operatives and terrorists.
* ''RoadToPerdition'' has Connor Looney, the primary villain, killing both Michael O'Sullivan's wife and his younger son. Connor thought that the boy in question was actually the older son, Michael, who had witnessed him and his father gunning down a rival, and did not believe Michael's assurance that his son was a man of honor.
* In ''FinalCrisis: [[TheFlash Rogues' Revenge]]'', [[TheDragon Libra]] attempts to coerce the Rogues into joining the Secret Society by holding the Weather Wizard's baby son [[HostageForMacGuffin hostage]]. The psychotic speedster Inertia, [[NiceJobBreakingItHero who had been released on Libra's own orders]], decides to derail the plan and casually blows the baby up. Shortly thereafter, the Rogues kill him.
* ''{{Ultimate X-Men}}'' had a Sentinel incinerating a young mutant mother and her infant.
* In ''ComicBook/TheWalkingDead'''s [[WhamEpisode Wham Issue]], [[spoiler:Rick's baby]] is among the ''many'' casualties. Aside
from ''Literature/{{Worm}}'' that, several of the zombies in the background are children.
* In ''Comicbook/{{Watchmen}}'', the Comedian, in a flashback scene, blows away a Vietnamese woman pregnant with ''his own child''.
** Also, there's Rorschach investigating the case of Blaire, a very young girl who
has this explicitly as been abducted... [[spoiler: He finds her too late; she has already been murdered and her remains fed to the killer's dogs.]]
* Another aversion from MarvelComics: One of the things that made {{Magneto}} from ''Comicbook/{{X-Men}}'' turn into a psycho would-be world conqueror was the death by fire of
his superpower; daughter Anya, who was somewhere between the ages of 2 and 5. A group of humans were attempting to beat Magneto, possibly to death, for having extorted his presence renders people incapable full pay out of deliberately a cheating boss with powers he had just manifested that day, while at the same time his daughter was screaming out the window of the second story of an inn on fire. Having just learned he ''had'' powers, he couldn't control them well enough to free himself of his attackers and save his daughter until she had burned to death, at which point he went temporarily insane and killed everyone except his wife (everyone on the street, at least, and some sources indicate possibly everyone in the city). This led his wife to run from him in terror. It is possible that the fire at the inn was arson, given the remarkable coincidence of the inn burning down at the ''same'' time as the gang attacking or harming him.him.
* In ''{{Fray}}'', Urkonn the demon Watcher kills a young girl Fray regards as her little sister, then [[MotivationalLie blames it on the vampires in order to spur her into defeating the vampires]].
* ''ComicBook/{{Runaways}}'': [[spoiler: Gert]] dies, becoming one of the first teen superheroes to do so.
* ''ComicBook/TheSandman'' has a sequence with Death doing her rounds. One of the people she collects is a young baby, a victim of cot death when its mother leaves the room to warm a bottle for it.
* This trope is usually averted in ''ComicBook/TeenTitans'', not with the members themselves but by their children. And this usually only happens to the five founding members. Donna Troy's son and stepdaughter were both killed in a car crash, along with their father. Wally West's twin children were aborted in the womb by the second Zoom, although this was undone some issues later and the two are currently alive. Baby Wildebeest also applies, as while he could shift from child to full grown monster, he was still technically a child when Superboy-Prime blew a hole through his torso. Tempest's wife and infant son were both missing since ''InfiniteCrisis'', and it was only recently stated the two had been dead since. Finally, Roy Harper's daughter Lian, the very first Titan child, was crushed to death in ''CryForJustice'' during the destruction of Star City.
* {{Punisher}} villain [[spoiler:General Zakharov]]. It's revealed in a flashback that [[spoiler:in order to draw an enemy force out of hiding, Zakharov THREW A BABY OFF A CLIFF]].
** In another story arc mafia boss Nicky Cavella killed a rival boss' two young sons and fed them to him.
* ComicBook/LesLegendaires plays with this trope interestingly: the story takes place in a world where, thanks to a curse, everyone is trapt into a children's body and unable to grow up beyond the age of twelve. And the serie is not afraid to kill off characters, so we ''do'' see children being killed ''everytime'' someone die onscreen, but they aren't necessarly technically children.
* ''ComicBook/AmazonsAttack'' opens with members of the tribe butchering a father vacationing in Washinton, D.C. with his son.... and then as the child starts crying they slaughter him too. It all goes downhill from there, folks...
* In the MaximumCarnage storyline Carnage killed several children in his rampage.
* Franchise/{{Batman}}'s arch enemy The Joker has killed many children, some examples include the brutal killing of 15 year old Jason Todd in "A Death in the Family" and on at least one occasion he blew up a school full of children.
* In ''Comicbook/{{Flashpoint}}'', Joe Chill accidentally kills 8 year old Bruce Wayne instead of his parents.



[[folder:Western Animation]]
* How many cat attacks has [[WesternAnimation/AnAmericanTail Fievel]] survived in the movies? He even climbs back up a cat's throat in the first movie and the sequel. His baby sister Yasha, [[WhatHappenedToTheMouse when she does actually appear]], is never put in any real danger.
* On ''WesternAnimation/{{Histeria}}!'', Big Fat Baby survives a ton of abuse in The History of Poland sketch.
* On ''{{Squidbillies}}'', this trope is invoked and has a [[LampshadeHanging lampshade hung on it]], as the Sherrif [[PaperThinDisguise disguises himself as a baby]] so that a pair of monsters won't kill him. It doesn't work.
--->'''Granny''': "They hate babies! Quick, nobody dress like a baby!"
* Any cartoon with a BadlyBatteredBabysitter.
* Played for laughs in ''WesternAnimation/TheTripletsOfBelleville''. During the [[ChaseScene car chase]] one of the Mafia's cars narrowly avoids hitting a screaming woman with a baby carriage by steering to the side and crashing. A second car does, however, impact with the baby carriage - and crumples like an accordion, while the baby carriage and its laughing occupant remains completely unscathed.
* Since Tommy and friends on ''{{Rugrats}}'' can safely pass through areas such as garages, attics, restaurants, post offices, miniature golf courses, bowling alleys, shopping malls, museums, fairs, Las Vegas, or [[TheRugratsMovie the forest]] on their own, they don't really need the "supervision" that they get.
* [[TheSimpsons Maggie Simpson]] has shown to survive and evade situations that any character of an older age within the series would otherwise not be as lucky in. An excellent instance is in episode "The Call of the Simpsons", though there are few other similar instances.

to:

[[folder:Western Animation]]
[[folder:FanWorks]]
* How many cat attacks has [[WesternAnimation/AnAmericanTail Fievel]] survived Averted hard in FanFic/TheConversionBureauTheOtherSideOfTheSpectrum-
** The TCB Ponies have zero qualms about potioning small children, even shoving it down their throats if needed. [[CreepyChild This does not]] [[MindRape end well for them.]]
** And on the other side, it's perfectly acceptable to ''shoot'' said newfoal children, especially since they're now the enemy and would happily force potion down people's throats, all
in the movies? He name of [[InsistentTerminology spreading]] [[YouKeepUsingThatWord harmony]]. It's even climbs back up seen as a cat's throat MercyKill of sorts.
* [[BrainwashedAndCrazy The Traitor Legions]] of ''FanFic/TheGodEmpressOfPonykind'' aren't too picky when it comes to massacres; when Celestia's forces arrive in Manehattan shortly after a battle, they find plenty of dead civilians, including foals and unborn children.
** Scorpan
in the first movie and the sequel. His baby sister Yasha, [[WhatHappenedToTheMouse when she does actually appear]], is never put sequel ''The Warmistress of Equestria'' kills an entire family of griffons in any real danger.
* On ''WesternAnimation/{{Histeria}}!'', Big Fat Baby survives a ton of abuse in The History of Poland sketch.
* On ''{{Squidbillies}}'', this trope is invoked and has a [[LampshadeHanging lampshade hung on it]], as the Sherrif [[PaperThinDisguise disguises himself as a baby]] so
order to use BloodMagic, even taking time to note that a pair of monsters won't kill him. It doesn't work.
--->'''Granny''': "They hate babies! Quick, nobody dress like a baby!"
* Any cartoon with a BadlyBatteredBabysitter.
* Played for laughs in ''WesternAnimation/TheTripletsOfBelleville''. During
the [[ChaseScene car chase]] one of the Mafia's cars narrowly avoids hitting a screaming woman with a baby carriage by steering to the side and crashing. A second car does, however, impact with the baby carriage - and crumples like an accordion, while the baby carriage and its laughing occupant remains completely unscathed.
* Since Tommy and friends on ''{{Rugrats}}'' can safely pass through areas such as garages, attics, restaurants, post offices, miniature golf courses, bowling alleys, shopping malls, museums, fairs, Las Vegas, or [[TheRugratsMovie the forest]] on their own, they don't really need the "supervision" that they get.
* [[TheSimpsons Maggie Simpson]] has shown to survive and evade situations that any character of an older age within the series would otherwise not be as lucky in. An excellent instance is in episode "The Call of the Simpsons", though there are few other similar instances.
family had three children.




[[folder:Real Life]]
* A notable example of real-life infant immortality was just recently in the news. A baby stroller got nicked by a ''train''. The stroller was pushed at least ''20 feet away''. The mother and others went running up to the baby expecting the worst only to see the baby only slightly injured.
** It happened twice on the same train line in Melbourne Australia within a year.
* Also in Canada, a couple of months ago, an elderly woman was driving recklessly and almost killed a mother with a child in a stroller, kid was pushed away just in the right moment.
* When [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afriqiyah_Airways_Flight_771 Afriqiyah Airways Flight 771]] crashed in 2010, out of the 104 people on board the only survivor was a 9-year-old Dutch boy. A newsperson pointed out that in most plane crashes with survivors, the survivor's been a young child. Mainly because the luggage might be flying around, decapitating people, and the kids are too small to be decapitated by the flying luggage.
* There was one news story a couple years back in India, also involving a train, but in a different way. A heavily pregnant woman went to the bathroom on the train was moving (it's not stated how fast). She somehow ended up pushing so hard, she gave birth right into the toilet. [[OhCrap This was one of those trains that empties right onto the tracks.]] the mother passed out from the pain. When her brother-in-law [[SomethingWeForgot finally checked up on her two hours later]], she was found unconscious and bloody in the bathroom. They stopped the train and finally recovered the infant who had been [[IncrediblyLamePun dumped]] and [[WhyWontYouDie left behind on the tracks for over two hours]]. The baby wasn't healthy, but with hospital care she survived. Read about it [[http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-522657/Baby-survives-falling-rail-tracks-mother-gave-birth-moving-trains-toilet.html here]].
* For ''literal'' Infant Immortality, see [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brooke_Greenberg Brooke Greenberg]].
* Countries with capital punishment generally won't execute a pregnant woman so as to not make the innocent baby pay for her crime. In the 17th to 19th century in England, male jailers in women's prisons had a nice secondary income providing the pregnancies.
** Seemingly nearly every female receiving a death sentence in this period would 'plead her belly'- i.e., claim to be pregnant, just in case. Even if it was unlikely, it would delay the case for a few weeks until she got her period.
** ''Or'' she could be examined by a team of up to twelve (!) midwives, to see whether she was ''actually'' pregnant. This, sadly for the child, was not always accurate.

to:

\n[[folder:Real Life]]\n[[folder:Gamebooks]]
* A notable example ''Literature/CanYouSurviveTheZombieApocalypse'' averts -- an elementary school's worth of real-life infant immortality was just recently in the news. A baby stroller got nicked by a ''train''. The stroller was pushed at least ''20 feet away''. The mother children can die, and others went running up to the baby expecting the worst only to see the baby only slightly injured.
** It happened twice on the same train line in Melbourne Australia within a year.
* Also in Canada, a couple of months ago, an elderly woman was driving recklessly and almost killed a mother with a
you run into many child in a stroller, kid was pushed away just in the right moment.
* When [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afriqiyah_Airways_Flight_771 Afriqiyah Airways Flight 771]] crashed in 2010, out of the 104 people on board the only survivor was a 9-year-old Dutch boy. A newsperson pointed out that in most plane crashes with survivors, the survivor's been a young child. Mainly because the luggage might be flying around, decapitating people, and the kids are too small to be decapitated by the flying luggage.
* There was one news story a couple years back in India, also involving a train, but in a different way. A heavily pregnant woman went to the bathroom on the train was moving (it's not stated how fast). She somehow ended up pushing so hard, she gave birth right into the toilet. [[OhCrap This was one of those trains that empties right onto the tracks.]] the mother passed out from the pain. When her brother-in-law [[SomethingWeForgot finally checked up on her two hours later]], she was found unconscious and bloody in the bathroom. They stopped the train and finally recovered the infant who had been [[IncrediblyLamePun dumped]] and [[WhyWontYouDie left behind on the tracks for over two hours]]. The baby wasn't healthy, but with hospital care she survived. Read about it [[http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-522657/Baby-survives-falling-rail-tracks-mother-gave-birth-moving-trains-toilet.html here]].
* For ''literal'' Infant Immortality, see [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brooke_Greenberg Brooke Greenberg]].
* Countries with capital punishment generally won't execute a pregnant woman so as to not make the innocent baby pay for her crime. In the 17th to 19th century in England, male jailers in women's prisons had a nice secondary income providing the pregnancies.
** Seemingly nearly every female receiving a death sentence in this period would 'plead her belly'- i.e., claim to be pregnant, just in case. Even if it was unlikely, it would delay the case for a few weeks until she got her period.
** ''Or'' she could be examined by a team of up to twelve (!) midwives, to see whether she was ''actually'' pregnant. This, sadly for the child, was not always accurate.
zombies.



----
!!Exceptions:

[[folder:Anime]]
* ''BattleAngelAlita'': In addition to the CrapsackWorld of The Scrapyard where villains have no qualms about killing children, there's also the [[IAmAHumanitarian infant-meat]]-fancying Venusians and the [[{{Immortality}} "Methuzalized"]] space colonists who regard "the next generation as a threat, not a promise" and regularly send death squads after children. There's also the ChildSoldiers of Jeru/Ketheres, who Alita and her new friends from Mars try to save a day too late, and the orphans on the Space Karate guy's planet.
* Kentaro Miura shows repeatedly in the ''{{Berserk}}'' manga that children do not get special immunity from the horrors of the story's universe.
** The dead body of a little boy can be seen among the victims of the bandit leader from the first major story arc.
** Later in the second arc Guts is given a ride by a kind priest and a young girl who he takes care of. The three are attacked by demonically possessed skeletons and the young girl Collette is brutally killed. She then returns possessed and kills the priest before going after Guts along with the rest of the undead. Guts then has to kill her again, along with the rest of the skeletons.
** After becoming separated from the rest of the Hawks during an earlier battle, Casca reveals to Guts that long before he joined them a young boy who acted as a page to the mercenary band was killed in battle. She says it is the first time that she truly saw Griffith be disturbed and depressed by something and later is shown to have deeply affected Griffith mentally.
** During the Band of the Hawks arc, Guts carries out an assassination order by Griffith on the King's brother and then is forced to kill the brother's young son because the boy saw too much, an act that shakes him up terribly -- not the very least because the boy reminded Guts of...well, himself when he was the kid's age.
*** Judeau later points out that the son was being groomed to marry the Princess who Griffith also wished to marry (as it was the most direct path to become king). By having the boy killed, Griffith has a much easier shot at marrying the Princess and as such gaining his dream, so it is likely he planned for the boy to be there and Guts having to kill him. This turns out to be one of the factors which eventually led to Guts [[spoiler:leaving the Hawks]].
** After [[spoiler: rescuing Griffith after a year of torture]] the Band of the Hawk gets aid from a young family which includes several children who long supported the group. Shortly afterward, the Black Dog Knights, a group of soldiers composed of the worst rapists, murderers and criminals that Midland has to offer appear, having been sent by the King to kill Griffith. The group, led by Wyald, a truly nasty piece of work of an Apostle, question the mother before she and her family including the young children are raped and killed. And if that wasn't bad enough, they then proceed to dismember their bodies (yes, including the kids) [[DeadGuyOnDisplay and carry them naked on poles into battle with the Hawks]], who are all disgusted at the sight.
** That said, [[spoiler:Rickert, the youngest of the Band of the Hawk, is the only other survivor of the Eclipse besides Guts and Casca, and that was only because he was separated from the main body of the Hawks before Griffith's Behelit activated, otherwise he would have been branded and eaten along with the rest. He did almost die when the below-mentioned Rosine and the Count from the third manga story massacred the men with him, but he was rescued by the Skull Knight]].
** The Misty Valley arc main villain Rosine started out as a cute, smart tomboy with a ''horrible'' home life who loved a certain fairy tale. She later sacrifices her parents to the Godhand and becomes a elf/fairy creature similar to that found in her favorite fairy tale and begins to attack the nearby village killing people and animals and kidnapping children to turn into twisted little elf/fairy creatures that play kickball with eyeballs, play war to the death, and rape each other for fun (remember they are still technically children and are acting in a twisted way like the kids they are.) By the time Guts reaches her, she is insane, and has to be killed in order to prevent her from hurting any more people (and given that Guts is still in hardcore post-Eclipse vengeance mode at this point, all he really cares about is killing another Apostle). During the arc you see that she UsedToBeASweetKid who only wanted to have some happiness that she never got at home turning into a case of ''AlasPoorVillain'' especially considering that once she dies, she, like anyone who makes a sacrifice to the Godhand and becomes a demon, is sent straight to hell.
** Also, those eyeball kick balling, to-the-death war playing elf/fairy creatures that Rosine made from kidnapped children? When they are killed [[ThisWasHisTrueForm they turn back into kids]], leading to Guts being seen as a child killer.
*** Guts himself did also indulge in a bit of child-mass-slaughter. Sure, they were [[spoiler:forcibly polymorphed by Rosine and reverted to human form upon death]], but he KNEW that, and he was still grinning maniacally while he crushed them.
*** And also, there's [[spoiler:Rosine's MoralityPet Jill, a somewhat younger girl that calls her "older sister Rosine" ("Rosine-neechan" in the original Japanese). She survives the arc, though not before being in lethal danger at least twice.]]
** In the Millennium Falcon arc, women and children in a village are constantly kidnapped by trolls. The woman are raped till they become pregnant with more trolls, but the rotting bodies of children skewered on poles are seen in the den.
*** As the trolls are being subdued by Guts, those captured escape with the rest of his party and many children are seen with them, acting as a slight subversion.
** And collectively, the most disturbing case in the series so far is what happened to [[spoiler: Guts and Casca's own child.]] When Guts returned to the Hawks and before the crew set out to rescue Griffith, he and Casca had an emotional reunion that ended up with them [[spoiler: making love, with said union resulting in Guts impregnating Casca.]] Though [[spoiler: pregnancy]] was unknown to them at the time, it's assumed that [[spoiler: the baby was developing normally in the womb]]... until the Eclipse happened. When it goes down, '' everything'' [[FromBadToWorse goes down,]] with [[spoiler: Griffith, now the demon lord Femto, raping the pregnant Casca in front of Guts, tainting her womb with his demonic seed and thus poisoning her unborn child.]] After the Eclipse, the now traumatized and insane Casca [[spoiler: undergoes a miscarriage from the event, resulting in a misshapen fetus being born that has been corrupted by evil.]] Guts, seeing the [[spoiler: child as nothing more than a byproduct of an event he failed to prevent, tries to kill it immediately, but because of Casca's intervention, the child disappears at daybreak.]]
* In ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'', there's this whole deal with a little boy having his soul separated from his body and placed in a parakeet's body by a Hollow...
** We see ghosts of children several times, their deaths are not shown on screen though.
* ''BlueGender''. Things don't go well for poor [[spoiler:Yung]], and during the massacre of [[spoiler:Yung]]'s group by the Blue, we see one of the BigCreepyCrawlies slash at a mother holding an infant (Mom dies; kid goes flying). Needless to say, if the blow didn't kill the baby, hitting the ground will.
* In ''Anime/CodeGeass'', (albeit, off-screen) as Britannian soldiers are gunning down Japanese, the viewer hears a crying infant, followed shortly by a hail of gunfire.
** Also, there's several instances in the general massacres scenes where you can see smaller bodies, clearly of children and teenagers, albeit undetailed and from a distance.
** The raid on the Order of Geass.
* The [[DGrayMan Earl]] [[BigBad of]] [[MonsterClown Millennium]] doesn't care how old you are; as long as you lost someone close to you, he will be there to turn you into an Akuma.
* ''Manga/DetectiveConan'' occasionally touches on the deaths of children, though always in the backstory providing a motive for the current killer. The closest it has come to killing a child on-screen was the start of the sixth NonSerialMovie ''Phantom of Baker Street'', which [[StartsWithASuicide starts with]] a ten-year old ChildProdigy jumping of a skyscraper.
* Horrendously averted in ''{{Devilman}}'': Two of the worst deaths are destined for [[spoiler: Sachiko, Akira's little neighbor, and Miki's younger brother]]. In fact, in regards to {{Devilman}} and DevilmanLady, GoNagai has absolutely NO compunction about killing children and babies in the most horrific way possible and showing it very clearly, preferably in front of their parents.
** The ''{{Grendizer}}'' manga (also a Go Nagai production) has a villain who averts this twice- in a flashback he kidnaps all the kids from planet Fleed and says he'll give them back in exchange for the planet's weapons. When they give up the weapons, he gives back the kids- ''by dropping them from 30,000 feet in the air''. And in the present, he steals GreatMazinger and ties up a bunch of kids as well as people Duke cares about all over the robot so Grendizer can't fight back.
** There's also an episode of MazingerZ where [[spoiler: Shirou's crush, Lorelei, was a RobotGirl with the body of a 10-year-old cutie... and [[KidWithTheLeash in control of a huge mecha beast]]. [[TearJerker She doesn't make it]].]] In another, Sayaka's cousin Yuri (who is actually ''crippled'') is kidnapped and placed inside a capsule in a mecha beast's head; she's luckier than the others, though, and survives.
** Also averted in ''ViolenceJack''. The first arc ''alone'' is filled with graphic deaths of young kids.
* Lucy from ''Manga/ElfenLied'' has no problem killing children in the most horrible ways, including [[spoiler:the male protagonist's little sister Kanae]]. Also young Diclonius children get killed off regularly, often in gruesome experiments (leading to a notably heartbreaking scene in the anime).
** There's also [[YourHeadASplode what Lucy did]] to the [[KidsAreCruel cruel kids]] in her {{backstory}}, though after [[spoiler:[[MoralEventHorizon what they did to the poor little dog that she had started caring for]]]], a good number of fans felt that those kids deserved ''worse''. She did, however, spare Mayu's dog.
* Averted in ''Anime/ErgoProxy'', when viewers are treated to a baby carriage falling down a flight of stairs in slow motion during the mall chase early on in the series; very much a shout-out to Eisenstein's ''[[Film/BattleshipPotemkin Bronenosets Potemkin]]'' 'Odessa stairs' scene. Later, the carriage is shown lying on its side in a puddle of (presumably the baby's) blood. However, that is certainly not the only baby to die in ''Ergo Proxy''. (Not a spoiler. Really.)
* Averted in ''EurekaSeven'', where, on one occasion, a little boy's death at the hands of the Scab Corals received an ironically graphic GoryDiscretionShot.
** Then there the shot of a mother ''actually'' smothering her crying infant just before some Corals find them and kill them both. Once again that was a GoryDiscretionShot. Plus the scene when Dominic tries to go looking for a replacement for Anemone.
* ''Manga/FistOfTheNorthStar''
** Several children die in the manga, but are spared in the TV series (notably Bat's younger brother Taki, who is murdered by one of Jackal's men; and Ryo, the kid at Shuu's hideout who died eating bread that Souther and his men poisoned). Strangely, the TV series "made up" for it by having several adult characters who survived the manga die instead (like both Harn Brothers instead of just Haz). In the first ''Raoh Den'' movie, the child-poisoning scene is restored.
** In contrast to the TV series, the original 1986 movie shows a group of nomads being massacred by camouflaged thugs while wandering the desert. The casualties include a young mother and her infant child.
* Definitely averted in ''Manga/FullmetalAlchemist'', to horrifying effect. There's the [[CheerfulChild Nina Tucker]] incident in which her crazed father [[BodyHorror merged her with the family dog]], Envy started the Ishvallan War by transforming himself into a soldier and shooting a child, Envy and Father have been shown to be PoweredByAForsakenChild, the [[ZombieMooks Doll Soldiers]] can be interpreted as children's souls put in freakish bodies...
** Yet for some reason Pride, a hundreds-of-years-old monster wearing the skin of a child, is the only surviving homunculus at the end of the series.
** In a strange ironic HilariousInHindsight way [[spoiler:the same character, Selim, died at the end of [[Anime/FullmetalAlchemist the 2003 anime version]]]]. Also, though a bit older than usual, [[spoiler:Edward dies in the 2003 anime (twice)]] only to be brought back (well..[[spoiler:not the "Real world" Edward though)]].
* Averting this is ''{{Genocyber}}'''s claim to fame, to the point that the most brutal and obvious example has ended up on at least one shock site.
* Horribly averted in ''GraveOfTheFireflies''. [[ForegoneConclusion They warned you]].
* In the ''{{Hellsing}}'' manga, one of the first images readers are shown during Millennium's invasion of London is a limp, bloody and unmistakably dead infant in the jaws of a [[NinjaPirateRobotZombie Vampire-Nazi.]]
* In ''VisualNovel/HigurashiNoNakuKoroNi'', [[CreepyChild Rika]] dies multiple times, in horrific ways. {{Tsundere}} Satoko also dies a few times, as well.
** Then again, ''no one'' is safe in Hinamizawa. Not the cute little 9 year olds, not the teenagers, not the annoying school kids, not the doctors, not even the random villagers.
** The general rule for both When They Cry series (Higurashi and Umineko) is that everyone in the series is fair game, and no it isn't just quick kills...
*** Played with in the first Episode(arc) of [[VisualNovel/UminekoNoNakuKoroNi Umineko]] where the "children" (just one of them is really a kid) survived until the end... But didn't survive the epilogue, anyway.
* In ''Manga/InuYasha'', Suikotsu's evil side emerges for the first time when a soldier kills an [[LittlestCancerPatient injured little girl]] he was trying to save. Worse, the soldier ''[[KickTheDog gloats]]'' [[KickTheDog about that]] since, in his view, [[ShootTheDog he spared the little girl from more pain]]. When the soldier tries to kill HIM, a panicked Suikotsu kills the other first with the same scalpel he was using to operate on his unfortunate little patient.
** Rin's ''first appearance'' has her [[spoiler:being brutally and graphically slaughtered by Kouga's wolves. Thankfully, she gets better.]]
*** Oh, and much later on? [[spoiler:''She gets dragged into Hell.'' Again, she gets better.]]
** [[spoiler: Kohaku]]. [[spoiler: Not only was he brainwashed into killing his dad and fellow Demon Slayers as well as injuring his older sister, but then he [[TakingTheBullet takes a fatal attack for her]] and dies. Then he's revived. But is BrainwashedAndCrazy. And it takes him a LOT to get better.]]
* Averted in the seventeenth volume of ''TheKindaichiCaseFiles'', "The Undying Butterflies" in which a twelve-year-old girl is the first victim of the story's murders.
* In ''Anime/{{Mobile Suit Gundam The 08th MS Team}}'', Shiro and his team are completely sickened when they see Zeon soldiers gun down a mother and her child for leaving their house at night.
** ''ZetaGundam'' specifically showed an infant body in the gassed colony 30 Bunch, and a mother and infant child are briefly shown dying when the Titans use the Colony Laser to destroy several colonies as a "demonstration".
** Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEED doesn't shy itself from averting the trope either [[spoiler: both with the girl that gave the origami flower to Kira being killed in the explosion that Yzak caused when he shot the refugee shuttle in which she was]]. There's also the shot [[spoiler:of a dead mother and her child in the ruins of Junius 7, which either shocked or caused a complete breakdown to the characters who entered the room where these bodies were.]]
* This idea is destroyed in ''Anime/NeonGenesisEvangelion''. By the end of the series EVERYONE is dead (sorta). some 14 year olds have suffered multiple, rather hideous deaths (impaled, eaten alive, impaled some more, then killed).
* Averted offscreen in ''Anime/{{Noir}}'', in the ''Intoccabile'' episodes, when a Mafia traitor gets questioned by the titular Intoccabile, with his wife and child in the next room to ensure his cooperation... and both get shot due to his hesitation. Also, Mirielle's older brother died when he was a young child in the assassination that killed her parents.
* Horrifically averted in ''NowAndThenHereAndThere''. The fact that the plot revolves around ChildSoldiers in a CrapsackWorld should give you an indication of what happens.
* In the ''SpaceRunawayIdeon'' movie, even the kids perish. Special mention goes to the scene when [[spoiler: a little girl is ''beheaded'' by a gunshot onscreen. Poor, ''poor'' Ashura]].
* In ''VenusVersusVirus'' in one arc [[spoiler: one of a set of twins gets turned into a [[TheVirus Vir]][[TheHeartless us]]. She asks [[ElegantGothicLolita Lucia]] to kill her so she doesn't harm her brother]].
* In a ''Manga/OnePiece'' [[DeathByOriginStory flashback,]] [[spoiler:a ship carrying a Celestial Dragon fires on Sabo's boat, killing him]]. [[NeverFoundTheBody The body was never found]], but WordOfGod (and that [[DeadHatShot panel showing his burning hat]]) confirmed the poor kid's death.
* In ''MaiOtome'', [[spoiler:Mimi, a young girl who is part of the refugees of Windbloom, dies from her wounds after being attacked by a desert monster]].
* ''MuhyoAndRoji'''s ghosts are often children, who die of causes such as falling onto a subway train tracks, fires, car accident, or even suicide, or parents who lost their children. The moment of their deaths is often shown in flashbacks.
* So many times in ''BarefootGen''.
* In ''MiraiNikki'', AnyoneCanDie, even children. The [[spoiler: 4 year old Reisuke]] is killed by Yuno, and later on [[spoiler: Yukki's 14 year old friends are all gunned down as well.]]
** Although a lot of their ages are ambiguous, and many are too old to count, [[spoiler: The 8th's orphanage is slaughtered.]]
* The ''{{Tsukihime}}'' manga featured a chapter when one of the antagonists invades a hotel, using his powers to kill anybody. He passes by a pair of children and it looks like he'll let them live...till his monsters chomp on them too.
* ''HunterXHunter'': This is how the Chimera arc starts, with a pair of sibling coming across the queen who eats both of them.
* Averted in ''StreetFighterAlphaTheAnimation'', where [[spoiler:Ryu]]'s kid brother dies.
* Averted seven ways to Sunday in ''Manga/FrankenFran'', where kids die in nasty ways : a little girl gets her head bitten off, a boy from the same chapter is mutated into a monster by a [[TheVirus virus]] and killed by the remaining survivors, another girl from a later chapter is stabbed in the head... Some chapters play it straight, though.
* Averted in episode 77 of SonicX. [[spoiler: Poor Cosmo]]
* Amanuma from Manga/YuYuHakusho thought his ability just made games realistic, but Sensui didn't tell him everything that happened in the game would actually happen. He died when Kurama defeated him, since that is what happens to the boss in the game they were playing.
* ''LightNovel/ShakuganNoShana'' got away with killing two children (one human and one Torch) in the first two episodes, perhaps because their deaths [[{{Retgone}} didn't leave behind any bodies]].
* Horrifically averted in ''[[BloodPlus Blood+]]'' by Saya, who impales a baby within the first minute of the series.
* The fourteen year old protagonist of ''DeadmanWonderland'' is constantly in danger but never really gets hurt. His classmates on the other hand are all brutally murdered within the first ten pages of the series. Hibana Daida, a seven year old, once tortured and killed a boy in kindergarten because ''he flipped her skirt''. [[spoiler:Hibana herself is killed by Toto.]]
* Toboe was actually the first of the ''WolfsRain'' wolves to die. He's the youngest, being roughly thirteen to fourteen in human form.

to:

----
!!Exceptions:

[[folder:Anime]]
[[folder:Music]]
* ''BattleAngelAlita'': In addition to The infamous ''[[Music/PinkFloyd Another Brick in the CrapsackWorld Wall]]'' segment of The Scrapyard ''Music/TheWall''.
* Music/TheDecemberists song "The Rake's Song",
where villains have no qualms about killing the entire point of the song is a rake who never wanted children, there's also the [[IAmAHumanitarian infant-meat]]-fancying Venusians and the [[{{Immortality}} "Methuzalized"]] space colonists who regard "the next generation as a threat, not a promise" and regularly send death squads murders his kids after children. There's also the ChildSoldiers of Jeru/Ketheres, who Alita his fourth child was stillborn and her new friends from Mars try to save a day too late, and the orphans on the Space Karate guy's planet.
* Kentaro Miura shows repeatedly in the ''{{Berserk}}'' manga that children do not get special immunity from the horrors of the story's universe.
** The dead body of a little boy can be seen among the victims of the bandit leader from the first major story arc.
** Later in the second arc Guts is given a ride by a kind priest and a young girl who he takes care of. The three are attacked by demonically possessed skeletons and the young girl Collette is brutally killed. She then returns possessed and kills the priest before going after Guts along with the rest of the undead. Guts then has to kill her again, along with the rest of the skeletons.
** After becoming separated from the rest of the Hawks during an earlier battle, Casca reveals to Guts that long before he joined them a young boy who acted as a page to the mercenary band was killed in battle. She says it is the first time that she truly saw Griffith be disturbed and depressed by something and later is shown to have deeply affected Griffith mentally.
** During the Band of the Hawks arc, Guts carries out an assassination order by Griffith on the King's brother and then is forced to kill the brother's young son because the boy saw too much, an act that shakes him up terribly -- not the very least because the boy reminded Guts of...well, himself when he was the kid's age.
*** Judeau later points out that the son was being groomed to marry the Princess who Griffith also wished to marry (as it was the most direct path to become king). By having the boy killed, Griffith has a much easier shot at marrying the Princess and as such gaining his dream, so it is likely he planned for the boy to be there and Guts having to kill him. This turns out to be one of the factors which eventually led to Guts [[spoiler:leaving the Hawks]].
** After [[spoiler: rescuing Griffith after a year of torture]] the Band of the Hawk gets aid from a young family which includes several children who long supported the group. Shortly afterward, the Black Dog Knights, a group of soldiers composed of the worst rapists, murderers and criminals that Midland has to offer appear, having been sent by the King to kill Griffith. The group, led by Wyald, a truly nasty piece of work of an Apostle, question
the mother before she died in childbirth.
* Ogden Edsl's ''Dead Puppies'', which, as any Dr. Demento fan can tell, ''aren't much fun''...
* [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3BFvN-idN1s Reboot]], sung by Hatsune Miku, Megurine Luka,
and her family including the young children are raped fanmade Samune Zimi. The song is sweet and happy at first, until Zimi's character is hit by a truck and killed. And if that wasn't bad enough, they then proceed to dismember their bodies (yes, including the kids) [[DeadGuyOnDisplay and carry them naked on poles into battle with the Hawks]], who are all disgusted at the sight.
** That said, [[spoiler:Rickert, the youngest of the Band of the Hawk,
[[spoiler: It gets worse when her spirit is the only other survivor of the Eclipse besides Guts and Casca, and that was only because he was separated accidentally recalled from the main body of the Hawks before Griffith's Behelit activated, otherwise he would have been branded and eaten along with the rest. He did almost die when the below-mentioned Rosine and the Count from the third manga story massacred the men with him, but he was rescued afterlife by the Skull Knight]].
** The Misty Valley arc main villain Rosine started out as a cute, smart tomboy with a ''horrible'' home life
her friends, who loved a certain fairy tale. She later sacrifices her parents to the Godhand and becomes a elf/fairy creature similar to that found in her favorite fairy tale and begins to attack the nearby village killing people and animals and kidnapping children to turn into twisted little elf/fairy creatures that play kickball with eyeballs, play war to the death, and rape blame each other for fun (remember they are still technically children and are acting in a twisted way like the kids they are.) By the time Guts reaches her, she is insane, and has to be killed in order to prevent her from hurting any more people (and given that Guts is still in hardcore post-Eclipse vengeance mode at this point, all he really cares about is killing another Apostle). During the arc you see that she UsedToBeASweetKid who only wanted to have some happiness that she never got at home turning into a case of ''AlasPoorVillain'' especially considering that once she dies, she, like anyone who makes a sacrifice to the Godhand and becomes a demon, is sent straight to hell.
** Also, those eyeball kick balling, to-the-death war playing elf/fairy creatures that Rosine made from kidnapped children? When they are killed [[ThisWasHisTrueForm they turn back into kids]], leading to Guts being seen as a child killer.
*** Guts himself did also indulge in a bit of child-mass-slaughter. Sure, they were [[spoiler:forcibly polymorphed by Rosine and reverted to human form upon death]],
death, but he KNEW that, and he was still grinning maniacally while he crushed them.
*** And also, there's [[spoiler:Rosine's MoralityPet Jill, a somewhat younger girl that calls her "older sister Rosine" ("Rosine-neechan" in the original Japanese). She survives the arc, though not before being in lethal danger at least twice.]]
** In the Millennium Falcon arc, women and children in a village are constantly kidnapped by trolls. The woman are raped till they become pregnant with more trolls, but the rotting bodies of children skewered on poles are seen in the den.
*** As the trolls are being subdued by Guts, those captured escape with the rest of his party and many children are seen with them, acting as a slight subversion.
** And collectively, the most disturbing case in the series so far is what happened to [[spoiler: Guts and Casca's own child.]] When Guts returned to the Hawks and before the crew set out to rescue Griffith, he and Casca had an emotional reunion that ended up with them [[spoiler: making love, with said union resulting in Guts impregnating Casca.]] Though [[spoiler: pregnancy]] was unknown to them at the time, it's assumed that [[spoiler: the baby was developing normally in the womb]]... until the Eclipse happened. When it goes down, '' everything'' [[FromBadToWorse goes down,]] with [[spoiler: Griffith, now the demon lord Femto, raping the pregnant Casca in front of Guts, tainting her womb with his demonic seed and thus poisoning her unborn child.]] After the Eclipse, the now traumatized and insane Casca [[spoiler: undergoes a miscarriage from the event, resulting in a misshapen fetus being born that has been corrupted by evil.]] Guts, seeing the [[spoiler: child as nothing more than a byproduct of an event he failed to prevent, tries to kill it immediately, but because of Casca's intervention, the child disappears at daybreak.]]
* In ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'', there's this whole deal with a little boy having his soul separated from his body and placed in a parakeet's body by a Hollow...
** We see ghosts of children several times, their deaths are not shown on screen though.
* ''BlueGender''. Things don't go well for poor [[spoiler:Yung]], and during the massacre of [[spoiler:Yung]]'s group by the Blue, we see one of the BigCreepyCrawlies slash at a mother holding an infant (Mom dies; kid goes flying). Needless to say, if the blow didn't kill the baby, hitting the ground will.
* In ''Anime/CodeGeass'', (albeit, off-screen) as Britannian soldiers are gunning down Japanese, the viewer hears a crying infant, followed shortly by a hail of gunfire.
** Also, there's several instances in the general massacres scenes where you can see smaller bodies, clearly of children and teenagers, albeit undetailed and from a distance.
** The raid on the Order of Geass.
* The [[DGrayMan Earl]] [[BigBad of]] [[MonsterClown Millennium]] doesn't care how old you are; as long as you lost someone close to you, he will be there to turn you into an Akuma.
* ''Manga/DetectiveConan'' occasionally touches on the deaths of children, though always in the backstory providing a motive for the current killer. The closest it has come to killing a child on-screen was the start of the sixth NonSerialMovie ''Phantom of Baker Street'', which [[StartsWithASuicide starts with]] a ten-year old ChildProdigy jumping of a skyscraper.
* Horrendously averted in ''{{Devilman}}'': Two of the worst deaths are destined for [[spoiler: Sachiko, Akira's little neighbor, and Miki's younger brother]]. In fact, in regards to {{Devilman}} and DevilmanLady, GoNagai has absolutely NO compunction about killing children and babies in the most horrific way possible and showing it very clearly, preferably in front of their parents.
** The ''{{Grendizer}}'' manga (also a Go Nagai production) has a villain who averts this twice- in a flashback he kidnaps all the kids from planet Fleed and says he'll give them back in exchange for the planet's weapons. When they give up the weapons, he gives back the kids- ''by dropping them from 30,000 feet in the air''. And in the present, he steals GreatMazinger and ties up a bunch of kids as well as people Duke cares about all over the robot so Grendizer can't fight back.
** There's also an episode of MazingerZ where [[spoiler: Shirou's crush, Lorelei, was a RobotGirl with the body of a 10-year-old cutie... and [[KidWithTheLeash in control of a huge mecha beast]]. [[TearJerker She doesn't make it]].]] In another, Sayaka's cousin Yuri (who is actually ''crippled'') is kidnapped and placed inside a capsule in a mecha beast's head; she's luckier than the others, though, and survives.
** Also averted in ''ViolenceJack''. The first arc ''alone'' is filled with graphic deaths of young kids.
* Lucy from ''Manga/ElfenLied'' has no problem killing children in the most horrible ways, including [[spoiler:the male protagonist's little sister Kanae]]. Also young Diclonius children get killed off regularly, often in gruesome experiments (leading to a notably heartbreaking scene in the anime).
** There's also [[YourHeadASplode what Lucy did]] to the [[KidsAreCruel cruel kids]] in her {{backstory}}, though after [[spoiler:[[MoralEventHorizon what they did to the poor little dog that she had started caring for]]]], a good number of fans felt that those kids deserved ''worse''. She did, however, spare Mayu's dog.
* Averted in ''Anime/ErgoProxy'', when viewers are treated to a baby carriage falling down a flight of stairs in slow motion during the mall chase early on in the series; very much a shout-out to Eisenstein's ''[[Film/BattleshipPotemkin Bronenosets Potemkin]]'' 'Odessa stairs' scene. Later, the carriage is shown lying on its side in a puddle of (presumably the baby's) blood. However, that is certainly not the only baby to die in ''Ergo Proxy''. (Not a spoiler. Really.)
* Averted in ''EurekaSeven'', where, on one occasion, a little boy's death at the hands of the Scab Corals received an ironically graphic GoryDiscretionShot.
** Then there the shot of a mother ''actually'' smothering her crying infant just before some Corals find them and kill them both. Once again that was a GoryDiscretionShot. Plus the scene when Dominic tries to go looking for a replacement for Anemone.
* ''Manga/FistOfTheNorthStar''
** Several children die in the manga, but are spared in the TV series (notably Bat's younger brother Taki, who is murdered by one of Jackal's men; and Ryo, the kid at Shuu's hideout who died eating bread that Souther and his men poisoned). Strangely, the TV series "made up" for it by having several adult characters who survived the manga die instead (like both Harn Brothers instead of just Haz). In the first ''Raoh Den'' movie, the child-poisoning scene is restored.
** In contrast to the TV series, the original 1986 movie shows a group of nomads being massacred by camouflaged thugs while wandering the desert. The casualties include a young mother and her infant child.
* Definitely averted in ''Manga/FullmetalAlchemist'', to horrifying effect. There's the [[CheerfulChild Nina Tucker]] incident in which her crazed father [[BodyHorror merged her with the family dog]], Envy started the Ishvallan War by transforming himself into a soldier and shooting a child, Envy and Father have been shown to be PoweredByAForsakenChild, the [[ZombieMooks Doll Soldiers]] can be interpreted as children's souls put in freakish bodies...
** Yet for some reason Pride, a hundreds-of-years-old monster wearing the skin of a child, is the only surviving homunculus at the end of the series.
** In a strange ironic HilariousInHindsight way [[spoiler:the same character, Selim, died at the end of [[Anime/FullmetalAlchemist the 2003 anime version]]]]. Also, though a bit older than usual, [[spoiler:Edward dies in the 2003 anime (twice)]] only to be brought back (well..[[spoiler:not the "Real world" Edward though)]].
* Averting this is ''{{Genocyber}}'''s claim to fame, to the point that the most brutal and obvious example has ended up on at least one shock site.
* Horribly averted in ''GraveOfTheFireflies''. [[ForegoneConclusion They warned you]].
* In the ''{{Hellsing}}'' manga, one of the first images readers are shown during Millennium's invasion of London is a limp, bloody and unmistakably dead infant in the jaws of a [[NinjaPirateRobotZombie Vampire-Nazi.]]
* In ''VisualNovel/HigurashiNoNakuKoroNi'', [[CreepyChild Rika]] dies multiple times, in horrific ways. {{Tsundere}} Satoko also dies a few times, as well.
** Then again, ''no one'' is safe in Hinamizawa. Not the cute little 9 year olds, not the teenagers, not the annoying school kids, not the doctors, not even the random villagers.
** The general rule for both When They Cry series (Higurashi and Umineko) is that everyone in the series is fair game, and no it isn't just quick kills...
*** Played with in the first Episode(arc) of [[VisualNovel/UminekoNoNakuKoroNi Umineko]] where the "children" (just one of them is really a kid) survived until the end... But didn't survive the epilogue, anyway.
* In ''Manga/InuYasha'', Suikotsu's evil side emerges for the first time when a soldier kills an [[LittlestCancerPatient injured little girl]] he was trying to save. Worse, the soldier ''[[KickTheDog gloats]]'' [[KickTheDog about that]] since, in his view, [[ShootTheDog he spared the little girl from more pain]]. When the soldier tries to kill HIM, a panicked Suikotsu kills the other first with the same scalpel he was using to operate on his unfortunate little patient.
** Rin's ''first appearance'' has her [[spoiler:being brutally and graphically slaughtered by Kouga's wolves. Thankfully,
she gets better.]]
*** Oh, and much later on? [[spoiler:''She gets dragged into Hell.'' Again, she gets better.]]
** [[spoiler: Kohaku]]. [[spoiler: Not only was he brainwashed into killing his dad and fellow Demon Slayers as well as injuring his older sister, but then he [[TakingTheBullet takes
a fatal attack for her]] and dies. Then he's revived. But is BrainwashedAndCrazy. And it takes him a LOT to get better.]]
* Averted in the seventeenth volume of ''TheKindaichiCaseFiles'', "The Undying Butterflies" in which a twelve-year-old girl is the first victim of the story's murders.
* In ''Anime/{{Mobile Suit Gundam The 08th MS Team}}'', Shiro and his team are completely sickened
happy ending when they see Zeon soldiers gun down a mother and her child for leaving their house at night.
** ''ZetaGundam'' specifically showed an infant body in the gassed colony 30 Bunch, and a mother and infant child are briefly shown dying when the Titans use the Colony Laser to destroy several colonies as a "demonstration".
** Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEED doesn't shy itself from averting the trope either [[spoiler: both with the girl that gave the origami flower to Kira being killed in the explosion that Yzak caused when he shot the refugee shuttle in which she was]]. There's also the shot [[spoiler:of a dead mother and her child in the ruins of Junius 7, which either shocked or caused a complete breakdown to the characters who entered the room where these bodies were.]]
* This idea is destroyed in ''Anime/NeonGenesisEvangelion''. By the end of the series EVERYONE is dead (sorta). some 14 year olds have suffered multiple, rather hideous deaths (impaled, eaten alive, impaled some more, then killed).
* Averted offscreen in ''Anime/{{Noir}}'', in the ''Intoccabile'' episodes, when a Mafia traitor gets questioned by the titular Intoccabile, with his wife and child in the next room to ensure his cooperation... and both get shot due to his hesitation. Also, Mirielle's older brother died when he was a young child in the assassination that killed her parents.
* Horrifically averted in ''NowAndThenHereAndThere''. The fact that the plot revolves around ChildSoldiers in a CrapsackWorld should give you an indication of what happens.
* In the ''SpaceRunawayIdeon'' movie, even the kids perish. Special mention goes to the scene when [[spoiler: a little girl is ''beheaded'' by a gunshot onscreen. Poor, ''poor'' Ashura]].
* In ''VenusVersusVirus'' in one arc [[spoiler: one of a set of twins gets turned into a [[TheVirus Vir]][[TheHeartless us]]. She asks [[ElegantGothicLolita Lucia]] to kill her so she doesn't harm her brother]].
* In a ''Manga/OnePiece'' [[DeathByOriginStory flashback,]] [[spoiler:a ship carrying a Celestial Dragon fires on Sabo's boat, killing him]]. [[NeverFoundTheBody The body was never found]], but WordOfGod (and that [[DeadHatShot panel showing his burning hat]]) confirmed the poor kid's death.
* In ''MaiOtome'', [[spoiler:Mimi, a young girl who is part of the refugees of Windbloom, dies from her wounds after being attacked by a desert monster]].
* ''MuhyoAndRoji'''s ghosts are often children, who die of causes such as falling onto a subway train tracks, fires, car accident, or even suicide, or parents who lost their children. The moment of their deaths is often shown in flashbacks.
* So many times in ''BarefootGen''.
* In ''MiraiNikki'', AnyoneCanDie, even children. The [[spoiler: 4 year old Reisuke]] is killed by Yuno, and later on [[spoiler: Yukki's 14 year old
friends are all gunned down as well.]]
** Although a lot of their ages are ambiguous,
make up and many are too old to count, [[spoiler: The 8th's orphanage she is slaughtered.]]
* The ''{{Tsukihime}}'' manga featured a chapter when one of the antagonists invades a hotel, using his powers to kill anybody. He passes by a pair of children and it looks like he'll let them live...till his monsters chomp on them too.
* ''HunterXHunter'': This is how the Chimera arc starts, with a pair of sibling coming across the queen who eats both of them.
* Averted in ''StreetFighterAlphaTheAnimation'', where [[spoiler:Ryu]]'s kid brother dies.
* Averted seven ways to Sunday in ''Manga/FrankenFran'', where kids die in nasty ways : a little girl gets her head bitten off, a boy from the same chapter is mutated into a monster by a [[TheVirus virus]] and killed by the remaining survivors, another girl from a later chapter is stabbed in the head... Some chapters play it straight, though.
* Averted in episode 77 of SonicX. [[spoiler: Poor Cosmo]]
* Amanuma from Manga/YuYuHakusho thought his ability just made games realistic, but Sensui didn't tell him everything that happened in the game would actually happen. He died when Kurama defeated him, since that is what happens to the boss in the game they were playing.
* ''LightNovel/ShakuganNoShana'' got away with killing two children (one human and one Torch) in the first two episodes, perhaps because their deaths [[{{Retgone}} didn't leave behind any bodies]].
* Horrifically averted in ''[[BloodPlus Blood+]]'' by Saya, who impales a baby within the first minute of the series.
* The fourteen year old protagonist of ''DeadmanWonderland'' is constantly in danger but never really gets hurt. His classmates on the other hand are all brutally murdered within the first ten pages of the series. Hibana Daida, a seven year old, once tortured and killed a boy in kindergarten because ''he flipped her skirt''. [[spoiler:Hibana herself is killed by Toto.]]
* Toboe was actually the first of the ''WolfsRain'' wolves to die. He's the youngest, being roughly thirteen to fourteen in human form.
reborn.]]



[[folder:Ballads]]
* Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} #20 ''[[http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/child/ch020.htm The Cruel Mother]]'' depicts the title character murdering her newborn babies or baby, depending on the variant.
* In many variants of Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} #106 ''Literature/TheFamousFlowerOfServingMen'', the heroine's evil mother has her baby killed.
* In Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} #21 ''[[http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/child/ch021.htm The Maid and the Palmer]]'', the palmer taunts the woman with his knowledge of where she buried the babies she has borne and murdered.
* In Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} #173 ''[[http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/child/ch173.htm Mary Hamilton]]'', Mary drowns her newborn baby. She's caught and executed.
-->''She?s tyed it in her apron\\
And she?s thrown it in the sea;\\
Says, Sink ye, swim ye, bonny wee babe!\\
You?l neer get mair o me.''
* In TomLehrer's "Irish Ballad", the heroine kills her entire family, including cutting her baby brother in half and [[HumanResources serving him to guests for dinner]] because she was ''bored''.
* The title character of the Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} [[http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/child/ch093.htm "Long Lankin"]] (#93) kills a lord's infant son (really very messily) either because the lord didn't pay him for building his castle, or just because he is a serial killer.
* In the horribly anti-Semitic Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} "Little Sir Hugh" (#55) the protagonist is killed by a "Jew's daughter" and thrown into a well -- this was a fairly recurrent medieval legend (it also appears in ''Literature/TheCanterburyTales'').
* The Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} "Captain Carr" (#178) features the titular captain burning down his enemy's house, killing his wife and children (after a lengthy siege, because the wife is a Badass).
* Erlkönig is about a farmer riding furiously through the night to get his sick son home. The feverish young boy becomes increasingly distraught, claiming that the Elf King is trying to take him. Whether the Elf King is really there and trying to kidnap the boy or if it's just a fever hallucination is left ambiguous, but by the time the father reaches their home the boy has died.

to:

[[folder:Ballads]]
[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
* Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} #20 ''[[http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/child/ch020.htm ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'', the corpses of children under the age of four (and above ten months) are sometimes used to make Cherubs, which are ''biomechanical robots''. They are used as incense bearers in temples, mobile data storage and ''fashion statements''. Add the fact that they sometimes go 'feral'...
* In the {{Ravenloft}} Gazetteers from Arthaus, the narrator S adopts an orphaned infant, only to offer it to the banshee Tristessa in exchange for free passage through her domain, Keening.
The Cruel Mother]]'' depicts the title character murdering insane banshee is obsessed with her newborn long-dead infant son, and attempts to "care for" babies or baby, depending on the variant.
* In many variants of Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} #106 ''Literature/TheFamousFlowerOfServingMen'', the heroine's evil mother has her baby killed.
* In Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} #21 ''[[http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/child/ch021.htm The Maid and the Palmer]]'', the palmer taunts the woman with his knowledge of where she buried the babies she has borne and murdered.
* In Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} #173 ''[[http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/child/ch173.htm Mary Hamilton]]'', Mary drowns her newborn baby. She's caught and executed.
-->''She?s tyed it in her apron\\
And she?s thrown it
in the sea;\\
Says, Sink ye, swim ye, bonny wee babe!\\
You?l neer get mair o me.''
* In TomLehrer's "Irish Ballad",
deluded belief they're hers; as Tristessa can't feed them or keep them warm enough, they inevitably perish from neglect.
** Also,
the heroine kills her entire family, Vistani avert this trope whenever one of their sons is born with the Sight, lest he grow up to become the dreaded Dukkar.
* Second edition ''DungeonsAndDragons'' actually gave stats and experience point recommendations for depicting infants in several species, up to and
including cutting her baby brother in half and [[HumanResources serving him to guests for dinner]] because she was ''bored''.
* The title character of the Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} [[http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/eng/child/ch093.htm "Long Lankin"]] (#93) kills a lord's infant son (really very messily) either because the lord didn't pay him for building his castle, or just because he is a serial killer.
* In the horribly anti-Semitic Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} "Little Sir Hugh" (#55) the protagonist is killed by a "Jew's daughter" and thrown into a well -- this was a fairly recurrent medieval legend (it also appears in ''Literature/TheCanterburyTales'').
* The Literature/{{Child Ballad|s}} "Captain Carr" (#178) features the titular captain burning down his enemy's house, killing his wife and children (after a lengthy siege, because the wife is a Badass).
* Erlkönig is about a farmer riding furiously through the night to get his sick son home. The feverish
humanoids like orcs.
** Young Dragons (as
young boy becomes increasingly distraught, claiming that as the Elf King is trying newly hatched "wyrmling" stage) have continued to take him. Whether be statted out as killable targets in the Elf King is really there third and trying to kidnap the boy or if it's just a fever hallucination is left ambiguous, but by the time the father reaches their home the boy has died.4th editions, as well as {{Pathfinder}}.



[[folder:Comic Books]]
* The death of Arthur Jr., Comicbook/{{Aquaman}}'s infant son during TheSeventies, who was killed in issue 60 after he was suffocated by Aquaman's nemesis, Black Manta. Notable in that the death occurred at a time when UsefulNotes/TheComicsCode of Authority's censorship standards were still rather strict.
* In one issue of ''TheAuthority'', the villains blow up a maternity ward full of babies, failing to get a specific baby that they were too lazy to check was there.
* In the current ''BoosterGold'' series, the bad guys will deal with their foes by smothering them in the cradle. This actually befalls Rex Hunter, and requires Rip Hunter to completely conceal his origin, and Booster Gold to keep and reinforce his reputation as FunPersonified, because they know they do not have Infant Immortality.
* In MarvelComics ''{{Captain Mar-Vell}}'' series, Genis time-travels to the future and meets his own evil, power-mad son, Ely. To defeat him, Genis [[spoiler:time-travels again and murders his son in the cradle.]]
** [[spoiler:'Cause raising him not to be evil and power-mad would be too much work]]?
* Quite horrifically avoided in the series ''Crawlspace: [=XXXombies=],'' when the zombie outbreak hits a maternity ward.
* The ''{{Planetary}}'' issue introducing the {{Big Bad}}s has them disposing of the [[AlternateCompanyEquivalent local-reality analogues]] of GreenLantern, {{Superman}}, and WonderWoman before they assume their Super Hero identities. Naturally, the Superman analogue is a baby at the time, and is killed entirely offhandedly.
** And let's NOT go into how Drummer was rescued... Worst. Rescue. Ever. Indeed.
* In the "One Man's War" one-shot of ''{{Preacher}}'', a young girl gets half of her head blown off in the crossfire between special forces operatives and terrorists.
* ''RoadToPerdition'' has Connor Looney, the primary villain, killing both Michael O'Sullivan's wife and his younger son. Connor thought that the boy in question was actually the older son, Michael, who had witnessed him and his father gunning down a rival, and did not believe Michael's assurance that his son was a man of honor.
* In ''FinalCrisis: [[TheFlash Rogues' Revenge]]'', [[TheDragon Libra]] attempts to coerce the Rogues into joining the Secret Society by holding the Weather Wizard's baby son [[HostageForMacGuffin hostage]]. The psychotic speedster Inertia, [[NiceJobBreakingItHero who had been released on Libra's own orders]], decides to derail the plan and casually blows the baby up. Shortly thereafter, the Rogues kill him.
* ''{{Ultimate X-Men}}'' had a Sentinel incinerating a young mutant mother and her infant.
* In ''ComicBook/TheWalkingDead'''s [[WhamEpisode Wham Issue]], [[spoiler:Rick's baby]] is among the ''many'' casualties. Aside from that, several of the zombies in the background are children.
* In ''Comicbook/{{Watchmen}}'', the Comedian, in a flashback scene, blows away a Vietnamese woman pregnant with ''his own child''.
** Also, there's Rorschach investigating the case of Blaire, a very young girl who has been abducted... [[spoiler: He finds her too late; she has already been murdered and her remains fed to the killer's dogs.]]
* Another aversion from MarvelComics: One of the things that made {{Magneto}} from ''Comicbook/{{X-Men}}'' turn into a psycho would-be world conqueror was the death by fire of his daughter Anya, who was somewhere between the ages of 2 and 5. A group of humans were attempting to beat Magneto, possibly to death, for having extorted his full pay out of a cheating boss with powers he had just manifested that day, while at the same time his daughter was screaming out the window of the second story of an inn on fire. Having just learned he ''had'' powers, he couldn't control them well enough to free himself of his attackers and save his daughter until she had burned to death, at which point he went temporarily insane and killed everyone except his wife (everyone on the street, at least, and some sources indicate possibly everyone in the city). This led his wife to run from him in terror. It is possible that the fire at the inn was arson, given the remarkable coincidence of the inn burning down at the ''same'' time as the gang attacking him.
* In ''{{Fray}}'', Urkonn the demon Watcher kills a young girl Fray regards as her little sister, then [[MotivationalLie blames it on the vampires in order to spur her into defeating the vampires]].
* ''ComicBook/{{Runaways}}'': [[spoiler: Gert]] dies, becoming one of the first teen superheroes to do so.
* ''ComicBook/TheSandman'' has a sequence with Death doing her rounds. One of the people she collects is a young baby, a victim of cot death when its mother leaves the room to warm a bottle for it.
* This trope is usually averted in ''ComicBook/TeenTitans'', not with the members themselves but by their children. And this usually only happens to the five founding members. Donna Troy's son and stepdaughter were both killed in a car crash, along with their father. Wally West's twin children were aborted in the womb by the second Zoom, although this was undone some issues later and the two are currently alive. Baby Wildebeest also applies, as while he could shift from child to full grown monster, he was still technically a child when Superboy-Prime blew a hole through his torso. Tempest's wife and infant son were both missing since ''InfiniteCrisis'', and it was only recently stated the two had been dead since. Finally, Roy Harper's daughter Lian, the very first Titan child, was crushed to death in ''CryForJustice'' during the destruction of Star City.
* {{Punisher}} villain [[spoiler:General Zakharov]]. It's revealed in a flashback that [[spoiler:in order to draw an enemy force out of hiding, Zakharov THREW A BABY OFF A CLIFF]].
** In another story arc mafia boss Nicky Cavella killed a rival boss' two young sons and fed them to him.
* ComicBook/LesLegendaires plays with this trope interestingly: the story takes place in a world where, thanks to a curse, everyone is trapt into a children's body and unable to grow up beyond the age of twelve. And the serie is not afraid to kill off characters, so we ''do'' see children being killed ''everytime'' someone die onscreen, but they aren't necessarly technically children.
* ''ComicBook/AmazonsAttack'' opens with members of the tribe butchering a father vacationing in Washinton, D.C. with his son.... and then as the child starts crying they slaughter him too. It all goes downhill from there, folks...
* In the MaximumCarnage storyline Carnage killed several children in his rampage.
* Franchise/{{Batman}}'s arch enemy The Joker has killed many children, some examples include the brutal killing of 15 year old Jason Todd in "A Death in the Family" and on at least one occasion he blew up a school full of children.
* In ''Comicbook/{{Flashpoint}}'', Joe Chill accidentally kills 8 year old Bruce Wayne instead of his parents.

to:

[[folder:Comic Books]]
[[folder:Webcomics]]
* The death of Arthur Jr., Comicbook/{{Aquaman}}'s infant son during TheSeventies, who was killed Averted in issue 60 after he was suffocated by Aquaman's nemesis, Black Manta. Notable in that the death occurred at a time when UsefulNotes/TheComicsCode of Authority's censorship standards were still rather strict.
* In one issue of ''TheAuthority'', the villains blow up a maternity ward full of babies, failing to get a specific baby that they were too lazy to check was there.
* In the current ''BoosterGold'' series, the bad guys will deal
WeaponBrown with Cal V1-n, who has absolutely no qualms about killing children right in front of their foes parents. His casual apathy for infants [[http://www.whatisdeepfried.com/2011/03/07/weapon-brown-217/ can be]] [[http://www.whatisdeepfried.com/2011/03/09/weapon-brown-218/ witnessed]] [[http://www.whatisdeepfried.com/2011/03/14/weapon-brown-219/ here]].
* In ''OffWhite,'' this is averted when Gebo returns home to find that his entire pack has been shot
by smothering them in humans, and the cradle. This actually befalls Rex Hunter, and requires Rip Hunter to puppies are dead.
* Also
completely conceal his origin, and Booster Gold to keep and reinforce his reputation as FunPersonified, because they know they do not have Infant Immortality.
* In MarvelComics ''{{Captain Mar-Vell}}'' series, Genis time-travels to the future and meets his own evil, power-mad son, Ely. To defeat him, Genis [[spoiler:time-travels again and murders his son
averted in ''AnsemRetort'', where an orphanage was burned in the cradle.]]
** [[spoiler:'Cause raising him not to be evil
''very first comic'' and power-mad would be too much work]]?
Axel and Zexion's 'Spock diet' consists of force feeding blended babies to Sora.
* Quite horrifically avoided in the series ''Crawlspace: [=XXXombies=],'' when the zombie outbreak hits a maternity ward.
*
''Salt The ''{{Planetary}}'' issue introducing the {{Big Bad}}s Holly'': Cade has them disposing of the [[AlternateCompanyEquivalent local-reality analogues]] of GreenLantern, {{Superman}}, and WonderWoman before they assume their Super Hero identities. Naturally, the Superman analogue is a baby at the time, and is killed entirely offhandedly.
** And let's NOT go into how Drummer was rescued... Worst. Rescue. Ever. Indeed.
* In the "One Man's War" one-shot of ''{{Preacher}}'', a young girl gets half of her head blown off in the crossfire between special forces operatives and terrorists.
* ''RoadToPerdition'' has Connor Looney, the primary villain, killing both Michael O'Sullivan's wife and his younger son. Connor thought that the boy in question was actually the older son, Michael, who had witnessed him and his father gunning down a rival, and did not believe Michael's assurance that his son was a man of honor.
* In ''FinalCrisis: [[TheFlash Rogues' Revenge]]'', [[TheDragon Libra]] attempts to coerce the Rogues into joining the Secret Society by holding the Weather Wizard's baby son [[HostageForMacGuffin hostage]]. The psychotic speedster Inertia, [[NiceJobBreakingItHero who had been released on Libra's own orders]], decides to derail the plan and casually blows the baby up. Shortly thereafter, the Rogues kill him.
* ''{{Ultimate X-Men}}'' had a Sentinel incinerating a young mutant mother and her infant.
* In ''ComicBook/TheWalkingDead'''s [[WhamEpisode Wham Issue]], [[spoiler:Rick's baby]] is among the ''many'' casualties. Aside from that, several of the zombies in the background are children.
* In ''Comicbook/{{Watchmen}}'', the Comedian, in
a flashback scene, blows away to when an assassin squad massacred his family. Not even a Vietnamese woman pregnant with ''his own child''.
** Also, there's Rorschach investigating the case of Blaire, a very young
baby girl who has been abducted... is spared.
* Averted repeatedly in ''{{Drowtales}}'', given its [[CrapsackWorld setting]]. Several children, including infants, die on screen, and the drow equivalent of a 7 year old child not only dies (mostly) on screen, but is killed by another child the same age as part of a SadisticChoice.
* ''WebComic/DragonBallMultiverse'':
[[spoiler: He finds her too late; she has already been murdered and her remains fed to the killer's dogs.]]
* Another aversion from MarvelComics: One of the things that made {{Magneto}} from ''Comicbook/{{X-Men}}'' turn into a psycho would-be world conqueror was the death by fire of his daughter Anya, who was somewhere between the ages of 2 and 5. A group of humans were attempting to beat Magneto, possibly to death, for having extorted his full pay out of a cheating boss with powers he had just manifested that day, while at the same time his daughter was screaming out the window of the second story of an inn on fire. Having just learned he ''had'' powers, he couldn't control them well enough to free himself of his attackers and save his daughter until she had burned to death, at which point he went temporarily insane and killed everyone except his wife (everyone on the street, at least, and some sources indicate possibly everyone
Averted in the city). This led his wife to run from him in terror. It is possible that the fire at the inn was arson, given the remarkable coincidence of the inn burning down at the ''same'' time as the gang attacking him.
* In ''{{Fray}}'', Urkonn the demon Watcher kills a young girl Fray regards as her little sister, then [[MotivationalLie blames it on the vampires in order to spur her into defeating the vampires]].
* ''ComicBook/{{Runaways}}'': [[spoiler: Gert]] dies, becoming one of the first teen superheroes to do so.
* ''ComicBook/TheSandman'' has a sequence with Death doing her rounds. One of the people she collects is a young baby, a victim of cot death
Chapter 9, when its mother leaves the room to warm a bottle for it.
* This trope is usually averted in ''ComicBook/TeenTitans'', not with the members themselves but by their children. And this usually only happens to the five founding members. Donna Troy's son and stepdaughter were both killed in a car crash, along with their father. Wally West's twin children were aborted in the womb by the second Zoom, although this was undone some issues later and the two are currently alive. Baby Wildebeest also applies, as while he could shift from child to full grown monster, he was still technically a child when Superboy-Prime blew a hole through his torso. Tempest's wife and infant son were both missing since ''InfiniteCrisis'', and it was only recently stated the two had been dead since. Finally, Roy Harper's daughter Lian, the very first Titan child, was crushed to death in ''CryForJustice'' during the destruction of Star City.
* {{Punisher}} villain [[spoiler:General Zakharov]]. It's revealed in a flashback that [[spoiler:in order to draw an enemy force out of hiding, Zakharov THREW A BABY OFF A CLIFF]].
** In another story arc mafia boss Nicky Cavella killed a rival boss' two young sons and fed them to him.
* ComicBook/LesLegendaires plays with this trope interestingly: the story takes place in a world where, thanks to a curse, everyone is trapt into a children's body and unable to grow up beyond the age of twelve. And the serie is not afraid to kill off characters, so we ''do'' see children being killed ''everytime'' someone die onscreen, but they aren't necessarly technically children.
* ''ComicBook/AmazonsAttack'' opens with members of the tribe butchering a father vacationing in Washinton, D.C. with his son.... and then as the child starts crying they slaughter him too. It all goes downhill from there, folks...
* In the MaximumCarnage storyline Carnage killed several children in his rampage.
* Franchise/{{Batman}}'s arch enemy The Joker has killed many children, some examples include the brutal killing of 15 year old Jason Todd in "A Death in the Family" and on at least one occasion he blew up a school full of children.
* In ''Comicbook/{{Flashpoint}}'', Joe Chill accidentally kills 8 year old Bruce Wayne instead of his parents.
Bojack snaps U16 Pan's neck.]]



[[folder:FanWorks]]
* Averted hard in FanFic/TheConversionBureauTheOtherSideOfTheSpectrum-
** The TCB Ponies have zero qualms about potioning small children, even shoving it down their throats if needed. [[CreepyChild This does not]] [[MindRape end well for them.]]
** And on the other side, it's perfectly acceptable to ''shoot'' said newfoal children, especially since they're now the enemy and would happily force potion down people's throats, all in the name of [[InsistentTerminology spreading]] [[YouKeepUsingThatWord harmony]]. It's even seen as a MercyKill of sorts.
* [[BrainwashedAndCrazy The Traitor Legions]] of ''FanFic/TheGodEmpressOfPonykind'' aren't too picky when it comes to massacres; when Celestia's forces arrive in Manehattan shortly after a battle, they find plenty of dead civilians, including foals and unborn children.
** Scorpan in the sequel ''The Warmistress of Equestria'' kills an entire family of griffons in order to use BloodMagic, even taking time to note that the family had three children.

to:

[[folder:FanWorks]]
[[folder:Web Original]]
* Averted hard in FanFic/TheConversionBureauTheOtherSideOfTheSpectrum-
**
In ''Roleplay/TheGamersAlliance'', children are just just as likely to die as adults...[[FateWorseThanDeath or become ravenous zombies if they end up infected with the Plague of Undeath]]. The TCB Ponies have zero qualms about potioning small children, even shoving it down their throats if needed. [[CreepyChild This does not]] [[MindRape end well for them.]]
** And on
senseless deaths of children play a plot point as watching an innocent child die in the other side, it's perfectly acceptable hands of merciless thugs and being unable to ''shoot'' said newfoal stop it is what eventually prompts Bishop [[KnightTemplar Arbriel Conrad]] to stray from the Path of Light and join the [[ReligionOfEvil Totenkopfs]] with the intention of "purging" the world from those who in his view don't deserve to live in it.
* In the [[http://akaichounokoe.deviantart.com/gallery/38542206 M,WDYD?]][[http://akaichounokoe.deviantart.com/gallery/43453866 Series]] seems to be pretty consistant with killing people off in a "Kenny Death",
children, especially since they're now the enemy titular Madgie, included.
** Actually the reason as to why she has it that is to usually make the story poignant
and would happily force potion down people's throats, all just to show anyone can die in the name of [[InsistentTerminology spreading]] [[YouKeepUsingThatWord harmony]]. It's even seen as a MercyKill of sorts.
* [[BrainwashedAndCrazy The Traitor Legions]] of ''FanFic/TheGodEmpressOfPonykind'' aren't too picky
those stories. Don't worry, they get better when it comes to massacres; when Celestia's forces arrive in Manehattan shortly after a battle, they find plenty of dead civilians, including foals and unborn children.
** Scorpan in the sequel ''The Warmistress of Equestria'' kills an entire family of griffons in order to use BloodMagic, even taking
time to note that the family had three children.is reversed.
* In ''Literature/{{Worm}}'', [[spoiler:the protagonist]] {{Mercy Kill}}s a toddler.
** The Slaughterhouse Nine also attacked a nursery at one point, albeit offscreen.



[[folder:Film]]
* Low-grade monster movies tend to avert this trope with glee, killing young children to show how {{Badass}} their monsters are.
** Averted in the 1988 remake of ''Film/TheBlob''. The heroine rescues her child brother and his friend. Right before they climb out of the sewer, the friend is pulled underwater screaming. Moments later, he pops out of the water again. Half melted. ''Still screaming''.
** {{Lampshaded}} in ''Film/{{Feast}}'', where a timid boy is introduced with the captioned advantage "Fits into small spaces", a common rationale for this trope in film ... but [[spoiler: the "small space" he fits into turns out to be a monster's gullet]].
** Broken rather spectacularly twice in ''Feast 2: Sloppy Seconds''. In the opening scene of the film Biker Queen, one of the protagonists of the film, kills a dog with a shotgun, and the camera lingers on the dog's mostly blown apart corpse. Later in the film, another character, Greg Swank, heroically attempts to save an infant from imminent doom. Regretfully, he is unable to save the baby, and, in fact, throws the infant into the air as a distraction, at which point the infant strikes the asphalt and is summarily devoured by monsters.
** ''[[Film/AlienVsPredator]] Aliens Vs Predator: Requiem'' really goes against the trope. A father and his son have gone into the woods, where [[spoiler: facehuggers give them both a FaceFullOfAlienWingWong.]] Later, [[spoiler:the predalien finds its way into a maternity ward, where it impregnates a pregnant mother and several babies with soon-to-be chestbursters.]] The resulting bodies are partially seen later on in the movie.
** Averted in ''[[SyFyChannelOriginalMovie Dinocroc]]'' when the monster [[spoiler: eats the protagonist's 12-year-old brother, leaving nothing behind ''but his head''.]]
** ''Piranha3DD'' ends with [[spoiler: a mutated piranha that can crawl on land decapitating a young boy taking photographs of it.]] Director John Gulager says he received multiple petitions to not include this scene in the film.
** ''The Swarm'' showed a grammar school under attack by killer bees. Not all of the children made it inside in time.
** In ''Film/{{Mimic}}'', [[spoiler: the two kids are horribly slaughtered]].
* The scene in ''Film/{{Titanic}}'' immediately after [[ItWasHisSled the sinking of the titular ship]] shows, among the frozen bodies floating in the ocean, a dead woman still cradling her frozen infant.
** About three times you see a curly-headed Irish girl named Cora, who doesn't look much older than seven or eight-years-old. A deleted scene shows her and her parents, screaming and crying, trapped behind a third-class gate and being submerged by water. Cameron stated that he cut the scene because it was [[TearJerker just too upsetting]].
** This happens a couple more times: first, a woman comforts her two young children before their cabin is submerged; and second, a boy whom Jack and Rose tried to save earlier is swept away by a current along with his father.
** Another woman caresses her son just before the ship breaks up, telling him that it'll be over soon. A few other children can be glimpsed in the background as well.
** This is also TruthInTelevision. At least half of the children aboard ''Titanic'' perished in the real-life sinking, including many of those in third-class like mentioned above.
* Averted spectacularly in the zombie film ''Automaton Transfusion''. In one scene, a pregnant woman answers the door to find a zombie, who tears the baby out of her womb and eats it in front of her.
* Averted in ''Disney/{{Mulan}}''. When walking through the ruins of a raided village, a single doll is found, as a G-rated signal that there were children killed here.
* Averted in ''Film/TheHungerGames'' - both the film and novels. The entire premise hinges on twelve to eighteen year old kids brutally killing one another.
* Averted over and over in ''{{Sinister}}''. The main villain kills entire families in a variety of ways, each murder preserved on a Super 8 reel. They still cut away from the most graphic child-deaths, though, or only show them out-of-focus.
* ''Film/TwentyEightDaysLater'' has children among the many discarded bodies around the manor house- presumably Infected- and we see quite clearly a dead infant in the arms of its mother with a pacifier in its mouth, part of a multi-generational dead family. There's also an attack by a preteen boy Infected.
** The sequel plays this completely straight, as this trope is the only reason that makes any sense to explain why the two child stars ([[HideYourChildren actually explicitly stated to be the only children in Britain]]) are the only ones to survive the entire movie.
*** The child in the very beginning of the movie. He escaped his Infected parents, [[spoiler: but it's implied he's dead as the Infected burst into the farm and killed everyone but Don and Alice.]]
* The 2011 [[AdaptationExpansion adaptation]] of ''[[LovecraftOnFilm The Whisperer In Darkness]]'' [[spoiler: averts this trope with Hannah, the little girl whose father shoots himself (in front of her, no less). Wilmarth really, ''really'' tries to save her (since she even reminded him of his own dead daughter), but after she bravely throws a gas cylinder from a plane into a Mi-Go's [[StarfishAliens face (?)]], another one simply picks her out of the cockpit and drops her to her death. This marks the [[DespairEventHorizon point where]] Wilmarth decides to kill himself by crashing the plane into the Mi-Go portal... What? It's [[CthulhuMythos Lovecraft.]] You weren't expecting a happy ending]].
* The original Creator/JohnCarpenter directed ''Film/AssaultOnPrecinct131976'' was considered quite violent for its time, mainly because of the scene that triggers the plot. A young girl walks up to an ice cream truck just as a gang leader kills the driver for not paying protection money. In any other movie, she would have gotten away and become the MacGuffin of the story. Instead, the gang leader shoots her through the heart right on camera. Her father witnesses the act, kills the gang leader, and ''he'' becomes the MacGuffin.
** The ice cream truck scene plays out like a very black comedy.
* In the original ''Film/DawnOfTheDead'', after escaping from the news broadcasting station, two zombie children attack one of the police officers as the party tries to refuel their helicopter. Both are shot at point-blank range.
* In the 2004 version of ''Film/DawnOfTheDead2004'', a zombie baby is born. Anna has to put it down. In the EditedForSyndication version, there's a lingering shot of the baby's unnatural eyes looking innocently up at Anna before Anna does what must be done to zombies.
** In the beginning of the film, it is a very young child that [[spoiler: attacks the main character and her husband in their bedroom.]]
** Romero even averted this trope in the 1969 ''Film/NightOfTheLivingDead'', where the young Cooper girl is in the basement, ill. [[spoiler: She eventually turns into a zombie and kills her own mother using a spade, which is shown by silhouette.]]
* The adorable almost-five Jess is killed off in a car crash just a few minutes into ''Film/TheDescent'', traumatizing her mother for the rest of the film.
* Averted in ''Film/DieHard2'', where the main villain actually crashes an airplane full of people by giving wrong landing instructions. Before the plane crashes, we see a little girl playing with a little doll, and after it crashes, we see [=McClane=] (the hero) walking through the wrecked airplane and soon finding the half-burnt doll. It is later stated nobody in that plane made it out of there alive, adding insult to the injury.
* In ''{{Dogville}}'', [[spoiler: everyone dies. Seriously]]. [[spoiler: Grace]]'s gangsters lay waste to the town, opening fire on a number of children and firing into a baby basket. However, [[spoiler: Grace]] stops them from killing the Dogville dog, because a dumb animal hasn't the capacity for evil that the townspeople showed. Besides, he was only mean to her because she took his food.
** "[[spoiler: Wait, one of children, the oldest, his name's Jason. Kill him first. Tell his mother if she can hold back her tears you won't kill any more.]]" ''Damn.''
** [[spoiler: Which was revenge for the mother having destroyed all Grace's possessions and told her if she could hold back her tears she wouldn't smash any more.... which either makes it less or ''much more'' horrifying.]]
*** [[spoiler: The dolls Vera destroyed symbolized Grace's contributions to the village (She spent all the money she earned from the townsfolk on them), and, thus, her acceptance among the townspeople. [[NavalGazing I'm just saying...]]]]
* One part in ''Film/BramStokersDracula'' has Dracula give his brides an infant and they carry it off, presumably to feed on it.
* ''Film/DragMeToHell'' averted this trope ''in three minutes'' with the kid who was... well, [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin you can probably guess]].
* ''Film/FaceOff'' begins with Castor Troy attempting to assassinate FBI Agent Sean Archer, only to accidentally kill Archer's young son in the process.
* The B-horror movie ''Flesh Eating Mothers'' averts this. The titular mothers are turned into cannibals, and one mother eats a character's baby brother.
* ''Film/ForAFewDollarsMore'': Indio invades an enemy's house, and asks his companions to kill the guy's wife and baby outside (off-screen). He shoots the guy later.
* The beginning of ''Film/FreddyVsJason'' has Freddy (himself a former child rapist and killer, whose victims now consist primarily of teens) murdering a little girl offscreen. What is presumably her spirit shows up later in the Dream World, [[EyeScream missing eyes]].
** In ''Film/FreddysDeadTheFinalNightmare'', Freddy also wiped out every single non-adult in Springwood.
* The 1954 film ''Film/{{Gojira}}'' features a scene which shows a mother comforting her two children during Godzilla's rampage in Tokyo. It's heavily implied that they were killed by the titular monster.
** Likewise, the extremely unnerving scene where two soldiers use a Geiger counter on the body of a little girl...and it goes berserk.
* Creator/SergioLeone obviously liked averting this trope. At the beginning of ''Film/TheGoodTheBadAndTheUgly'', Lee Van Cleef's character shoots a man he was paid to kill, then shoots his young son, who was rushing down the stairs with a rifle to investigate. True to this trope, however, the younger son does survive.
** He only killed the elder son because the kid would have shot him. Angel Eyes may be a bastard, but he doesn't kill just for fun.
** [[PlayingAgainstType Henry Fonda's]] character Frank from ''Film/OnceUponATimeInTheWest'' kills Jill's family in his introduction scene, including a little boy.
*** Not only that, but he saves the little boy for last (though it might be just because the kid happened to be inside at the time, and only came out after the others were killed). Also while the others were sniped from a distance, Frank goes right up to the boy, and ''smiles'' as he pulls out his gun.
* Averted in ''Film/HalloweenIIISeasonOfTheWitch'', where the aim of the BigBad is [[spoiler: killing America's children with Halloween masks]].
** Animal-wise, it's subverted in the original ''Film/{{Halloween 1978}}'' where Michael chokes a dog to death to stop his barking and avoid being detected.
* ''TheHappening'' plays this straight and subverts it rather horribly. The little girl (around 10 or so) with the protagonists (and the protagonists themselves, so PlotArmor might be more appropriate) lives through the entire film. The two slightly older kids they pick up halfway through the film, [[TooDumbToLive get themselves killed]] when they harass some people who have barricaded themselves inside their home. They get a rather brutal treatment, too. The first kid takes a buckshot blast point blank in the chest, and you get to see it come out his back. The second thankfully gets a GoryDiscretionShot when he gets the same treatment to the head, but we're treated to the wound afterward.
* ''Film/TheHost''
* The entire plot to ''InBruges'' is driven by the fact that Colin Farrell's character accidentally shot a five-year old.
** Killing children is the BigBad's personal MoralEventHorizon. [[spoiler:when tricked into thinking he's done so, he kills himself]]
* The shark in ''Film/{{Jaws}}'' averts this twice in a single scene. The first victim is a dog, which disappears after chasing a thrown stick into the ocean. Mere moments later, a young boy on a raft is gruesomely devoured on-screen.
* ''Film/MadMaxBeyondThunderdome'': A bunch of abandoned children in a desert outpost. What could possibly happen? Swallowed up by sand, for one.
* In ''TheFinalConflict'', new ambassador [[AntiChrist Damien Thorn]] orders all newborns in the area killed in the hopes that the newly born Christ will be among those murdered; we're shown ''baby after baby'' being killed, with one actually being hit by a car after its carriage is knocked into traffic.
* Can anyone say ''PansLabyrinth''? [[spoiler: Not only does the heroine get shot at the end, the Pale Man's lair is decorated with paintings of him killing and eating babies.]]
** It does partially play the trope straight, with [[spoiler:Ofelia's little brother surviving.]]
* [[spoiler: Averted in ]][[Film/InstructionsNotIncluded No se Aceptan Devoluciones]][[spoiler: , in which little Maggie dies at the end.]]
* ''PayItForward'': Everything's more fine and dandy with the world thanks to young Trevor, the main character, until he's stabbed to death by bullies.
* In ''Film/PlanetTerror'' a mother hands her son a gun, instructing him to use it in case his father shows up. Being the curious little bugger that he is, the kid blasts his own face off in five seconds flat.
* In Creator/UweBoll's film adaptation of ''{{Postal}}'', there is a particular shootout scene where the camera focuses on only the ridiculous number of children being shot. Later the replacement TV reporter, whilst gloating over her predecessor's death, is standing in essentially a massive pile of dead, at least a good 30 of them were under 15.
** Plus one scene involving a baby stroller hit by a vehicle, sending the kid flying.
** The "cat silencer" game mechanic from Postal 2 is also copied by putting a gun up a cat's butt to use it as a pistol silencer. Though for some odd reason, the cat walks away unharmed after several shots.
* In one of the most disturbing scenes ever, in ''{{Rambo}} 4'' there's a sequence where Government soldiers attack a rebel village, and kill EVERYONE. Young kids are bayoneted, infants are beaten with blunt objects, and a baby is taken from its mother and thrown into a fire, and the remains are gunned down with heavy machine gun rounds. Which makes it all the better when Rambo manages to get a hold of the ones responsible.
* ''Film/ResidentEvilApocalypse''. The characters enter an [[spoiler: elementary school. One doesn't survive when -child- zombies pounce her]].
* Creator/AlfredHitchcock's ''Sabotage'' features a scene where a young boy is given a package to deliver, which is really a bomb. [[spoiler: He dwadles en route, and it goes off, killing him and several other people on a bus.]] Hitchcock later said he regretted doing the scene this way, although it might have still been an example of this trope.
* ''Film/SchindlersList'' the girl in the red coat. Though [[JustifiedTrope justified]] because of the subject matter.
** There is also a scene where a truckload of children are taken away from their parents; it's implied that they are killed.
* ''Film/TheSixthSense'': Among the dead people seen is a preteen girl [[spoiler: poisoned to death by her stepmother.]]
** Also at one point Cole encounters the ghost of a pre-teen boy who had showed his friend his father's gun and accidentally shot himself, and we see the wound in the back of his head.
* In ''Film/SleepyHollow'', [[spoiler: Lady Van Tassel]] has the Headless Horseman [[spoiler: massacre the Killian family, including the young son]] because she overheard the young wife speaking of a certain "inheritance." Before the boy's time comes, he [[spoiler: gets to see the severed head of his mother stare at him]]. Creator/TimBurton has gone on record to state he disagrees with the trope.
* In the exploitation film ''[[Film/TheBeastInHeat SS Hell Camp]]'', Nazi soldiers have no problem snatching babies out of their mothers' arms and tossing them in the air for target practice.
** Sadly, based on real survivor accounts.
* Edgy variant: In ''StarWars Episode III: RevengeOfTheSith'', Anakin aka soon-to-be Darth Vader steps into a room full of kindergarten-aged Jedi with his lightsaber. After the cutscene, there are no more Jedi. You do the math. The movie manages to NeverSayDie around the issue to soften the potential impact, with such {{Unusual Euphemism}}s as "Younglings," (although the novel adaptation explains this is a catch-all term for young members of any species, so it incorporates children, pups, kittens, etc; also, the word is used in the same context in Episode II). The word ''kill'' certainly comes up anyway.
** I'll never look at a [[WesternAnimation/RobotChicken sunflower]] the same way.
** And the population of Alderaan in Ep IV probably weren't all grown up.
** Though the only two babies seen on-screen in the entire trilogy are also the only two characters shown in Episode 3 who survive to the end of Episode 6 (not counting Chewbacca).
* ''Film/ANightToRemember'':
** There was a moment towards the end where a little boy is seen looking for his mother. An elderly waiter tries to comfort him, but it is only a few minutes later that the ship finally sinks into the ocean, and its implied that both either drown or freeze to death.
** There was also a later scene where two of the Irish steerage passengers show up at an overturned longboat with a child. One of the officers looks under the child's hood, realizes its dead and sets it adrift.
* Logically averted in ''TheElementOfCrime'', since the movie is about a [[SerialKiller child killer]], yet we still manage to get unexpected infant deaths.
* ''Literature/{{Trainspotting}}'' has a drawn out, closeup shot of [[spoiler: baby Dawn lying dead in her crib, having been neglected by her junkie mother and starving to death.]]
* Subverted in ''Film/{{Serenity}}'': the Operative is not above to killing children, as he flat out informs Mal. As proof of this, when the characters arrive at Haven, Kaylee (the crew's most soft-hearted member) comes across a dead little boy about 10 years old (one whom she was briefly seen interacting with affectionately, earlier in the film). [[spoiler: The Operative is aware that this is his MoralEventHorizon, but argues these deeds as being NecessaryEvil.]]
* Averted to TearJerker extent in ''PiratesOfTheCaribbean: At World's End''. The first scene features a large group of accused pirates/accomplices being hanged--including a ten-year old boy, who has to stand on a barrel in order to be at noose height (which means a short drop, causing at least a few seconds of agony, at worst a lot more). If you didn't think Beckett had hit MoralEventHorizon before...
* In ''EnemyAtTheGates'', Sacha, the Russian tween who's been reporting German positions to Soviet snipers during the siege of Stalingrad, is hanged by Major Koenig to bring rival sniper Zaitsev out of hiding.
* In ''Film/TheProfessional'', her little brother's murder (onscreen, but not clearly shown) is the reason [[YouKilledMyFather Mathilda hires Lèon to kill the men responsible]].
* In ''Warlock'', the titular villain strikes up a conversation with a young boy when he learns his family aren't church-goers. In the next scene, the heroes come across two constables and a grieving mother, staring at the boy's off-screen body and assuming coyotes must have skinned him.
-->'''REDFERNE''': There's only one reason he'd need the fat of an unbaptized male child.
-->'''KASSANDRA''': Why?
-->'''REDFERNE''': [[PoweredByAForsakenChild Flying potion]].
* ''FunnyGames'' averts. [[spoiler:The family dog is the first to go, and next to die is the son. Both die in pretty brutal ways too.]]
* The turning point in King Vidor's silent classic ''Film/TheCrowd'' comes when the protagonist's little daughter is run over and killed by a truck.
* In ''ForColoredGirls'', Crystal's two young children are killed by their father because his PTSD-fueled delusions have led him to believe that the children aren't his and that this was the reason why Crystal refuses to marry him. [[spoiler: he drops them from the sixth-floor of their apartment building]]
* In ''Film/{{Aliens}}'', Newt's brother is said to have died before the Colonial Marines reach the planet. In ''Film/{{Alien 3}}'', not only does Newt die in the very beginning, we get to see the autopsy.
* Viciously averted in ''Creator/UweBoll's'' ''Darfur'' No one is safe from the Janjaweed, children get killed just as often as adults, and at one point [[spoiler: a baby is impaled on a wooden spike, and it's shown in full detail]] What makes this even more heartbreaking is that it's TruthInTelevision.
* In ''Film/{{Downfall}}'' Frau Goebbels personally poisons her six children to "save" them from a world without Naziism. Also a real life example. The (admittedly somewhat older) Hitler Youth carrying the battle on the streets don't fare too well either, though it's implied that one (who left his post) survived.
* In some versions of ''SupermanII'', there is the infamous "He was just a boy!" "He will never be a man." scene, which [[KickTheDog cements the Kryptonian outlaws Zod, Non and Ursa as evil in a big way]].
* The otherwise forgettable ''Beware! Children at Play'' ends with [[spoiler:a five-minute sequence of an angry mob murdering the feral children]].
* ''HeroicTrio''
* Averted in ''Film/MachineGunPreacher'' when a child whose village was destroyed chases his dog through the brush [[spoiler:only to step on a land mine.]]
* Averted in ''Film/LordOfWar'', which begins with a child soldier being shot in the face by a 7.62mm round, which the camera has followed from its manufacture up to that moment.
* In ''Film/{{Creation}}'', an aversion causes a HeroicBSOD for CharlesDarwin.
* Averted with a vengeance in the {{Anvilicious}} 1970s western ''SoldierBlue''. [[spoiler:The finale features several young Native American children (along with everyone else in the village) brutally murdered by crazed U.S. Calvary soldiers. Children are graphically shot, stabbed and trampled by horses]] all while the soldiers cheer on their own actions.
** Tragically a case of TruthInTelevision, as the event was [[http://www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sand_Creek_massacre based on a real incident during the West]].
* Averted (though off-camera) in ''Film/{{Session 9}}''.
* In ''Film/TheRaid'', one of the first people killed by the SWAT Team in the apartment complex is a child, who tries to alert the mobsters to the police's presence.
* ''Film/{{Them}}'' began with a very young girl wandering the desert in a catatonic state. It was later discovered that she had been in a camper with her family, including a brother of about the same age. None of the others survived.
* PlayedForLaughs in the British TV movie ''Bernard and the Genie''. When the title characters take over for the shopping centre Santa they start granting wishes for the children who visit them. At one point a boy and his baby sister make their wishes and just after their mother asks the toddler what she wished for and she answers "Snow" and the brother gives a mischevious look she explodes, implying that's what the brother wished for.
* In {{TheGoodSon}} we find out that Henry's toddler brother Richard died before the events of the film [[spoiler:Henry killed him]], later [[spoiler: Henry dies after his mother chooses Mark over him after they end up dangling from a cliff]].
* In ''DemonKnight'' Danny is a young boy who joins the heroes after his parents were murdered by the Collector, near the end he is transformed into a demon and explodes after being thrown into a barrier.
* In ''TheChildren'', all of the kids possessed by the fog are eventually killed.
* Subverted and played with in ''Film/GhostShip''. Katie survives the razor wire murder scene, but only because she is too small. She is later murdered anyway by two insane crew members, and she becomes a ghost.
* Averted hard in ''[[{{Fearless1993}} Fearless]]'': Carla's infant son and several other children are killed in a horrific plane crash.
* Averted in ''Film/HellraiserInferno''. Joseph's case is to look for a missing child who is slowly being killed by the serial killer the Engineer by cutting off the boy's fingers one by one and [[spoiler:Joseph's daughter]] is frozen to death right in front of him. [[spoiler:Neither of them were real however, but part of Joseph's torture in Hell.]]

to:

[[folder:Film]]
[[folder:Western Animation]]
* Low-grade monster movies tend In the ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' Episode "Canada On Strike", all of the [[MemeticMutation Internet Memes]] die except for the Laughing Baby, so the Infant Immortality in ''South Park'' applies to avert this trope ages seven and below.
** Well, better make it four and below. It's just that whole "Stanley's Cup" thing...
** This obviously doesn't apply to Kenny, as for the first few seasons he dies violently in every single episode. Though they later had one where he was dying slowly in the hospital, where for the first time his death was treated
with glee, killing young children to show how {{Badass}} their monsters are.
**
the gravitas a child's death actually would.
*
Averted in the 1988 remake of ''Film/TheBlob''. The heroine rescues her child brother and his friend. Right before they climb out of the sewer, the friend is pulled underwater screaming. Moments later, he pops out of the water again. Half melted. ''Still screaming''.
** {{Lampshaded}} in ''Film/{{Feast}}'', where a timid boy is introduced
''HappyTreeFriends'' with the captioned advantage "Fits characters Pop and Cub. Their gimmick is mainly that Pop is not a competent parent and his negligence constantly costs the life of Cub, and sometimes of himself, in very gruesome ways as is the norm for ''HappyTreeFriends'' episodes. Examples include when he tries to wash him in the sink and accidentally scalds his lower half, then slices him up below the waist in the garbage disposal and when he is cutting the hedge and accidentally slices the top part of his head off.
* ''WesternAnimation/ThePrinceOfEgypt''. Because of its [[Literature/TheBible particular source material]], the child-killing would have been practically impossible to avoid, but still, they do quite a good and discreet job of showing it.
* In ''Disney/{{Tarzan}}'' [[spoiler:an ape baby dies]] at the beginning, so it's a partial example.
* One episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Superjail}}'' centered largely over whether or not this would apply to a little girl that Jailbot accidentally brought with him during the opening. [[spoiler:It's mostly an aversion: Multiple inmates kill each other after being turned temporarily
into small spaces", a common rationale for this trope in film ... but [[spoiler: the "small space" he fits into turns out to be a monster's gullet]].
** Broken rather spectacularly twice in ''Feast 2: Sloppy Seconds''. In the opening scene of the film Biker Queen, one of the protagonists of the film, kills a dog with a shotgun,
babies, and the camera lingers girl herself dies, albeit in a much less gruesome fashion than anyone else (from a combination of a bunch of boxes falling on top of her and the dog's mostly blown apart corpse. Later in cancer which she already had). Also worth noting is that when the film, another character, Greg Swank, heroically attempts Warden finds her, he's so disgusted by her cuteness that he actually tells Jailbot to save an infant from imminent doom. Regretfully, he is unable to save the baby, and, in fact, throws the infant ''throw her into the air as a distraction, at which point furnace'', while most of the infant strikes the asphalt and is summarily devoured by monsters.
** ''[[Film/AlienVsPredator]] Aliens Vs Predator: Requiem'' really goes against the trope. A father and his son have gone into the woods, where [[spoiler: facehuggers give them both a FaceFullOfAlienWingWong.]] Later, [[spoiler:the predalien finds its way into a maternity ward, where it impregnates a pregnant mother and several babies with soon-to-be chestbursters.]] The resulting bodies are partially seen later on in the movie.
** Averted in ''[[SyFyChannelOriginalMovie Dinocroc]]'' when the monster [[spoiler: eats the protagonist's 12-year-old brother, leaving nothing behind ''but his head''.
inmates [[PetTheDog were pretty nice to her]].]]
** ''Piranha3DD'' ends with [[spoiler: * In ''FarthingWoodFriends'', after the rodents have babies, the little ones are killed and impaled by a mutated piranha that can crawl on land decapitating a young boy taking photographs bird of it.]] Director John Gulager says he received multiple petitions to not include this scene prey in the film.
very next episode, thus simultaneously averting Infant Immortality and WhatMeasureIsANonCute.
** ''The Swarm'' showed This has happened a grammar school under attack few more times; one of Mr. and Mrs. Rabbit's offspring is shot by killer bees. Not all a hunter then fed to his dog, and Dreamer, one of the Fox and Vixen's cubs, is killed by Scarface.
* ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' takes BlackComedy literally:
-->'''Brian''': Stewie I killed one of my own kind! I mean how would you feel if you killed a baby!
-->'''Stewie''': Well actually I've killed seven...
** Peter has killed many
children made it inside in time.
** In ''Film/{{Mimic}}'', [[spoiler: the two kids are horribly slaughtered]].
* The scene in ''Film/{{Titanic}}'' immediately after [[ItWasHisSled the sinking of the titular ship]] shows, among the frozen bodies floating in the ocean, a dead woman still cradling her frozen infant.
** About three times you see a curly-headed Irish girl named Cora, who doesn't look much older than seven or eight-years-old. A deleted scene shows her
both intentionally and her parents, screaming and crying, trapped behind a third-class gate and being submerged by water. Cameron stated that he cut the scene because it was [[TearJerker just too upsetting]].
** This happens a couple more times: first, a woman comforts her two young children before their cabin is submerged; and second, a boy whom Jack and Rose tried to save earlier is swept away by a current along with his father.
** Another woman caresses her son just before the ship breaks up, telling him that it'll be over soon. A few other children can be glimpsed in the background as well.
** This is also TruthInTelevision. At least half of the children aboard ''Titanic'' perished in the real-life sinking, including many of those in third-class like mentioned above.
* Averted spectacularly in the zombie film ''Automaton Transfusion''. In one scene, a pregnant woman answers the door to find a zombie, who tears the baby out of her womb and eats it in front of her.
unintentionally.
* Averted in ''Disney/{{Mulan}}''. When walking through a TreehouseOfHorror special, where Film/KingKong Homer eats a little girl.
** Heavily {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in ''TheSimpsons'' Treehouse of Horror V, where
the ruins of a raided village, a single doll is found, as a G-rated signal that there were children killed here.
* Averted in ''Film/TheHungerGames'' - both the film
teachers at Springfield Elementary are trying to kill Bart, Lisa, and novels. The entire premise hinges on twelve Milhouse:
--->'''Bart''': Don't worry guys, something [[LeaningOnTheFourthWall always comes along
to eighteen year old kids brutally killing one another.
* Averted over and over in ''{{Sinister}}''. The main villain kills entire families in a variety of ways, each murder preserved on a Super 8 reel. They still cut away from the most graphic child-deaths, though, or only show them out-of-focus.
* ''Film/TwentyEightDaysLater'' has children among the many discarded bodies around the manor house- presumably Infected- and we see quite clearly a dead infant in the arms of its mother with a pacifier in its mouth, part of a multi-generational dead family. There's also an attack by a preteen boy Infected.
** The sequel plays this completely straight, as this trope is the only reason that makes any sense to explain why the two child stars ([[HideYourChildren actually explicitly stated to be the only children in Britain]]) are the only ones to survive the entire movie.
*** The child in the very beginning of the movie. He escaped his Infected parents, [[spoiler: but it's implied he's dead as the Infected burst into the farm and killed everyone but Don and Alice.
save us.]]
* The 2011 [[AdaptationExpansion adaptation]] of ''[[LovecraftOnFilm The Whisperer In Darkness]]'' [[spoiler: averts this trope with Hannah, the little girl whose father shoots himself (in front of her, no less). Wilmarth really, ''really'' tries to save her (since she even reminded him of his own dead daughter), but after she bravely throws a gas cylinder from a plane --->'''(Milhouse falls backwards into a Mi-Go's [[StarfishAliens face (?)]], another one simply picks her out of the cockpit and drops her to her death. This marks the [[DespairEventHorizon point where]] Wilmarth decides to kill himself by crashing the plane into the Mi-Go portal... What? It's [[CthulhuMythos Lovecraft.]] You weren't expecting a happy ending]].
* The original Creator/JohnCarpenter directed ''Film/AssaultOnPrecinct131976'' was considered quite violent for its time, mainly because of the scene
meat grinder)'''
--->'''Bart''': Nevertheless, [[WideEyedIdealist I remain confident
that triggers someone will come along and save the plot. A young girl walks up to an ice cream truck just as a gang leader kills the driver for not paying protection money. In any other movie, she would have gotten away and become the MacGuffin of the story. Instead, the gang leader shoots her through the heart right on camera. Her father witnesses the act, kills the gang leader, and ''he'' becomes the MacGuffin.
** The ice cream truck scene plays out like a very black comedy.
* In the original ''Film/DawnOfTheDead'', after escaping from the news broadcasting station, two zombie children attack one of the police officers as the party tries to refuel their helicopter. Both are shot at point-blank range.
* In the 2004 version of ''Film/DawnOfTheDead2004'', a zombie baby is born. Anna has to put it down. In the EditedForSyndication version, there's a lingering shot of the baby's unnatural eyes looking innocently up at Anna before Anna does what must be done to zombies.
** In the beginning of the film, it is a very young child that [[spoiler: attacks the main character and her husband in their bedroom.]]
** Romero even averted this trope in the 1969 ''Film/NightOfTheLivingDead'', where the young Cooper girl is in the basement, ill. [[spoiler: She eventually turns into a zombie and kills her own mother using a spade, which is shown by silhouette.
Simpson children.]]
* The adorable almost-five Jess is killed off in a car crash just a few minutes into ''Film/TheDescent'', traumatizing her mother for the rest of the film.
* Averted in ''Film/DieHard2'', where the main villain actually crashes an airplane full of people by giving wrong landing instructions. Before the plane crashes, we see a little girl playing with a little doll, and after it crashes, we see [=McClane=] (the hero) walking through the wrecked airplane and soon finding the half-burnt doll. It is later stated nobody in that plane made it out of there alive, adding insult to the injury.
* In ''{{Dogville}}'', "Yesteryear," generally considered the best episode of ''WesternAnimation/StarTrekTheAnimatedSeries,'' Spock tries to restore his personal timeline, but doesn't get it quite right, and [[spoiler: everyone dies. Seriously]]. [[spoiler: Grace]]'s gangsters lay waste his childhood pet I-Chaya dies heroically to the town, opening fire on a number of children and firing into a baby basket. However, [[spoiler: Grace]] stops them save his young self from killing the Dogville dog, because a dumb animal hasn't the capacity for evil that the townspeople showed. Besides, he was only mean to her because she took his food.
** "[[spoiler: Wait, one of children, the oldest, his name's Jason. Kill him first. Tell his mother if she can hold back her tears you won't kill any more.]]" ''Damn.''
** [[spoiler: Which was revenge for the mother having destroyed all Grace's possessions and told her if she could hold back her tears she wouldn't smash any more.... which either makes it less or ''much more'' horrifying.
wild animal.]]
*** [[spoiler: The dolls Vera destroyed symbolized Grace's contributions to the village (She spent all the money she earned from the townsfolk on them), and, thus, her acceptance among the townspeople. [[NavalGazing I'm just saying...]]]]
* One part in ''Film/BramStokersDracula'' has Dracula give his brides an infant and they carry it off, presumably to feed on it.
* ''Film/DragMeToHell'' averted this trope ''in three minutes'' with the kid who was... well, [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin you can probably guess]].
* ''Film/FaceOff'' begins with Castor Troy attempting to assassinate FBI Agent Sean Archer, only to accidentally kill Archer's young son in the process.
* The B-horror movie ''Flesh Eating Mothers'' averts this. The titular mothers are turned into cannibals, and one mother eats a character's baby brother.
* ''Film/ForAFewDollarsMore'': Indio invades an enemy's house, and asks his companions to kill the guy's wife and baby outside (off-screen). He shoots the guy later.
* The beginning of ''Film/FreddyVsJason'' has Freddy (himself a former child rapist and killer, whose victims now consist primarily of teens) murdering a little girl offscreen. What is presumably her spirit shows up later in the Dream World, [[EyeScream missing eyes]].
** In ''Film/FreddysDeadTheFinalNightmare'', Freddy also wiped out every single non-adult in Springwood.
* The 1954 film ''Film/{{Gojira}}'' features a scene which shows a mother comforting her two children during Godzilla's rampage in Tokyo. It's heavily implied that they were killed by the titular monster.
** Likewise, the extremely unnerving scene where two soldiers use a Geiger counter on the body of a little girl...and it goes berserk.
* Creator/SergioLeone obviously liked averting this trope. At the beginning of ''Film/TheGoodTheBadAndTheUgly'', Lee Van Cleef's character shoots a man he was paid to kill, then shoots his young son, who was rushing down the stairs with a rifle to investigate. True to this trope, however, the younger son does survive.
** He only killed the elder son because the kid would have shot him. Angel Eyes may be a bastard, but he doesn't kill just for fun.
** [[PlayingAgainstType Henry Fonda's]] character Frank from ''Film/OnceUponATimeInTheWest'' kills Jill's family in his introduction scene, including a little boy.
*** Not only that, but he saves the little boy for last (though it might be just because the kid happened to be inside at the time, and only came out after the others were killed). Also while the others were sniped from a distance, Frank goes right up to the boy, and ''smiles'' as he pulls out his gun.
* Averted in ''Film/HalloweenIIISeasonOfTheWitch'', where the aim of the BigBad is [[spoiler: killing America's children with Halloween masks]].
** Animal-wise, it's subverted in the original ''Film/{{Halloween 1978}}'' where Michael chokes a dog to death to stop his barking and avoid being detected.
* ''TheHappening'' plays this straight and subverts it rather horribly. The little girl (around 10 or so) with the protagonists (and the protagonists themselves, so PlotArmor might be more appropriate) lives through the entire film. The two slightly older kids they pick up halfway through the film, [[TooDumbToLive get themselves killed]] when they harass some people who have barricaded themselves inside their home. They get a rather brutal treatment, too. The first kid takes a buckshot blast point blank in the chest, and you get to see it come out his back. The second thankfully gets a GoryDiscretionShot when he gets the same treatment to the head, but we're treated to the wound afterward.
* ''Film/TheHost''
* The entire plot to ''InBruges'' is driven by the fact that Colin Farrell's character accidentally shot a five-year old.
** Killing children is the BigBad's personal MoralEventHorizon. [[spoiler:when tricked into thinking he's done so, he kills himself]]
* The shark in ''Film/{{Jaws}}'' averts this twice in a single scene. The first victim is a dog, which disappears after chasing a thrown stick into the ocean. Mere moments later, a young boy on a raft is gruesomely devoured on-screen.
* ''Film/MadMaxBeyondThunderdome'': A bunch of abandoned children in a desert outpost. What could possibly happen? Swallowed up by sand, for one.
* In ''TheFinalConflict'', new ambassador [[AntiChrist Damien Thorn]] orders all newborns in the area killed in the hopes that the newly born Christ will be among those murdered; we're shown ''baby after baby'' being killed, with one actually being hit by a car after its carriage is knocked into traffic.
* Can anyone say ''PansLabyrinth''? [[spoiler: Not only does the heroine get shot at the end, the Pale Man's lair is decorated with paintings of him killing and eating babies.]]
** It does partially play the trope straight, with [[spoiler:Ofelia's little brother surviving.]]
* [[spoiler: Averted in ]][[Film/InstructionsNotIncluded No se Aceptan Devoluciones]][[spoiler: , in which little Maggie dies at the end.]]
* ''PayItForward'': Everything's more fine and dandy with the world thanks to young Trevor, the main character, until he's stabbed to death by bullies.
* In ''Film/PlanetTerror'' a mother hands her son a gun, instructing him to use it in case his father shows up. Being the curious little bugger that he is, the kid blasts his own face off in five seconds flat.
* In Creator/UweBoll's film adaptation of ''{{Postal}}'', there is a particular shootout scene where the camera focuses on only the ridiculous number of children being shot. Later the replacement TV reporter, whilst gloating over her predecessor's death, is standing in essentially a massive pile of dead, at least a good 30 of them were under 15.
** Plus one scene involving a baby stroller hit by a vehicle, sending the kid flying.
** The "cat silencer" game mechanic from Postal 2 is also copied by putting a gun up a cat's butt to use it as a pistol silencer. Though for some odd reason, the cat walks away unharmed after several shots.
* In one of the most disturbing scenes ever, in ''{{Rambo}} 4'' there's a sequence where Government soldiers attack a rebel village, and kill EVERYONE. Young kids are bayoneted, infants are beaten with blunt objects, and a baby is taken from its mother and thrown into a fire, and the remains are gunned down with heavy machine gun rounds. Which makes it all the better when Rambo manages to get a hold of the ones responsible.
* ''Film/ResidentEvilApocalypse''. The characters enter an [[spoiler: elementary school. One doesn't survive when -child- zombies pounce her]].
* Creator/AlfredHitchcock's ''Sabotage'' features a scene where a young boy is given a package to deliver, which is really a bomb. [[spoiler: He dwadles en route, and it goes off, killing him and several other people on a bus.]] Hitchcock later said he regretted doing the scene this way, although it might have still been an example of this trope.
* ''Film/SchindlersList'' the girl in the red coat. Though [[JustifiedTrope justified]] because of the subject matter.
** There is also a scene where a truckload of children are taken away from their parents; it's implied that they are killed.
* ''Film/TheSixthSense'': Among the dead people seen is a preteen girl [[spoiler: poisoned to death by her stepmother.]]
** Also at one point Cole encounters the ghost of a pre-teen boy who had showed his friend his father's gun and accidentally shot himself, and we see the wound in the back of his head.
* In ''Film/SleepyHollow'', [[spoiler: Lady Van Tassel]] has the Headless Horseman [[spoiler: massacre the Killian family, including the young son]] because she overheard the young wife speaking of a certain "inheritance." Before the boy's time comes, he [[spoiler: gets to see the severed head of his mother stare at him]]. Creator/TimBurton has gone on record to state he disagrees with the trope.
* In the exploitation film ''[[Film/TheBeastInHeat SS Hell Camp]]'', Nazi soldiers have no problem snatching babies out of their mothers' arms and tossing them in the air for target practice.
** Sadly, based on real survivor accounts.
* Edgy variant: In ''StarWars Episode III: RevengeOfTheSith'', Anakin aka soon-to-be Darth Vader steps into a room full of kindergarten-aged Jedi with his lightsaber. After the cutscene, there are no more Jedi. You do the math. The movie manages to NeverSayDie around the issue to soften the potential impact, with such {{Unusual Euphemism}}s as "Younglings," (although the novel adaptation explains this
''WesternAnimation/AmericanDad'' episode "100 A.D." junior reporter Matty Moyer is a catch-all term for young members of any species, so it incorporates children, pups, kittens, etc; also, the word is used in the same context in Episode II). The word ''kill'' certainly comes up anyway.
** I'll never look at a [[WesternAnimation/RobotChicken sunflower]] the same way.
** And the population of Alderaan in Ep IV probably weren't all grown up.
** Though the only two babies seen on-screen in the entire trilogy are also the only two characters shown in Episode 3 who survive to the end of Episode 6 (not counting Chewbacca).
* ''Film/ANightToRemember'':
** There was a moment towards the end where a little boy is seen looking for his mother. An elderly waiter tries to comfort him, but it is only a few minutes later that the ship finally sinks into the ocean, and its implied that both either drown or freeze to death.
** There was also a later scene where two of the Irish steerage passengers show up at an overturned longboat with a child. One of the officers looks under the child's hood, realizes its dead and sets it adrift.
* Logically averted in ''TheElementOfCrime'', since the movie is about a [[SerialKiller child killer]], yet we still manage to get unexpected infant deaths.
* ''Literature/{{Trainspotting}}'' has a drawn out, closeup shot of [[spoiler: baby Dawn lying dead in her crib, having been neglected by her junkie mother and starving to death.]]
* Subverted in ''Film/{{Serenity}}'': the Operative is not above to killing children, as he flat out informs Mal. As proof of this, when
among the characters arrive at Haven, Kaylee (the crew's most soft-hearted member) comes across a dead little boy about 10 years old (one whom she was briefly seen interacting with affectionately, earlier killed in the film). [[spoiler: The Operative is aware that this is his MoralEventHorizon, but argues these deeds as being NecessaryEvil.]]
a bus crash.
* Averted ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheCloneWars'' tends to TearJerker extent in ''PiratesOfTheCaribbean: At World's End''. The first scene features a large group of accused pirates/accomplices being hanged--including a ten-year old boy, who has to stand on a barrel in order to be at noose height (which means a short drop, causing at least a few seconds of agony, at worst a lot more). If you didn't think Beckett had hit MoralEventHorizon before...
* In ''EnemyAtTheGates'', Sacha, the Russian tween who's been reporting German positions to Soviet snipers during the siege of Stalingrad, is hanged by Major Koenig to bring rival sniper Zaitsev
go out of hiding.
* In ''Film/TheProfessional'', her little brother's murder (onscreen, but not clearly shown) is the reason [[YouKilledMyFather Mathilda hires Lèon to kill the men responsible]].
* In ''Warlock'', the titular villain strikes up a conversation with a young boy when he learns his family aren't church-goers. In the next scene, the heroes come across two constables and a grieving mother, staring at the boy's off-screen body and assuming coyotes must have skinned him.
-->'''REDFERNE''': There's only one reason he'd need the fat of an unbaptized male child.
-->'''KASSANDRA''': Why?
-->'''REDFERNE''': [[PoweredByAForsakenChild Flying potion]].
* ''FunnyGames'' averts. [[spoiler:The family dog is the first to go, and next to die is the son. Both die in pretty brutal ways too.]]
* The turning point in King Vidor's silent classic ''Film/TheCrowd'' comes when the protagonist's little daughter is run over and killed by a truck.
* In ''ForColoredGirls'', Crystal's two young children are killed by their father because his PTSD-fueled delusions have led him to believe that the children aren't his and that this was the reason why Crystal refuses to marry him. [[spoiler: he drops them from the sixth-floor of their apartment building]]
* In ''Film/{{Aliens}}'', Newt's brother is said to have died before the Colonial Marines reach the planet. In ''Film/{{Alien 3}}'', not only does Newt die in the very beginning, we get to see the autopsy.
* Viciously averted in ''Creator/UweBoll's'' ''Darfur'' No one is safe from the Janjaweed, children get killed just as often as adults, and at one point [[spoiler: a baby is impaled on a wooden spike, and
it's shown in full detail]] What makes this even more heartbreaking is that it's TruthInTelevision.
* In ''Film/{{Downfall}}'' Frau Goebbels personally poisons her six children
way to "save" them from a world without Naziism. Also a real life example. The (admittedly somewhat older) Hitler Youth carrying the battle on the streets don't fare too well either, though it's implied that one (who left his post) survived.
* In some versions
avert this.
** "ARC Troopers" shows towers
of ''SupermanII'', there is the infamous "He was just a boy!" "He will never be a man." scene, which [[KickTheDog cements the Kryptonian outlaws Zod, Non and Ursa as evil in a big way]].
* The otherwise forgettable ''Beware! Children at Play'' ends with [[spoiler:a five-minute sequence of an angry mob murdering the feral children]].
* ''HeroicTrio''
* Averted in ''Film/MachineGunPreacher'' when a child whose village was
cloning tanks being destroyed chases his dog through the brush [[spoiler:only to step during an attack on a land mine.]]
* Averted in ''Film/LordOfWar'', which begins with a child soldier being shot in the face by a 7.62mm round, which the camera has followed from its manufacture up to that moment.
*
Kamino. That is ''hundreds of babies dying on-screen''.
**
In ''Film/{{Creation}}'', an aversion causes "Padawan Lost", Kalifa, a HeroicBSOD for CharlesDarwin.
* Averted with a vengeance in the {{Anvilicious}} 1970s western ''SoldierBlue''. [[spoiler:The finale features several young Native American children (along with everyone else in the village) brutally
tweenaged girl was murdered by crazed U.S. Calvary soldiers. Children are graphically shot, stabbed and trampled by horses]] all while the soldiers cheer on their own actions.
Garnac, a [[LizardFolk Trandoshan]] EgomaniacHunter.
** Tragically a case In "A Friend in Need" Pre Vizsla leader of TruthInTelevision, as the event was [[http://www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sand_Creek_massacre based on a real incident during the West]].
* Averted (though off-camera) in ''Film/{{Session 9}}''.
* In ''Film/TheRaid'', one of the first people
Death Watch, killed by the SWAT Team in the apartment complex is a child, who tries to alert the mobsters to the police's presence.
* ''Film/{{Them}}'' began with a very young
teenage girl wandering because her grandfather ''dared'' to speak up against the desert in a catatonic state. It was later discovered that she had been in a camper with her family, including a brother of about the same age. None of the others survived.
* PlayedForLaughs in the British TV movie ''Bernard and the Genie''. When the title characters take over for the shopping centre Santa they start granting wishes for the children who visit them. At one point a boy and
way his baby sister make gang treated their wishes and just after their mother asks village.
** In
the toddler what she wished for and she answers "Snow" and the brother gives a mischevious look she explodes, implying that's what the brother wished for.
* In {{TheGoodSon}} we find out that Henry's toddler brother Richard died before the events of the film [[spoiler:Henry killed him]], later
season 4 finale [[spoiler: Henry dies after his mother chooses Mark over him after they end up dangling from Darth Maul slaughters a cliff]].
* In ''DemonKnight'' Danny is a young boy who joins
village, including children, to get the heroes after his parents were murdered by Jedi's attention. [[FamilyUnfriendlyDeath For once]], Clone Wars plays it safe and keeps the Collector, near the end he is transformed into a demon and explodes after being thrown into a barrier.
* In ''TheChildren'', all of the kids possessed by the fog are eventually killed.
* Subverted and played with in ''Film/GhostShip''. Katie survives the razor wire murder scene, but only because she is too small. She is later murdered anyway by two insane crew members, and she becomes a ghost.
* Averted hard in ''[[{{Fearless1993}} Fearless]]'': Carla's infant son and several other children are killed in a horrific plane crash.
* Averted in ''Film/HellraiserInferno''. Joseph's case is to look for a missing child who is slowly being killed by the serial killer the Engineer by cutting off the boy's fingers one by one and [[spoiler:Joseph's daughter]] is frozen to death right in front of him. [[spoiler:Neither of them were real however, but part of Joseph's torture in Hell.
slaughter largely offscreen.]]



[[folder:Gamebooks]]
* ''Literature/CanYouSurviveTheZombieApocalypse'' averts -- an elementary school's worth of children can die, and you run into many child zombies.

to:

[[folder:Gamebooks]]
[[folder:Real Life]]
* ''Literature/CanYouSurviveTheZombieApocalypse'' averts -- Animals. In fact, the vast majority die in juvenile stage.
** Special mentioning goes to reptiles that hunt on eggs and birds that destroy eggs to favour their own children.
* Rather common for humans too, especially in developing countries.
** Common enough to be the norm in developed countries before about 1900. To give
an elementary school's worth example, a typical 18th century English nobleman could be expected to father ten to fifteen legitimate children, but he'd be lucky to be survived by more than two of them. (High rates of death in childbirth even among the rich also meant that these children would likely be from two or three wives.)
* RealLife [[AnyoneCanDie has the annoying habit of letting anyone die]]. Even children. Mother Nature has no mercy.
* In a more brutal way, sometimes children are killed by other humans.
** Most abducted children are found within a few hours, or not. The core of all AdultFear.
** Frau Goebbels personally poisoned her six children to "save" them from a world without Nazism. As noted in the [[TruthInTelevision film section]].
** One of the staples of organized massacres and genocides is wiping out the next generation. Numerous examples can be found throughout history
of children can die, being specifically targeted for extermination, most notably in the Holocaust and you run into Rwandan genocide.
** In
many conflicts, children have been used for all kinds of tasks. The most direct version would include ChildSoldiers, although messengers and scouts are known as well. Goes without saying that WarIsHell.
** Historically, many forms of
child zombies.labor were not only abusively grueling, but downright dangerous. Children were preferred for mining or some kinds of factory work because they or their hands could fit into small spaces, often spaces that were surrounded with crumbling rockfaces or industrial machinery with NoOSHACompliance.
* The Time of Troubles was one of the most traumatic times in Russian history. It started off with a famine that killed two million people and the death of the last tsar of the Rurik Dynasty, one of the worst leaders in Russia's history. Invasions, civil conflicts, large gangs of bandits roaming the countryside. Many people believed that Ivan the Terrible's son Dimitri was still alive somewhere and several impostors took advantage of this, seizing the throne with the support of foreign invaders. The end of the Time of Troubles came when Micheal Romanov took the throne, and he decided to be rid of the threat of any more "false Dimitris" or any of their ties. While his mother was strangled, Tsar Micheal had the son of the second false Dimitri hanged. ''He was three years old.'' WarIsHell, indeed, but politics can have their moments.
* In 1969, a group of Viet Cong attacked a girls' school in South Vietnamese territory. The teachers and girls -- some as young as six -- were raped and murdered. American and South Vietnamese forces followed the trail and caught up with the culprits close to the Cambodian border. It did ''not'' end well for the VC.
* In a more recent example, about 20 children were shot dead at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newton, Connecticut on December 14, 2012.



[[folder:Literature]]
* In Michael Grant's ''Literature/{{Gone}}'' series, it is averted, and how. Sam and some others find a dead baby inside an abandoned house. Also, the final battle scene in the end of ''Gone'' kills a lot of children.
** Averted again near the end of ''Fear'' to a horrifying degree.
* In RaymondEFeist's ''[[TheRiftwarCycle Serpentwar]]'' series, a squad of reformed criminals located a creche containing the eggs of a race of evil humanoid snakemen, and destroyed every last one, dooming the race to extinction. Justified by the fact that all snakemen are inherently evil from the moment they hatched, demonstrated when one hatched while the squad was busy.
** Also during the Serpentwar, a magic-wielding protagonist on a scouting mission, discovers a village attacked by deserters from the BigBad's army, including a hut containing only small, charred corpses. In a CrowningMomentOfBadass, she took down several trained soldiers, WITHOUT using magic.
* Young Tad Trenton dies in Creator/StephenKing's novel ''Literature/{{Cujo}}''... but survives in the {{Film}}. King also kills off toddler Gage Creed in ''Film/PetSematary'' (this death, crucial to plot, also happens in the movie version).
** All of the above is topped by his novel ''{{It}}'', where there is a monster that specifically targets children.
** In ''UnderTheDome'', supporting characters are killed off left and right; adults, children, dogs equally.
** Also, there's [[spoiler: the little girl in TheLangoliers.]]
*** It's safe to say that Stephen King casually crushes this trope under his boot he starts writing.
* Creator/GuyGavrielKay's ''Literature/TheLionsOfAlRassan'' has a particularly nasty example during an unsanctioned Jaddite raid near the beginning of the book.
* And in another OlderThanFeudalism entry, Literature/TheBible features, among other acts of evil, the killings of firstborn children ordered by Pharaoh and King Herod in order to try to prevent both Moses and Jesus from growing up to cause trouble, and God himself killing all of the Egyptians' firstborn children, and the firstborn calves as well.
** When the words Molech/Baal-Hammon, Astarte/Astarthe/Astaroth/Ashtoreth, the Valley of Ben-Hinnom/Gehenna, the Ammonites/Amorites, the Canaanites, etc. are mentioned, these are specifically referencing the sacrifices of children, born and unborn, to the gods of some of the cultures of the time. Sometimes the Jewish people (such as Kings Solomon, Achaz, and Manasses) messed up and took on this practice as well, despite God calling such a practice an abomination, and demanding the death of those who did such things. Those people ended up in a lot of trouble. It's the whole reason that Gehenna came to be the Jewish word for Tartarus/Hell (which is different from Sheol/Hades/Purgatory).
** In 2 Maccabees, when the Jewish people rebelled against the corrupt high priest Jason, who had been appointed by King Antiochus IV, and ran him out of town, the king left Egypt for Jerusalem. Once in Jerusalem, he massacred many, young and old, women and children, virgins and infants. In 1 and 2 Maccabees (2 Maccabees is not a "sequel', it's another viewpoint of what happened in the the first book), King Antiochus IV then decreed that everyone take up the customs of everyone else, except the Jewish customs. He outlawed all Jewish customs, including circumcision. The children who were circumcized were killed, as were their mothers and whoever performed the circumcision.
* As has been mentioned, literature is much less uncomfortable about killing children. Sometimes, but not always, this carries over to adaptions. Take for example the animated movie version of Creator/RoaldDahl's ''The BFG'', wherein we see into a boys dream and are allowed to at least on some level "bond" with this kid only for him to be ''very'' heavily implied to have been '''eaten'''. Oh, and when Sophie and The BFG discuss the other Giants' plans to eat some school children it is acknowledged to have happened.
** Dahl seemed to be fairly fond of averting this trope. He did it a lot in ''TheWitches'' too, having the main character's grandmother regale him with stories of kids who turned to stone, were transmogrified into slugs and killed by their parents, trapped in pictures, etc.
* In the AnneRice series, it's generally frowned upon to turn a human into a vampire who hasn't lived to adulthood, but Lestat, that LoveableRogue, turns Claudia who was, maybe, seven at the time. This results in an eventual BreakTheCutie, turning her into a bitter creature who has a mature woman's mind but is trapped in a child's body.
* ''LordOfTheFlies''. The children ''kill each other''.
* ''ASongOfIceAndFire'', notable in that baby-killing isn't seen as ''exceptionally'' dramatic or vile, because the world is already saturated with evil. Though it is cited as one of the more notorious of Gregor Clegane's many, many, many horrible acts.
** There's also the Unsullied, who have to kill babies as part of their training.
* The title character in the novel version of ''Literature/{{Dracula}}'' had no compunction feeding a baby to his three vampire wives. Then the baby's mother to a pack of wolves. And one of his victims, Lucy Westenra, gains a reputation for preying on children.
* In Nancy A. Collins' ''Sunglasses After Dark'' series, Sonja comes across an ogre who is in the process of lowering a baby into his maw. He would've been successful in eating the baby if she'd been two minutes slower.
--> '''Sonja:''' Uh-uh. No veal for you.
* Averted in the ''LeftBehind'' Kids' Series. Of the original four kids, ranging from ages 18 to 12, the youngest is the first to go. Rather violently.
* In ''Literature/SamanthaStoneAndTheMermaidsQuest'', a large group of girls, aged 8 to 12, are all kidnapped in an attempt to find the heroine, 10-year-old Samantha Stone. When each one is shown to the main villain, one by one, he orders their execution when he discovers the girl is not Samantha. Which actually gets carried out in one case. Yup, a children's book where a child is executed.
* In the Russian book ''[[Literature/AliceGirlFromTheFuture Secret of a Black Stone]]'' by Creator/KirBulychev, child protagonist Alice investigates kidnapping of 84 children. Turns out they were kidnapped to be used as child soldiers. While no children are shown dying [[spoiler: and Alice, being drafted as a child soldier as well, is rescued seconds before the planned execution]], the number count in the end clearly shows that some of the kidnapped children died. Also Alice befriends a child kidnapped from another planet, and he tells that out of 30+ children kidnapped with him, only 8 or so are alive now.
* In ''Literature/{{Coraline}}'' the heroine [[spoiler: discovers ghosts of children previously taken by Other Mother. And the only thing she can do is liberate their spirits so they rest in peace...]]
* ''Literature/AmericanGods'': Hinzelmann.
* In the ''Literature/KeeperOfTheSwords'' series by Creator/NickPerumov, DarkMagicalGirl Sylvia, being in a city overrun with monsters, hears a plea for help, coming from a 6-year old girl. She rushes in, but cannot save the girl anymore. This sets Sylvia in a [[BerserkButton deep rage]]. Cue one big CrowningMomentOfAwesome where Sylvia [[spoiler: invites ''all'' monsters in a city to feast on her, and when they really come proceeds to hack them all in pieces with her sword. She single-handedly defeats a monster army capable of overrunning dozens of local wizards.]]
* Though Jason never kills any kids in the movies, he does it quite a bit in the ''Franchise/FridayThe13th'' books.
** Jason kicks and stomps a baby and two toddlers to death in ''Friday the 13th: Jason's Curse''.
** ''Friday the 13th: The Carnival'' has kids being mangled and fried when the carnival rides go haywire and fires break out.
** ''Friday The 13th: Hate Kill Repeat]]'' had Jason attacking a family of campers, killing them all, including the little boy and baby girl.
** A zombie baby shows up in ''Friday The 13th: The Jason Strain''.
** Finally, ''Friday The 13th: Carnival Of Maniacs'', after Jason's rampage in the titular carnival, a dead father is found holding his son's body in his arms.
* In Cormac [=McCarthy=]'s masterpiece ''Literature/TheRoad'', the two main characters come upon a campfire abandoned by cannibals. A baby has been left roasting on a spit.
** The man had seen a pregnant woman and a few other men passing by a few days before, too.
* In Erich Maria Remarque's novel ''A Time to Live and a Time to Die'' (set during WorldWarII) the protagonist is on the streets of a German city during an air raid, and sees a five-year-old girl with an infant. Then a bomb hits the place; when the explosion is over, the girl is dead, and the baby has disappeared.
* AnyoneCanDie in ''Literature/WarriorCats'', so this trope is completely averted. Throughout the course of the series, we have seen kits carried off by hawks, starved to death, and fallen into crevasses. And that's just ''onscreen!'' Offscreen we have kits and apprentices mauled by dogs, frozen to death in winter, killed by diseases, hit by cars, and at one point the BigBad brutally murders an apprentice from another Clan whom the protagonist had saved earlier, [[MoralEventHorizon just to spite him.]]
* Averted in ''[[Literature/TheSilenceOfTheLambs Hannibal Rising]]'', where the plot revolves around Hannibal seeking revenge on [[spoiler: the Nazis who killed and [[ImAHumanitarian ate his sister]].]]
* Averted in ''TheSilmarillion'': Dior's young sons are abandoned in a forest and it's strongly implied that they die there.
* Averted in ''TheBookOfTheDunCow'', in which [[spoiler: Chauntecleer's three sons]] are killed by basilisks, along with their nurse.
* The ogre-like titular monster from Creator/CliveBarker's ''Rawhead Rex'' devours a young boy alive, as well as dismembering and eating a little girl's riding pony. Much of the story is told from Rex's point of view, so although no infants are killed, the creature reminisces at length about eating them.
* In ''AmericanPsycho'', serial killer Patrick Bateman stabs a little boy to death in a zoo, just to see if he'd enjoy it. He doesn't (not because of guilt). He also kills a dog once (along with its owner).
* Subverted and averted in the ''AnitaBlake Vampire Hunter'' series by Laurell K. Hamilton.
** It starts strong in the second novel [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Laughing_Corpse_(novel) The Laughing Corpse]][[spoiler: where part of the plot deals with a flesh eating zombie that consumed a family, but having failed to find the body of one of the children ,an infant, it is assumed he is still alive. The assumption proves to be false in a very gruesome way.]].
** In the fifth novel [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloody_Bones_(novel) Bloody Bones]] [[spoiler: the criminal investigations concern gruesomely murdered teenagers, as well as a teenager turned vampire that burns to death at the end and her brother whom the main characters fail to rescue and have to watch die.]]
** The ninth novel [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obsidian_Butterfly_(novel) Obsidian Butterfly]] takes the cake it has [[spoiler: whole families, including children of all ages, gruesomely murdered, having their skins completely removed and reanimated as zombies, a pair of children, a 6 year old girl and 10 year old boy, kidnapped, tortured and raped by the bad guys, and the Crowning Moment of Gruesome -- one of the previously mentioned skinless zombies getting loose in the maternity ward and eating several (like 20) newborns before the main character puts him or her down.]].
** The twelfth novel [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incubus_Dreams_(novel) Incubus Dreams]] gives the readers [[spoiler: several back stories, including a high school couple raped and murdered in such a gruesome way that the parents still haven't found closure after 3 years, and one of the lovers of the main character that witnessed at ten the death of his prepubescent brother at the hands of their father]].
* Shakespeare's ''Theatre/{{Macbeth}}'': Macduff's wife and children are murdered -- including a son, who is murdered on-stage.
* ''{{Redwall}}'' has gone into this territory several times, all of them being killed by vermin. There are at least four instances: 1) In ''The Long Patrol'', where one of the characters is shown a vermin blade that's been notched for every kill. The shallower notches are for creatures who couldn't fight back, such as women and children. 2) ''Taggerung'', where a vermin character causes a landslide that kills a family of dormice so that he could get their food. 3) ''Doomwyte'', though this one was done by a snake, the infant in question was a tree rat, and it was a KarmicDeath. After the tree rat ran away from a fight it ran into a snake and got eaten. 4) ''The Sable Quean'', where a young otter is stabbed in the neck with a poisoned knife and dies shortly afterwards.
* [[spoiler:The first book of]] ''HisDarkMaterials'' presents a full segment from the POV of a child character [[spoiler:who is introduced and given a name and backstory exactly ''for'' the audience to be shocked when he suffers a FateWorseThanDeath, which leads to actual death soon enough. The end of the book proper features the death of the protagonist's best friend (a boy about 10-12) as being ''plot relevant''. No other deaths are featured later, but the [[CorruptChurch Magisterium]] are nonetheless unhesitant in sending an assassin to kill children later on.]]
* Being only lightly fictionalized, averted in the ''Literature/LittleHouseOnThePrairie'' series by Laura Ingalls Wilder. Although the death of Laura's baby brother occurs off-screen and is never mentioned, we do see the death by SIDS of her first son. And her subsequent depression was so crippling that [[ShootTheShaggyDog she failed to react in time to an over-burning pot and their house burned down.]] Wasn't the Old West romantic?
* In ''GoneWithTheWind'', not only does Scarlett miscarry, her daughter Bonnie is killed in a riding accident. These two incidents put the nail in the coffin of Scarlett and Rhett's marriage.
* In the ''Literature/MortalInstruments'' books, all the teenage protagonists survive the final battle.... but the cute, manga-reading little brother who wasn't allowed to fight is brutally murdered.
* In ''Literature/TheInvertedWorld'', during an attack on the City, the creche where the children are raised gets set on fire. Many children die, including the protagonist's infant son.
* Averted in one of the Literature/{{Discworld}} novels. Granny Weatherwax is acting as a midwife in a...''difficult'' birth, and realizes she can only save either the baby or the mother. She chooses to save the mother, because she is otherwise able-bodied, and doing otherwise would leave the husband to take care of the child alone. Another character tells Granny she should have let the husband make the choice, and she asks in return [[TearJerker what the man has ever done to her that she should hurt him so]].
* In the ''Warcraft'' novel, ''Literature/{{Arthas}}'', Jaina Proudmoore, the title character's on-again, off-again LoveInterest, suggests that [[TheVirus Undead Plague]] might not [[OnlyFatalToAdults effect kids the same as adults.]] [[spoiler:It was then defied by Arthas, who made it clear that [[MoralEventHorizon he was going to kill every last person in Stratholme - adults and children alike.]]]] Luckily, we never see THAT ugly tidbit in the games.
* In ''Eon'', the infant future emperor is publicly executed by sword to ensure all other lines of power are wiped out.
* ''PercyJacksonAndTheOlympians'' averts this trope by having [[spoiler: Bianca di Angelo]] die at the age of twelve. The rest of the deaths were teenagers and adults, not counting the off screen deaths.
* In [[AnneOfGreenGables Anne's House of Dreams]], Anne's firstborn child dies the day it is born.
* ''Literature/TheBoyInTheStripedPyjamas'' subverts this. You expect one of the children to die because he's in a Concentration Camp [[spoiler:but the ending has both the protagonist and his friend killed]].
* ''Literature/TheOnceAndFutureKing'' has multiple infanticide [[spoiler:''committed by King Arthur'']], albeit off-stage (and [[spoiler:revealed to us decades afterward]].
* In the book ''Lost'' by Jacqueline Davies, two of the protagonist's siblings were stillborn. [[spoiler:Her younger sister also dies from being trampled by a carriage horse.]]
* ''Stealaway:'' Crackspear avenges the theft of his horse by Walt of Wideopen by killing the latter's young son.
* ''Literature/RaptorRed'' has several aversions and at least one near-aversion. The Trinity Turtle's earliest memories include her siblings being devoured by pterosaurs, Raptor Red and her sister [[spoiler:seriously consider abandoning the chicks during a famine, and one of the chicks dies of an infection]].
* ''Literature/TheFoxAndTheHound'' has a lot of cute fox pups fathered by Tod romping around in a few chapters. [[spoiler:All but [[WhatHappenedToTheMouse possibly one]] die.]] There's also a human child who's accidentally poisoned by bait meant to cull rabid foxes.
* In ''Literature/TheAdventuresOfPinocchio'' Pinocchio's friend Candlewick dies as a donkey as a result of exhaustion and the injuries inflicted by his master, and who knows how many children suffered similar fates in The Land Of Toys.
* ''TheHungerGames'', obviously. But even apart from the Games, there's [[spoiler: the District 12 bombing, Prim, the Capitol girl with the yellow coat...]]
* Creator/TamoraPierce really likes to hold nothing back in her portrayals of medieval life in the Literature/TortallUniverse:
** Particularly noteworthy are the last two books of ''Literature/ProtectorOfTheSmall'', where the hideous "killing devices" are apparently powered by the souls of dead children and infants who cry out for their mothers when released. [[spoiler:It turns out that the necromancer who makes the devices doesn't need to use children. He does it because he ''likes'' to.]]
** In ''Literature/DaughterOfTheLioness'', the children of rebels are thrown into a piranha moat. (Mercifully, this does not ever happen onscreen.) Also, [[spoiler:Kyprioth persuades Rubinyan and Imajane to kill the four-year-old King Dunevon and his closest cousin, Elsren Balitang, who is the same age]].
** The first ''Literature/ProvostsDog'' book has the Shadow Snake, a kidnapper who kills the children they abduct if the parents don't give up the valuables that the Snake wants. One of Beka's best friends lost her boy this way. There's also a woman who commits infanticide on her own. In the third, [[spoiler:one of the child princes is murdered]].
* ''Literature/RunningOutOfTime'' is about a girl from a 19th century-themed historical preserve who leaves and stumbles about the "modern day" in order to find a cure for the diphtheria that has afflicted the children of her village. Two of them later die from it.

to:

[[folder:Literature]]
!!Partial Aversions:

[[folder: Board Games]]
* In Michael Grant's ''Literature/{{Gone}}'' series, it is averted, and how. Sam and some others find a dead baby inside an abandoned house. Also, the final battle scene in the end of ''Gone'' kills a lot of children.
** Averted again near the end of ''Fear'' to a horrifying degree.
* In RaymondEFeist's ''[[TheRiftwarCycle Serpentwar]]'' series, a squad of reformed criminals located a creche containing the eggs of a race of evil humanoid snakemen, and destroyed every last one, dooming the race to extinction. Justified by the fact that all snakemen are inherently evil from the moment they hatched, demonstrated when one hatched while the squad was busy.
** Also during the Serpentwar, a magic-wielding protagonist on a scouting mission, discovers a village attacked by deserters from the BigBad's army, including a hut containing only small, charred corpses. In a CrowningMomentOfBadass, she took down several trained soldiers, WITHOUT using magic.
* Young Tad Trenton dies in Creator/StephenKing's novel ''Literature/{{Cujo}}''... but survives in the {{Film}}. King also kills off toddler Gage Creed in ''Film/PetSematary'' (this death, crucial to plot, also happens in the movie version).
** All of the above is topped by his novel ''{{It}}'', where there is a monster that specifically targets children.
** In ''UnderTheDome'', supporting characters are killed off left and right; adults, children, dogs equally.
** Also, there's [[spoiler: the little girl in TheLangoliers.]]
*** It's safe to say that Stephen King casually crushes this trope under his boot he starts writing.
* Creator/GuyGavrielKay's ''Literature/TheLionsOfAlRassan'' has a particularly nasty example during an unsanctioned Jaddite raid near the beginning of the book.
* And in another OlderThanFeudalism entry, Literature/TheBible features, among other acts of evil, the killings of firstborn children ordered by Pharaoh and King Herod in order to try to prevent both Moses and Jesus from growing up to cause trouble, and God himself killing all of the Egyptians' firstborn children, and the firstborn calves as well.
** When the words Molech/Baal-Hammon, Astarte/Astarthe/Astaroth/Ashtoreth, the Valley of Ben-Hinnom/Gehenna, the Ammonites/Amorites, the Canaanites, etc. are mentioned, these are specifically referencing the sacrifices of children, born and unborn, to the gods of some of the cultures of the time. Sometimes the Jewish people (such as Kings Solomon, Achaz, and Manasses) messed up and took on this practice as well, despite God calling such a practice an abomination, and demanding the death of those who did such things. Those people ended up in a lot of trouble. It's the whole reason that Gehenna came to be the Jewish word for Tartarus/Hell (which is different from Sheol/Hades/Purgatory).
** In 2 Maccabees, when the Jewish people rebelled against the corrupt high priest Jason, who had been appointed by King Antiochus IV, and ran him out of town, the king left Egypt for Jerusalem. Once in Jerusalem, he massacred many, young and old, women and children, virgins and infants. In 1 and 2 Maccabees (2 Maccabees is not a "sequel', it's another viewpoint of what happened in the the first book), King Antiochus IV then decreed that everyone take up the customs of everyone else, except the Jewish customs. He outlawed all Jewish customs, including circumcision. The children who were circumcized were killed, as were their mothers and whoever performed the circumcision.
* As has been mentioned, literature is much less uncomfortable about killing children. Sometimes, but not always, this carries over to adaptions. Take for example the animated movie version of Creator/RoaldDahl's ''The BFG'', wherein we see into a boys dream and are allowed to at least on some level "bond" with this kid only for him to be ''very'' heavily implied to have been '''eaten'''. Oh, and when Sophie and The BFG discuss the other Giants' plans to eat some school children it is acknowledged to have happened.
** Dahl seemed to be fairly fond of averting this trope. He did it a lot in ''TheWitches'' too, having the main character's grandmother regale him with stories of kids who turned to stone, were transmogrified into slugs and killed by their parents, trapped in pictures, etc.
* In the AnneRice series, it's generally frowned upon to turn a human into a vampire who hasn't lived to adulthood, but Lestat, that LoveableRogue, turns Claudia who was, maybe, seven at the time. This results in an eventual BreakTheCutie, turning her into a bitter creature who has a mature woman's mind but is trapped in a child's body.
* ''LordOfTheFlies''. The children ''kill each other''.
* ''ASongOfIceAndFire'', notable in that baby-killing isn't seen as ''exceptionally'' dramatic or vile, because the world is already saturated with evil. Though it is cited as one of the more notorious of Gregor Clegane's many, many, many horrible acts.
** There's also the Unsullied, who have to kill babies as part of their training.
* The title character in the novel version of ''Literature/{{Dracula}}'' had no compunction feeding a baby to his three vampire wives. Then the baby's mother to a pack of wolves. And one of his victims, Lucy Westenra, gains a reputation for preying on children.
* In Nancy A. Collins' ''Sunglasses After Dark'' series, Sonja comes across an ogre who is in the process of lowering a baby into his maw. He would've been successful in eating the baby if she'd been two minutes slower.
--> '''Sonja:''' Uh-uh. No veal for you.
* Averted in the ''LeftBehind'' Kids' Series. Of the original four kids, ranging from ages 18 to 12, the youngest is the first to go. Rather violently.
* In ''Literature/SamanthaStoneAndTheMermaidsQuest'', a large group of girls, aged 8 to 12, are all kidnapped in an attempt to find the heroine, 10-year-old Samantha Stone. When each one is shown to the main villain, one by one, he orders their execution when he discovers the girl is not Samantha. Which actually gets carried out in one case. Yup, a children's book where a child is executed.
* In the Russian book ''[[Literature/AliceGirlFromTheFuture Secret of a Black Stone]]'' by Creator/KirBulychev, child protagonist Alice investigates kidnapping of 84 children. Turns out they were kidnapped to be used as child soldiers. While no children are shown dying [[spoiler: and Alice, being drafted as a child soldier as well, is rescued seconds before the planned execution]], the number count in the end clearly shows that some of the kidnapped children died. Also Alice befriends a child kidnapped from another planet, and he tells that out of 30+ children kidnapped with him, only 8 or so are alive now.
* In ''Literature/{{Coraline}}'' the heroine [[spoiler: discovers ghosts of children previously taken by Other Mother. And the only thing she can do is liberate their spirits so they rest in peace...]]
* ''Literature/AmericanGods'': Hinzelmann.
* In the ''Literature/KeeperOfTheSwords'' series by Creator/NickPerumov, DarkMagicalGirl Sylvia, being in a city overrun with monsters, hears a plea for help, coming from a 6-year old girl. She rushes in, but cannot save the girl anymore. This sets Sylvia in a [[BerserkButton deep rage]]. Cue one big CrowningMomentOfAwesome where Sylvia [[spoiler: invites ''all'' monsters in a city to feast on her, and when they really come proceeds to hack them all in pieces with her sword. She single-handedly defeats a monster army capable of overrunning dozens of local wizards.]]
* Though Jason never kills any kids in the movies, he does it quite a bit in the ''Franchise/FridayThe13th'' books.
** Jason kicks and stomps a baby and two toddlers to death in ''Friday the 13th: Jason's Curse''.
** ''Friday the 13th: The Carnival'' has kids being mangled and fried when the carnival rides go haywire and fires break out.
** ''Friday The 13th: Hate Kill Repeat]]'' had Jason attacking a family of campers, killing them all, including the little boy and baby girl.
** A zombie baby shows up in ''Friday The 13th: The Jason Strain''.
** Finally, ''Friday The 13th: Carnival Of Maniacs'', after Jason's rampage in the titular carnival, a dead father is found holding his son's body in his arms.
* In Cormac [=McCarthy=]'s masterpiece ''Literature/TheRoad'', the two main characters come upon a campfire abandoned by cannibals. A baby has been left roasting on a spit.
** The man had seen a pregnant woman and a few other men passing by a few days before, too.
* In Erich Maria Remarque's novel ''A Time to Live and a Time to Die'' (set during WorldWarII) the protagonist is on the streets of a German city during an air raid, and sees a five-year-old girl with an infant. Then a bomb hits the place; when the explosion is over, the girl is dead, and the baby has disappeared.
* AnyoneCanDie in ''Literature/WarriorCats'', so this trope is completely averted. Throughout the course of the series, we have seen kits carried off by hawks, starved to death, and fallen into crevasses. And that's just ''onscreen!'' Offscreen we have kits and apprentices mauled by dogs, frozen to death in winter, killed by diseases, hit by cars, and at one point the BigBad brutally murders an apprentice from another Clan whom the protagonist had saved earlier, [[MoralEventHorizon just to spite him.]]
* Averted in ''[[Literature/TheSilenceOfTheLambs Hannibal Rising]]'', where the plot revolves around Hannibal seeking revenge on [[spoiler: the Nazis who killed and [[ImAHumanitarian ate his sister]].]]
* Averted in ''TheSilmarillion'': Dior's young sons are abandoned in a forest and it's strongly implied that they die there.
* Averted in ''TheBookOfTheDunCow'', in which [[spoiler: Chauntecleer's three sons]] are killed by basilisks, along with their nurse.
* The ogre-like titular monster from Creator/CliveBarker's ''Rawhead Rex'' devours a young boy alive, as well as dismembering and eating a little girl's riding pony. Much of the story is told from Rex's point of view, so although no infants are killed, the creature reminisces at length about eating them.
* In ''AmericanPsycho'', serial killer Patrick Bateman stabs a little boy to death in a zoo, just to see if he'd enjoy it. He doesn't (not because of guilt). He also kills a dog once (along with its owner).
* Subverted and averted in the ''AnitaBlake Vampire Hunter'' series by Laurell K. Hamilton.
** It starts strong in the second novel [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Laughing_Corpse_(novel) The Laughing Corpse]][[spoiler: where part of the plot deals with a flesh eating zombie that consumed a family, but having failed to find the body of one of the children ,an infant, it is assumed he is still alive. The assumption proves to be false in a very gruesome way.]].
** In the fifth novel [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloody_Bones_(novel) Bloody Bones]] [[spoiler: the criminal investigations concern gruesomely murdered teenagers, as well as a teenager turned vampire that burns to death at the end and her brother whom the main characters fail to rescue and have to watch die.]]
** The ninth novel [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obsidian_Butterfly_(novel) Obsidian Butterfly]] takes the cake it has [[spoiler: whole families, including children of all ages, gruesomely murdered, having their skins completely removed and reanimated as zombies, a pair of children, a 6 year old girl and 10 year old boy, kidnapped, tortured and raped by the bad guys, and the Crowning Moment of Gruesome -- one of the previously mentioned skinless zombies getting loose in the maternity ward and eating several (like 20) newborns before the main character puts him or her down.]].
** The twelfth novel [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incubus_Dreams_(novel) Incubus Dreams]] gives the readers [[spoiler: several back stories, including a high school couple raped and murdered in such a gruesome way that the parents still haven't found closure after 3 years, and one of the lovers of the main character that witnessed at ten the death of his prepubescent brother at the hands of their father]].
* Shakespeare's ''Theatre/{{Macbeth}}'': Macduff's wife and children are murdered -- including a son, who is murdered on-stage.
* ''{{Redwall}}'' has gone into this territory several times, all of them being killed by vermin. There are at least four instances: 1) In ''The Long Patrol'', where
''Shadow Hunters'', one of the characters is shown a vermin blade that's been notched for every kill. The shallower notches are for creatures who couldn't fight back, such as women and children. 2) ''Taggerung'', where a vermin character causes a landslide that kills a family of dormice so that he could get their food. 3) ''Doomwyte'', though this one was done by a snake, the infant in question was a tree rat, and it was a KarmicDeath. After the tree rat ran away from a fight it ran into a snake and got eaten. 4) ''The Sable Quean'', where a young otter is stabbed in girl. If you're playing her, the neck with a poisoned knife and dies shortly afterwards.
* [[spoiler:The first book of]] ''HisDarkMaterials'' presents a full segment from
only way to win is to survive until the POV of a child character [[spoiler:who is introduced and given a name and backstory exactly ''for'' the audience to be shocked when he suffers a FateWorseThanDeath, which leads to actual death soon enough. The end of the book proper features game (there are several ways of ending the death of game besides killing everyone).
** In a reversal,
the protagonist's best friend (a boy about 10-12) as being ''plot relevant''. No other deaths are featured later, but the [[CorruptChurch Magisterium]] are nonetheless unhesitant in sending an assassin to kill children later on.]]
* Being only lightly fictionalized, averted in the ''Literature/LittleHouseOnThePrairie'' series by Laura Ingalls Wilder. Although the death of Laura's baby brother occurs off-screen and is never mentioned, we do see the death by SIDS of her first son. And her subsequent depression was so crippling that [[ShootTheShaggyDog she failed to react in time to an over-burning pot and their house burned down.]] Wasn't the Old West romantic?
* In ''GoneWithTheWind'', not only does Scarlett miscarry, her daughter Bonnie is killed in a riding accident. These two incidents put the nail in the coffin of Scarlett and Rhett's marriage.
* In the ''Literature/MortalInstruments'' books, all the teenage protagonists survive the final battle.... but the cute, manga-reading little brother who wasn't allowed to fight is brutally murdered.
* In ''Literature/TheInvertedWorld'', during an attack on the City, the creche where the children are raised gets set on fire. Many children die, including the protagonist's infant son.
* Averted in one of the Literature/{{Discworld}} novels. Granny Weatherwax is acting as a midwife in a...''difficult'' birth, and realizes she can only save either the baby or the mother. She chooses to save the mother, because she is otherwise able-bodied, and doing otherwise would leave the husband to take care of the child alone. Another
oldest looking character tells Granny she should have let the husband make the choice, and she asks in return [[TearJerker what the man has ever done to her that she should hurt him so]].
* In the ''Warcraft'' novel, ''Literature/{{Arthas}}'', Jaina Proudmoore, the title character's on-again, off-again LoveInterest, suggests that [[TheVirus Undead Plague]] might not [[OnlyFatalToAdults effect kids the same as adults.]] [[spoiler:It was then defied by Arthas, who made it clear that [[MoralEventHorizon he was going to kill every last person in Stratholme - adults and children alike.]]]] Luckily, we never see THAT ugly tidbit in the games.
* In ''Eon'', the infant future emperor is publicly executed by sword to ensure all other lines of power are wiped out.
* ''PercyJacksonAndTheOlympians'' averts this trope by having [[spoiler: Bianca di Angelo]] die at the age of twelve. The rest
of the deaths were teenagers and adults, not counting the off screen deaths.
* In [[AnneOfGreenGables Anne's House of Dreams]], Anne's firstborn child dies the day it is born.
* ''Literature/TheBoyInTheStripedPyjamas'' subverts this. You expect one of the children to die because he's in a Concentration Camp [[spoiler:but the ending has both the protagonist and his friend killed]].
* ''Literature/TheOnceAndFutureKing'' has multiple infanticide [[spoiler:''committed by King Arthur'']], albeit off-stage (and [[spoiler:revealed to us decades afterward]].
* In the book ''Lost'' by Jacqueline Davies, two of the protagonist's siblings were stillborn. [[spoiler:Her younger sister also dies from being trampled by a carriage horse.]]
* ''Stealaway:'' Crackspear avenges the theft of his horse by Walt of Wideopen by killing the latter's young son.
* ''Literature/RaptorRed'' has several aversions and at least one near-aversion. The Trinity Turtle's earliest memories include her siblings being devoured by pterosaurs, Raptor Red and her sister [[spoiler:seriously consider abandoning the chicks during a famine, and one of the chicks dies of an infection]].
* ''Literature/TheFoxAndTheHound'' has a lot of cute fox pups fathered by Tod romping around in a few chapters. [[spoiler:All but [[WhatHappenedToTheMouse possibly one]] die.]] There's also a human child who's accidentally poisoned by bait meant to cull rabid foxes.
* In ''Literature/TheAdventuresOfPinocchio'' Pinocchio's friend Candlewick dies as a donkey as a result of exhaustion and the injuries inflicted by his master, and who knows how many children suffered similar fates in The Land Of Toys.
* ''TheHungerGames'', obviously. But even apart from the Games, there's [[spoiler: the District 12 bombing, Prim, the Capitol girl with the yellow coat...]]
* Creator/TamoraPierce really likes to hold nothing back in her portrayals of medieval life in the Literature/TortallUniverse:
** Particularly noteworthy are the last two books of ''Literature/ProtectorOfTheSmall'', where the hideous "killing devices" are apparently powered by the souls of dead children and infants who cry out for their mothers when released. [[spoiler:It turns out that the necromancer who makes the devices doesn't need to use children. He does it because he ''likes'' to.]]
** In ''Literature/DaughterOfTheLioness'', the children of rebels are thrown into a piranha moat. (Mercifully, this does not ever happen onscreen.) Also, [[spoiler:Kyprioth persuades Rubinyan and Imajane to kill the four-year-old King Dunevon and his closest cousin, Elsren Balitang,
game, who is the same age]].
** The first ''Literature/ProvostsDog'' book has the Shadow Snake, a kidnapper who kills the children they abduct if the parents don't give up the valuables that the Snake wants. One of Beka's best friends lost her boy this way. There's also a woman who commits infanticide on her own. In the third, [[spoiler:one of the child princes is murdered]].
* ''Literature/RunningOutOfTime'' is about a girl from a 19th century-themed historical preserve who leaves
smiling and stumbles about the "modern day" in order to find wearing a cure for the diphtheria that has afflicted the children of her village. Two of them later die from it.noose, wins if he dies first.



[[folder:Live Action TV]]
* Often averted on daytime soaps.
** ''AllMyChildren'' killed off infant Leora (heart defect) in 2003 and Donna's baby (fire) in the early 80's, as well as Gloria's premature infant Anna Claire (one of the saddest daytime scenes EVER), and most notably, Brooke's 6-year daughter Laura was killed by a drunk driver.
** One of GeneralHospital's most famous storylines involved BJ Jones being killed in a car accident and her heart being given to her dying cousin Maxie.
** Many soaps (AsTheWorldTurns, OneLifeToLive, TheBoldAndTheBeautiful) have featured characters being within weeks of delivery a healthy baby, only for tragedy to strike -- car accident, premature labor -- resulting in the baby's stillbirth.
** Even more disturbing is that the likelihood of this often seems to be inversely proportional to the mother's or couple's feelings about the pregnancy -- if she's HappilyMarried (or happily involved with the baby's father),happy about the pregnancy, and looking forward to motherhood, odds are, the child is doomed. If she's miserable and/or the child was conceived under dicey circumstances, such as an affair, the kid will make it. Case in point-- on TheBoldAndTheBeautiful Rick and Amber decided to have a child to solidify their reconciliation and were blissfully happy about her pregnancy, only for the baby to be stillborn. Meanwhile, Brooke conceived during her affair with her daughter's husband Deacon and after consciously deciding not to have an abortion, spent months wailing and angsting about the turmoil and havoc that was going to result from the child's birth and promptly gave birth to a healthy baby girl.
* The first death in ''Film/TheDayAfter'' is that of a young girl in a red dress who is afraid to take shelter in the basement of a Kansas City office building. She's reassured by a guard, but shortly after the first bomb drops on the outskirts of the city she's trampled by a panicked crowd. Seconds later, dozens of children are vaporized when bombs fall on Kansas City and Whiteman AFB, including Airman [=McCoy's=] infant child and a class of preteens.
* ''Series/{{House}}'' averts this by having a newborn baby die in the episode "Maternity."
** 'Forever' has mentally unstable [[PatientOfTheWeek Patient]] ''murder'' her child on-screen.
** Medical dramas in general tend to avert this trope, and to milk it for all the [[TearJerker heart-rending tears]] it's worth when they do.
* ''Series/{{Heroes}}'': Averted with [[spoiler: the onscreen death of future-Sylar's child, Noah]] - though this may be a case of ExpendableAlternateUniverse.
** He also seemed to have very little blood on him. For a show not shy about its gore, you'd think having a grown man and some furniture tossed onto him would result in a little more than just BloodFromTheMouth.
*** He may very well have been knocked out cold, and Sylar didn't know it. If the furniture didn't kill him, the ''nuclear explosion'' did.
*** With all that weight on him, the kid most likely suffocated while unconscious.
* [[spoiler:Trip and T'Pol's daughter, cloned from their tissue,]] does not survive in ''Series/StarTrekEnterprise''.
* A baby was killed by a disguised Cylon in the pilot for the new ''Series/{{Battlestar Galactica|Reimagined}}''; this is one the few -- perhaps the only -- infant ''murders'' ever shown on TV. It happened again in the second season opener, where Commander Adama (leader of the humans) drowns a baby in Baltar's dream sequence on Kobol. The baby-killing on this show is starting to worry this editor. Though that scene in the pilot was quite ambiguous, with specific directions to the actress playing the Cylon to make it so. Was it just a murder, was it a mercy killing so the baby wouldn't have to go through the nuclear holocaust that would be released in a few hours, or was it an accident with the Cylon not realizing how fragile a human baby would be?
** The death of [[spoiler: Cami, the girl from botanical cruiser in the Miniseries]] is a clear aversion. And we see it onscreen!
** And there are the offscreen deaths of 99% of all children in the Colonies. That's billions.
** In ''The Plan'', [[spoiler: Cavil coldbloodedly stabs a small child]] who repeatedly tried to sneak in to his chapel and befriend him. What makes it so chilling is that the kid has been seeking refuge there for the length of the movie. In the end, [[spoiler: Cavil]] seems to give in, sharing his food and learning that they both have the same first name. The whole scene is leading up to a PetTheDog moment until he [[spoiler: kills him and casually dumps his body to the side]].
* ''Series/LittleHouseOnThePrairie,'' in an effort to be true to the infant mortality rates of the harsh frontier, is another show that did not adhere to this trope. Babies died on several occasions on this show.
** Wilder's first son Charles Jr. dies of leukemia before he even turns a year old.
** When the school for the blind Mary and her husband run is on fire they two are able to get all the students out only to realize their baby and another woman are trapped inside. They are then forced to watch helplessly as the woman and baby appear at a high window unable to escape and plead for help until they are both overtaken by the flames. (All of this happens onscreen and is quite unsettling)
** Laura and Almanzo's unnamed son dies during the night after becoming ill a few days before. (It is now believed that he was conceived to soon after Laura recovered for diphtheria later causing his illness and death.)
* In an episode of ''Series/{{CSI}}'', one of the victims is a baby. This then proceeds to move Grissom so much that he gets quite angry at Greg Sanders for working on a gang-related case which happened earlier in the week.
* Played to the hilt in ''CSIMiami'', when the sole survivors of a murdered family are the murderer playing his wife's postpartum stress as the cause, and a toddler who wandered away from the crime scene in a blood stained shirt.
* In ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'' and ''Series/{{Angel}}'', vampires never hesitated to kill or turn children and babies, though naturally this never occurred on-screen. Darla discovers the effect of Angel's soul when he refuses to drink from a baby. Spike, after becoming unable to hurt humans but before becoming ensouled, tells Dawn a story of slaughtering a family, leading up to his discovering the baby in the coal bin, but he quickly revises this story when Buffy arrives, to her evident skepticism.
** And in the episode "Band Candy," the Mayor orders his minions to [[MoralEventHorizon steal babies]] as a tribute (Read: Lunch) to one of the demons he owes a debt to. Guess who the BigBad of the season turned out to be?
** In "Triangle", Olaf the troll requests babies to eat. Nobody actually grants this request though, nor does he ever get any babies to eat.
** In an early season 3 episode of ''Series/{{Angel}}'', one type of demon is said to prefer babies.
** In the season 8 (comic) Faith discovers that [[spoiler: a mother was turned with all of her children - and Faith has to stake those children, as well! (though we only see "paff" and not the moment of impalement]].
** We do see Buffy's cousin Celia being killed by Der Kindestod in detail in "Killed By Death" in a flashback.
** Also, Wes once dreamed about baby Connor being fatally bitten [[spoiler: by Angel]].
** In "The I in Team", Adam skewers and dissects a small boy. We only hear about it on the news, however.
** The flashback of Holtz who finds that Angel (going by Angelus at the time) killed his wife and turned his daughter. Holtz grimly forces her out into the sunlight where she burns to death. The scene of the mother being killed also cuts away after the sound of a baby crying is heard and Darla is seen looking hungrily at the cradle.
** In "Lie to Me" it looks like Drusilla is about to chow down on a young boy, but Angel shows up in time to rescue him.
* ''Series/DoctorWho'': The episode ''School Reunion'' opens with a child being eaten.
** In ''The Stolen Earth'' we see a family of three, with a child about ten years old, retreat back to their house after being ordered out by the Daleks. And then the Daleks blow up the whole house.
** In ''Survival,'' the Doctor pursues the predatory Cheetah People to Earth. The first person he meets is a little girl in tears because someone has killed her cat.
** In ''Full Circle'', a juvenile Marshman known simply as the Marshchild dies (and is, in fact, the only Marshman to perish in the story). Tylos and Varsh also arguably count, as both are teenagers who die during the Marshmen's rampage aboard the Starliner in the final episode.
* The villain in the ''Series/{{Torchwood}}'' episode "Sleeper" had no problem killing babies. Two infants in prams were ''strongly hinted'' to have died in unfortunate manners, though they stop short of ''showing'' it.
** ''Children of Earth''. [[spoiler:Three children get killed, and many more are placed in great danger. Several suffer a FateWorseThanDeath.]]
* ''Series/TheSarahJaneAdventures'': A child Slitheen disguises himself as a schoolboy, and later a child genius. Although it is not explicitly stated or shown onscreen, in both cases the real boy must have been killed and skinned so [[KillAndReplace the Slitheen could assume his identity]].
** ''The Day of the Clown'', which states that all the kidnapped children that weren't taken recently by Odd Bob "fade[d] away".
* An episode of the '60s ''Franchise/{{Dragnet}}'' featured two parents who were so high on drugs that they forgot they put their baby in the bathtub. Whoops. Another followed the officers as they investigated a case of child abuse; that one ended with them arresting the father after he shook his baby to death.
* This was is what sent Hawkeye over the edge in the ''Series/{{Mash}}'' GrandFinale, the fact that a mother had to smother her child because he told her that she had to keep it quiet[[note]] They were on a bus full of people with an enemy patrol in the area, and the child was at risk of giving away their position.[[/note]] We only see the head fall back but it's obvious the baby is dead. Hawkeye had been so traumatized by the incident that at first he steadfastly remembered the infant being a chicken, until Sydney Freedman was able to draw the truth out of him as the big heartbreaking [[TheReveal reveal]].
* Claire and Russell's baby died on ''Promised Land'', which was unusual because it was a "family" show, with the characters actually looking forward to the birth.
* In ''Frank Herbert's Dune'' miniseries, Paul Maud'dib's baby son is killed in a Sardaukar raid. The scene shows a soldier advancing towards the baby with a knife, then jumps to another scene with a yelp from the baby in the background.
* Very averted: Nearly the entire arc of the fourth season of ''TheShield'' surrounds the Strike Team trying to help Shane after a vicious gangster executes a young girl and frames him for it.
* In ''{{Series/Deadwood}}'', Stubs and "The Nigga general" lose control of a wild horse they were trying to castrate. It runs through the camp and caves in the chest of the sheriff's nephew, who he was raising as his son with his sister-in-law who was living as his wife.
* ''Series/{{Farscape}}'' episode "Different Destinations" [[DownerEnding ends with the]] [[EverybodysDeadDave mass murder]] of an ''entire nunnery, including the eight-year-old novices''.
** And in "Prayer," a Scarran officer aboard a research vessel disposed of a test subject's unborn child by using his heat-projection to fry it alive inside the womb. And the holographic display also shows the fetus writhing and shrivelling in the heat.
** However as [[spoiler:the mother was a mole]] hopefully they faked it to scare aeryn. Hopefully. She [[NeckSnap got what's coming either way]].
* ''Series/{{Charmed}}'': Unlike Piper's unborn son (see above), Phoebe's actually-not-her-child has no such luck: [[spoiler: he is burned alive when the Charmed Ones reflect his power back at the Seer, in whose womb he is currently residing.]] Apparently this Trope doesn't apply if you're the Spawn of Satan.
* Played straight in one episode of ''LegendOfTheSeeker'', and conspicuously averted in another. In the first case, [[spoiler:a male Confessor is born, who by Confessor law has to be put to death, but Richard stops them in the end.]] In the second case, the episode opens with kids playing hide and seek, with one finding a mysterious object, and the scene cuts away when it opens. A little later, the heroes show up in the village, and find everyone dead, including the kids.
* In ''Series/IClaudius'', during the purge in Tiberius's reign, both Sejanus' son and daughter were killed, both under age. The boy was given his "manly gown" and the girl was raped before being killed as killing a virgin would bring bad luck to the city.
** Furthmore, Gemellus, aged perhaps twelve or thirteen, is murdered and decapitated offscreen, his head brought to Caligula as evidence and Caligula's infant daughter Drusilla is murdered in her cradle along with her mother. There are still more child deaths in the book. All in all, thoroughly averted.
* ''Series/BabylonFive'''s ''Believers'' ([[spoiler: An alien boy is killed by his parents at the end because they believe a surgical operation has caused his soul to leave his body.]]) and ''Confessions and Lamentations'' ([[spoiler: 99% of an alien race dies of a plague, including a prominently featured girl]]).
* At least two children are killed during the series run of ''TheWire''.
* Like the [[ASongOfIceAndFire the novels]] it was based on, the world of ''AGameOfThrones'' is very dark and gritty, and AnyoneCanDie. To drive this home, a child of perhaps 7 or 8 years is shown impaled on a tree, along with the dismembered remains of her family group, within the first two minutes of the pilot. She is unlikely to be the first child to be dead (or die) onscreen.
** One of Arya's friends is murdered as a scapegoat for the well-deserved mauling of [[RoyalBrat Joffrey]]. While we don't see the act itself, we do see his corpse being hauled away by [[TheBrute the Hound]].
** More children (including an infant) die in the Season Two premiere, "The North Remembers," as part of a massive purge of [[spoiler: King Robert's bastard children.]]
** During an attack on the Night's Watch, one of the young orphan recruits ends up [[KickTheDog getting a sword through his throat]] when his captors realize that he can't walk unassisted.
** Two Lannister children are attacked and murdered in their beds by Stark bannermen.
* The third series opener of ''Series/{{Merlin}}'' revealed that [[spoiler: Uther used to drown the children of magic users in case they inherited their parents' abilities. Though the drowning itself is entirely offscreen, their ghosts appear en masse.]]
* ''Series/PowerRangersLostGalaxy'' has a solid aversion. The Magna Defender's revenge obsession is due to the (witnessed onscreen) death of his son. However, his son was a Magna Defender in training (despite being ten-ish, if we go by the size and the voice) who was never seen demorphed, making this less daring than some examples. Still, he doesn't ultimately survive, time isn't rewritten, he doesn't AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence, or anything like that, and he's small and has the voice of a kid.
* In the ''Franchise/LawAndOrder'' franchise, there are the occasional episodes where juvenile deaths are investigated.
* ''WalkingWithDinosaurs'' and its spinoffs averts this. The first episode of ''WalkingWithDinosaurs'' has a litter of prehistoric mammals ''[[OffingTheOffspring eaten by their own parents]]''. For pure terror, however, the first episode of ''Walking With Beasts'' shows a baby terror bird that is still hatching when it is devoured by ants.
* ''Series/SonsOfAnarchy'' [[spoiler:averts the trope off-screen in the first episode of season 6, Straw, with a school shooting. Averts the trope so hard, in fact, that Kurt Sutter was later compelled to apologise for it: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/09/13/kurt-sutter-parents-tv-council_n_3921807.html.]]

to:

[[folder:Live Action TV]]
[[folder: Comic Books]]
* Often averted on daytime soaps.
** ''AllMyChildren'' killed off infant Leora (heart defect) in 2003 and Donna's baby (fire) in the early 80's, as well as Gloria's premature infant Anna Claire (one of the saddest daytime scenes EVER), and most notably, Brooke's 6-year daughter Laura was killed by a drunk driver.
** One of GeneralHospital's most famous storylines involved BJ Jones being killed in a car accident and her heart being given to her dying cousin Maxie.
** Many soaps (AsTheWorldTurns, OneLifeToLive, TheBoldAndTheBeautiful) have featured characters being within weeks of delivery a healthy baby, only for tragedy to strike -- car accident, premature labor -- resulting in the baby's stillbirth.
** Even more disturbing is that the likelihood of this often
In ''ComicBook/BatmanNoMansLand'', SelfDemonstrating/TheJoker seems to be inversely proportional to the mother's or couple's feelings about the pregnancy -- if she's HappilyMarried (or happily involved perfectly okay with the baby's father),happy about the pregnancy, shooting a baby. Commissioner Gordon's wife Sarah begs him not to, and looking forward to motherhood, odds are, the child is doomed. If she's miserable and/or the child was conceived under dicey circumstances, such as an affair, the kid will make it. Case in point-- on TheBoldAndTheBeautiful Rick and Amber decided to have a child to solidify their reconciliation and were blissfully happy about trades her pregnancy, only own life for the baby to be stillborn. Meanwhile, Brooke conceived during her affair with her daughter's husband Deacon and after consciously deciding not to have an abortion, spent months wailing and angsting about the turmoil and havoc theirs.
** This is notable in
that was going to result from the child's birth and promptly gave birth to a healthy baby girl.
* The first death in ''Film/TheDayAfter'' is that of a young girl in a red dress who is afraid to take shelter in the basement of a Kansas City office building. She's reassured by a guard, but shortly after the first bomb drops on the outskirts of the city she's trampled by a panicked crowd. Seconds later, dozens of children are vaporized when bombs fall on Kansas City and Whiteman AFB, including Airman [=McCoy's=] infant child and a class of preteens.
* ''Series/{{House}}'' averts this by having a newborn baby die in the episode "Maternity."
** 'Forever' has mentally unstable [[PatientOfTheWeek Patient]] ''murder'' her child on-screen.
** Medical dramas in general tend to avert this trope, and to milk it for all the [[TearJerker heart-rending tears]] it's worth when they do.
* ''Series/{{Heroes}}'': Averted with [[spoiler: the onscreen death of future-Sylar's child, Noah]] - though this may be a case of ExpendableAlternateUniverse.
** He also seemed to have very little blood on him. For a show not shy about its gore, you'd think having a grown man and some furniture tossed onto him would result in a little more than just BloodFromTheMouth.
*** He may very well have been knocked out cold, and Sylar didn't know it. If the furniture didn't kill him, the ''nuclear explosion'' did.
*** With all that weight on him, the kid most likely suffocated while unconscious.
* [[spoiler:Trip and T'Pol's daughter, cloned from their tissue,]] does not survive in ''Series/StarTrekEnterprise''.
* A baby was killed by a disguised Cylon in the pilot for the new ''Series/{{Battlestar Galactica|Reimagined}}'';
this is one the few -- perhaps the only -- infant ''murders'' time the Joker is ever shown on TV. It happened again in the second season opener, where Commander Adama (leader of the humans) drowns a baby in Baltar's dream sequence on Kobol. The baby-killing on this show is starting to worry this editor. Though that scene in the pilot was quite ambiguous, with specific directions to the actress playing the Cylon to make it so. Was it just a murder, was it a mercy killing so the baby wouldn't have to go through the nuclear holocaust that would be released in a few hours, or was it an accident with the Cylon not realizing how fragile a human baby would be?
** The death of [[spoiler: Cami, the girl from botanical cruiser in the Miniseries]] is a clear aversion. And we see it onscreen!
** And there are the offscreen deaths of 99% of all children in the Colonies. That's billions.
** In ''The Plan'', [[spoiler: Cavil coldbloodedly stabs a small child]] who repeatedly tried to sneak in to his chapel and befriend him. What makes it so chilling is that the kid has been seeking refuge there for the length of the movie. In the end, [[spoiler: Cavil]] seems to give in, sharing his food and learning that they both have the same first name. The whole scene is leading up to a PetTheDog moment until he [[spoiler: kills him and casually dumps his body to the side]].
* ''Series/LittleHouseOnThePrairie,'' in an effort to be true to the infant mortality rates of the harsh frontier, is another show that did not adhere to this trope. Babies died on several occasions on this show.
** Wilder's first son Charles Jr. dies of leukemia before he even turns a year old.
** When the school for the blind Mary and her husband run is on fire they two are able to get all the students out only to realize their baby and another woman are trapped inside. They are then forced to watch helplessly as the woman and baby appear at a high window unable to escape and plead for help until they are both overtaken by the flames. (All of this happens onscreen and is quite unsettling)
** Laura and Almanzo's unnamed son dies during the night after becoming ill a few days before. (It is now believed that he was conceived to soon after Laura recovered for diphtheria later causing his illness and death.)
* In an episode of ''Series/{{CSI}}'', one of the victims is a baby. This then proceeds to move Grissom so much that he gets quite angry at Greg Sanders for working on a gang-related case which happened earlier in the week.
* Played to the hilt in ''CSIMiami'', when the sole survivors of a murdered family are the murderer playing his wife's postpartum stress as the cause, and a toddler who wandered away from the crime scene in a blood stained shirt.
* In ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'' and ''Series/{{Angel}}'', vampires never hesitated to kill or turn children and babies, though naturally this never occurred on-screen. Darla discovers the effect of Angel's soul when he refuses to drink from a baby. Spike, after becoming unable to hurt humans but before becoming ensouled, tells Dawn a story of slaughtering a family, leading up to his discovering the baby in the coal bin, but he quickly revises this story when Buffy arrives, to her evident skepticism.
** And in the episode "Band Candy," the Mayor orders his minions to [[MoralEventHorizon steal babies]] as a tribute (Read: Lunch) to one of the demons he owes a debt to. Guess who the BigBad of the season turned out to be?
** In "Triangle", Olaf the troll requests babies to eat. Nobody actually grants this request though, nor does he ever get any babies to eat.
** In an early season 3 episode of ''Series/{{Angel}}'', one type of demon is said to prefer babies.
** In the season 8 (comic) Faith discovers that [[spoiler: a mother was turned with all of her children - and Faith has to stake those children, as well! (though we only see "paff" and not the moment of impalement]].
** We do see Buffy's cousin Celia being killed by Der Kindestod in detail in "Killed By Death" in a flashback.
** Also, Wes once dreamed about baby Connor being fatally bitten [[spoiler: by Angel]].
** In "The I in Team", Adam skewers and dissects a small boy. We only hear about it on the news, however.
** The flashback of Holtz who finds that Angel (going by Angelus at the time) killed his wife and turned his daughter. Holtz grimly forces her out into the sunlight where she burns to death. The scene of the mother being killed also cuts away after the sound of a baby crying is heard and Darla is seen looking hungrily at the cradle.
** In "Lie to Me" it looks like Drusilla is about to chow down on a young boy, but Angel shows up in time to rescue him.
* ''Series/DoctorWho'': The episode ''School Reunion'' opens with a child being eaten.
** In ''The Stolen Earth'' we see a family of three, with a child about ten years old, retreat back to their house after being ordered out by the Daleks. And then the Daleks blow up the whole house.
** In ''Survival,'' the Doctor pursues the predatory Cheetah People to Earth. The first person he meets is a little girl in tears because someone has killed her cat.
** In ''Full Circle'', a juvenile Marshman known simply as the Marshchild dies (and is, in fact, the only Marshman to perish in the story). Tylos and Varsh also arguably count, as both are teenagers who die during the Marshmen's rampage aboard the Starliner in the final episode.
* The villain in the ''Series/{{Torchwood}}'' episode "Sleeper" had no problem killing babies. Two infants in prams were ''strongly hinted'' to have died in unfortunate manners, though they stop short of ''showing'' it.
** ''Children of Earth''. [[spoiler:Three children get killed, and many more are placed in great danger. Several suffer a FateWorseThanDeath.]]
* ''Series/TheSarahJaneAdventures'': A child Slitheen disguises himself as a schoolboy, and later a child genius. Although it is not explicitly stated or shown onscreen, in both cases the real boy must have been killed and skinned so [[KillAndReplace the Slitheen could assume his identity]].
** ''The Day of the Clown'', which states that all the kidnapped children that weren't taken recently by Odd Bob "fade[d] away".
* An episode of the '60s ''Franchise/{{Dragnet}}'' featured two parents who were so high on drugs that they forgot they put their baby in the bathtub. Whoops. Another followed the officers as they investigated a case of child abuse; that one ended with them arresting the father
sad after he shook his baby to death.
* This was is what sent Hawkeye over the edge in the ''Series/{{Mash}}'' GrandFinale, the fact that a mother had to smother her child because he told her that she had to keep it quiet[[note]] They were on a bus full of people with an enemy patrol in the area, and the child was at risk of giving away their position.[[/note]] We only see the head fall back but it's obvious the baby is dead. Hawkeye had been so traumatized by the incident that at first he steadfastly remembered the infant being a chicken, until Sydney Freedman was able to draw the truth out of him as the big heartbreaking [[TheReveal reveal]].
* Claire and Russell's baby died on ''Promised Land'', which was unusual because it was a "family" show, with the characters actually looking forward to the birth.
* In ''Frank Herbert's Dune'' miniseries, Paul Maud'dib's baby son is killed in a Sardaukar raid. The scene shows a soldier advancing towards the baby with a knife, then jumps to another scene with a yelp from the baby in the background.
* Very averted: Nearly the entire arc of the fourth season of ''TheShield'' surrounds the Strike Team trying to help Shane after a vicious gangster executes a young girl and frames him for it.
* In ''{{Series/Deadwood}}'', Stubs and "The Nigga general" lose control of a wild horse they were trying to castrate. It runs through the camp and caves in the chest of the sheriff's nephew, who he was raising as his son with his sister-in-law who was living as his wife.
* ''Series/{{Farscape}}'' episode "Different Destinations" [[DownerEnding ends with the]] [[EverybodysDeadDave mass murder]] of an ''entire nunnery, including the eight-year-old novices''.
** And in "Prayer," a Scarran officer aboard a research vessel disposed of a test subject's unborn child by using his heat-projection to fry it alive inside the womb. And the holographic display also shows the fetus writhing and shrivelling in the heat.
** However as [[spoiler:the mother was a mole]] hopefully they faked it to scare aeryn. Hopefully. She [[NeckSnap got what's coming either way]].
* ''Series/{{Charmed}}'': Unlike Piper's unborn son (see above), Phoebe's actually-not-her-child has no such luck: [[spoiler: he is burned alive when the Charmed Ones reflect his power back at the Seer, in whose womb he is currently residing.]] Apparently this Trope doesn't apply if you're the Spawn of Satan.
* Played straight in one episode of ''LegendOfTheSeeker'', and conspicuously averted in another. In the first case, [[spoiler:a male Confessor is born, who by Confessor law has to be put to death, but Richard stops them in the end.]] In the second case, the episode opens with kids playing hide and seek, with one finding a mysterious object, and the scene cuts away when it opens. A little later, the heroes show up in the village, and find everyone dead, including the kids.
* In ''Series/IClaudius'', during the purge in Tiberius's reign, both Sejanus' son and daughter were killed, both under age. The boy was given his "manly gown" and the girl was raped before being killed as killing a virgin would bring bad luck to the city.
** Furthmore, Gemellus, aged perhaps twelve or thirteen, is murdered and decapitated offscreen, his head brought to Caligula as evidence and Caligula's infant daughter Drusilla is murdered in her cradle along with her mother. There are still more child deaths in the book. All in all, thoroughly averted.
* ''Series/BabylonFive'''s ''Believers'' ([[spoiler: An alien boy is killed by his parents at the end because they believe a surgical operation has caused his soul to leave his body.]]) and ''Confessions and Lamentations'' ([[spoiler: 99% of an alien race dies of a plague, including a prominently featured girl]]).
* At least two children are killed during the series run of ''TheWire''.
* Like the [[ASongOfIceAndFire the novels]] it was based on, the world of ''AGameOfThrones'' is very dark and gritty, and AnyoneCanDie. To drive this home, a child of perhaps 7 or 8 years is shown impaled on a tree, along with the dismembered remains of her family group, within the first two minutes of the pilot. She is unlikely to be the first child to be dead (or die) onscreen.
** One of Arya's friends is murdered as a scapegoat for the well-deserved mauling of [[RoyalBrat Joffrey]]. While we don't see the act itself, we do see his corpse being hauled away by [[TheBrute the Hound]].
** More children (including an infant) die in the Season Two premiere, "The North Remembers," as part of a massive purge of [[spoiler: King Robert's bastard children.]]
** During an attack on the Night's Watch, one of the young orphan recruits ends up [[KickTheDog getting a sword through his throat]] when his captors realize that he can't walk unassisted.
** Two Lannister children are attacked and murdered in their beds by Stark bannermen.
* The third series opener of ''Series/{{Merlin}}'' revealed that [[spoiler: Uther used to drown the children of magic users in case they inherited their parents' abilities. Though the drowning itself is entirely offscreen, their ghosts appear en masse.]]
* ''Series/PowerRangersLostGalaxy'' has a solid aversion. The Magna Defender's revenge obsession is due to the (witnessed onscreen) death of his son. However, his son was a Magna Defender in training (despite being ten-ish, if we go by the size and the voice) who was never seen demorphed, making this less daring than some examples. Still, he doesn't ultimately survive, time isn't rewritten, he doesn't AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence, or anything like that, and he's small and has the voice of a kid.
* In the ''Franchise/LawAndOrder'' franchise, there are the occasional episodes where juvenile deaths are investigated.
* ''WalkingWithDinosaurs'' and its spinoffs averts this. The first episode of ''WalkingWithDinosaurs'' has a litter of prehistoric mammals ''[[OffingTheOffspring eaten by their own parents]]''. For pure terror, however, the first episode of ''Walking With Beasts'' shows a baby terror bird that is still hatching when it is devoured by ants.
* ''Series/SonsOfAnarchy'' [[spoiler:averts the trope off-screen in the first episode of season 6, Straw, with a school shooting. Averts the trope so hard, in fact, that Kurt Sutter was later compelled to apologise for it: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/09/13/kurt-sutter-parents-tv-council_n_3921807.html.]]
kills someone.



[[folder:Music]]
* The infamous ''[[Music/PinkFloyd Another Brick in the Wall]]'' segment of ''Music/TheWall''.
* Music/TheDecemberists song "The Rake's Song", where the entire point of the song is a rake who never wanted children, murders his kids after his fourth child was stillborn and the mother died in childbirth.
* Ogden Edsl's ''Dead Puppies'', which, as any Dr. Demento fan can tell, ''aren't much fun''...
* [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3BFvN-idN1s Reboot]], sung by Hatsune Miku, Megurine Luka, and the fanmade Samune Zimi. The song is sweet and happy at first, until Zimi's character is hit by a truck and killed. [[spoiler: It gets worse when her spirit is accidentally recalled from the afterlife by her friends, who blame each other for the death, but she gets a happy ending when her friends make up and she is reborn.]]

to:

[[folder:Music]]
[[folder:Religion&Mythology]]
* In ClassicalMythology, the goddess Hera tries to subvert this, attempts are made on almost all of Zeus' misbegotten get. Heracles and Dionysus of example just to name a few. Oddly enough she never seems to succeed.
** The stories in which she succeeded may have simply not been interesting enough to be told as much as those that have reached us. Dead babies don't grow up to become heroes and/or gods.
*** Also, the heroes occasionally have their dad's help as well as have powers of their own.
* It's not just Hera. A lot of Greek stories concern the attempt to kill a child before he can fulfill his destiny and kill someone else. It never works.
** Not just Greeks, either, Jesus pulls this... although a lot of other babies die.
** That blood is on Herod's hands, though. He was trying to stop a perceived threat to his throne. (Though Jesus was never meant to be that type of king, and fled the people when he heard they were wanted to make him such. (John 6:15)
* The infamous ''[[Music/PinkFloyd Another Brick tenth plague visited upon Egypt, the Slaying of the Firstborn, did not discriminate by age or species; he even killed the firstborn cattle (which had already been killed in the Wall]]'' segment of ''Music/TheWall''.
* Music/TheDecemberists song "The Rake's Song", where
fifth plague). The only families spared were the entire point of the song is a rake Hebrews who never wanted children, murders his kids after his fourth child was stillborn and the mother died in childbirth.
* Ogden Edsl's ''Dead Puppies'', which, as any Dr. Demento fan can tell, ''aren't much fun''...
* [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3BFvN-idN1s Reboot]], sung by Hatsune Miku, Megurine Luka, and the fanmade Samune Zimi. The song is sweet and happy at first, until Zimi's character is hit by a truck and killed. [[spoiler: It gets worse when her spirit is accidentally recalled from the afterlife by her friends, who blame each other for the death, but she gets a happy ending when her friends make up and she is reborn.]]
had painted their doorposts with lamb's blood.



[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
* ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'', the corpses of children under the age of four (and above ten months) are sometimes used to make Cherubs, which are ''biomechanical robots''. They are used as incense bearers in temples, mobile data storage and ''fashion statements''. Add the fact that they sometimes go 'feral'...
* In the {{Ravenloft}} Gazetteers from Arthaus, the narrator S adopts an orphaned infant, only to offer it to the banshee Tristessa in exchange for free passage through her domain, Keening. The insane banshee is obsessed with her long-dead infant son, and attempts to "care for" babies in the deluded belief they're hers; as Tristessa can't feed them or keep them warm enough, they inevitably perish from neglect.
** Also, the Vistani avert this trope whenever one of their sons is born with the Sight, lest he grow up to become the dreaded Dukkar.
* Second edition ''DungeonsAndDragons'' actually gave stats and experience point recommendations for depicting infants in several species, up to and including humanoids like orcs.
** Young Dragons (as young as the newly hatched "wyrmling" stage) have continued to be statted out as killable targets in the third and 4th editions, as well as {{Pathfinder}}.

to:

[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
[[folder:Webcomics]]
* ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'', the corpses Black Mage of children under the age ''WebComic/EightBitTheater'' consistently fails to kill a single orphan boy, instead destroying everything else around him, dooming him to live in a hell far worse than death could ever be.
** He also destroys a barge full
of four (and above ten months) are sometimes used to make Cherubs, which are ''biomechanical robots''. They are used as incense bearers in temples, mobile data storage medicine and ''fashion statements''. Add the fact that they sometimes go 'feral'...
* In the {{Ravenloft}} Gazetteers from Arthaus, the narrator S adopts
food for orphans.
*** And
an orphaned infant, only orphanage.
* Lampshaded and subverted in Ebenezer Splooge's (NSFW, we warned you) Pronquest, where killing them is all you CAN do
to offer it kids, due to the banshee Tristessa in exchange for free passage through her domain, Keening. The insane banshee is obsessed with her long-dead infant son, and attempts to "care for" babies in adult nature of the deluded belief they're hers; as Tristessa can't feed them or keep them warm enough, they inevitably perish from neglect.
** Also, the Vistani avert this trope whenever one of their sons is born with the Sight, lest he grow up to become the dreaded Dukkar.
* Second edition ''DungeonsAndDragons'' actually gave stats and experience point recommendations for depicting infants in several species, up to and including humanoids like orcs.
** Young Dragons (as young as the newly hatched "wyrmling" stage) have continued to be statted out as killable targets in the third and 4th editions, as well as {{Pathfinder}}.
strip.



[[folder:Video Games]]
* In the classic Commodore 64 game Mad Nurse, the entire premise is trying to prevent wandering babies from blundering into poison, electrical sockets, high-flush-power toilets and even elevator shafts. If you do nothing, almost every baby in the ward is guaranteed a gruesome death.
* In ''VideoGame/{{Fallout}}'' and ''VideoGame/{{Fallout 2}}'' it is possible for the player to kill very young children, though doing so earns you the "Childkiller" title and greatly decreases your reputation. The European release of the game was {{Bowdlerise}}d specifically to prevent this (to the extent that certain quests cannot be completed, and the player can have their items stolen without realizing it). This is [[LampshadeHanging commented on]] in ''VideoGame/{{Fallout 2}}''.
** The first two ''Fallout''s avert this trope with such fierce glee that probably some of the most vivid and horrifying descriptions of critical hit damage in the games come from shooting a child in the eye, or blowing off a leg, or firing a minigun at a groin, and so on.
** For reference one player semi-famously played through the entire game in a completely non-violent manner as even the final boss fight can be resolved with words. He did, however, kill every single child in the game.
** ''Fallout'''s spiritual predecessor, ''VideoGame/{{Wasteland}}'', has Camp Highpool, a [[TeenageWasteland town populated entirely by kids]] where this trope is in full aversion.
* Horribly, horribly averted in ''VideoGame/DwarfFortress'' - children can die in any number of ways, and military mothers will carry their infants into combat, where they are very likely to get impaled and upset said parent. On the other hand, if you can offset the mood loss, children make excellent body armor.
** Moreover, sometimes the mother ''uses the child as a blunt weapon''
* ''ShadowHearts: Covenant'' subverts this, albeit with a young girl, not a true baby. Early in the game, a young girl is taken hostage by one of the villains apparent. In keeping with the trope, she apparently escapes in the scuffle... but shortly thereafter, we find out she was killed off-screen when she appears as Yuri's SpiritAdvisor.
* Averted in the ''Franchise/StarWars: ThePhantomMenace'' game. You can kill children who conveniently run in front of you, even after already killing a few of them.
* In ''DeadRising'', the hero offers to help a hysterical mother find her missing baby only to be told that she saw it eaten by zombies. She is so distraught that she refuses to save herself and must be carried to safety.
** Actually, I'm pretty sure she was willing to be saved...she did have an ankle injury, though. Making it a difficult run if you swing through with Jeff, Natalie, Bill, Aaron, and Burt, and then have to go pick up Sophie.
** The opening cinematic has a woman and her child trying to escape the zombie horde in a car, but they crash. It fades out with the zombies surrounding the car, with the child trapped inside.
* ''VideoGame/TalesOfTheAbyss'' subverts this during the [[spoiler: destruction of Akzeriuth. After the city's complete decimation, the first thing of the aftermath that the heroes see is a small child crying out in pain and screaming to his parents, dying as he sinks into the hot mud of the Qliphoth]]. Kinda chilling and really hits home at how horrible the devastation is.
** Zig-zagged with the death of [[spoiler: Fon Master Ion.]] He's almost old enough not to count... except that [[spoiler: he's a replica, so while being physically fourteen might disqualify him, he's mentally ''2 years old.'']]
* ''FireEmblem: Radiant Dawn'' has a scene where [[KickTheDog Begnion soldiers shoot a bunch of arrows into a crowd of Daein civilians]]. Everyone stops when an arrow hits a small boy. Cue female using HealingHands on the boy, both exit stage right. What really makes the scene guilty of this trope is Jarod's arrival moments later. After finding out his men failed to apprehend Micaiah, he promptly kills three (adult) civilians.
** Averted later when Fiona and her troops attempt to rescue several civilians, two of whom are children. If the knight carrying the child dies, the kid will be exposed to enemy units who are almost guaranteed to make a beeline for it.
*** ''Seisen no Keifu'' also features child civilians, and yes, enemies will kill them given the chance. Given that saving one grants ''an automatic Level Up'', it's in your best interests to save them.
* Averted in ''VideoGame/MaxPayne'', in which Max's newborn daughter is murdered at the start of the game, though the body is mostly concealed in the PC version, and completely concealed in the PS2 port. Still, there's no mistaking the rag-covered lump in the bloody cradle for anything else.
* Avoided numerous times in ''Videogame/AlterEgo''. At several points during childhood and infancy, it's possible to inadvertently kill yourself or severely injure yourself by food poisoning, a falling iron, or numerous other means.
** At one point, a bad choice can result in your character (while a child) being kidnapped, molested, and murdered by a pedophile.
* In ''VideoGame/CliveBarkersJericho'', some of the enemies that the Jericho squad have to face are simply known as the Children: hideously mutilated, demonic child spectres, who are the souls of a child army that was massacred during the time of the Crusades.
* Subtly averted in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyII''. In the beginning of the game, in the various towns you can travel to, here are many child [=NPCs=] you can talk to! After the Imperial Dreadnaught goes on its first run...there are significantly fewer child sprites left, and some shell-shocked adults [=NPCs=] grieving their sons and daughters. And then the Cyclone starts its world tour...
* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI'', Kefka wipes out the kingdom of Doma via poison. One of the main character's family is in Doma, and as he rushes in to warn about the poison, he discovers his wife dead, and as he opens the door, the corpse of his son falls out of the bed. And [[MoralEventHorizon that was the moment]] where Kefka lost his [[AffablyEvil charm]].
* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX'', there is a cutscene in Kilika where children are playing with a blitzball near a mother with her baby. Then Sin comes and attacks the villiage. The last thing that you see is the blitzball in the wreckage. Later, when Yuna does the Sending, you can see a very small casket among the dozens in the water, and you see the mother breaking down back on shore.
* ''VideoGame/DeusEx'' has a number of (male only) kids around, all of whom are viable targets. One of them is, in fact, a Jerkass most players relish killing. The sequel, ''[[VideoGame/DeusExInvisibleWar Invisible War]]'', is no different: you can go on a rampage in a girls' elementary school.
-->'''Scott''': You can [[LudicrousGibs gib]] a child with one stroke of the [[CoolSword nanosword!]]\\
'''Chris''': That’s because children have fewer hit points. They are inferior and weak.
-->-- ''VideoGame/DeusEx developer quote''
* ''VideoGame/AmericanMcGeesGrimm'' has children die all over the place, which is played for BlackComedy.
* ''AdvanceWars'': Days of Ruin features a virus (Endoflorus Terriblis) which kills ''only'' children [[spoiler:though it mutates into killing ''anyone'' later]]. To drive the point home, photos are shown of a child with ''[[GrimFandango flowers sprouting out of his body]]''.
-->Lin: He had roots and leaves growing under his skin... In his ears... In his eyes... Little roots creeping behind the eyes... ...What if you could hear them...?
-->Dr. Morris: Lin, please! Stop talking about it! Curiously, the virus seems to only infect young people. [[KidHero You're in the right age range, Will, which means you're at risk.]] If you meet anyone suffering from this, you must stay away! Is that clear?
-->Lin: Starvation, raiders, and flowers that kill you. [[CrapsackWorld Gotta love this place.]]
* In ''{{Drakengard}}'', Leonard is forced to kill child soldiers employed by the Empire.
** Drakengard goes against this trope. The Verses full of child conscript enemies are only one example.
* In ''MegaManZero 3'', Zero finally kills Crier and Prier, the Mother Elf's two children. While they were trying to stop the hero from stopping [[BigBad Dr. Weil]], they are really [[HorribleJudgeOfCharacter bad at discerning good guy from bad guy.]]
* In ''UltimaVII: The Black Gate'' you can find a small bundled-up baby held captive by harpies outside the first town. As the baby is considered an ''object'', it's impossible to harm, and you don't have to feed it or change diapers, can keep it in the bottom of your pack or drop it wherever you stash your spare loot, and it doesn't make a sound. Your party member Iolo will helpfully mention that his mother is lady Tory and you should bring him to her, but doesn't mention WHERE she lives - you have to actually get a transport to get there, it's out of the way of the plot and you'll probably stumble across her by mistake. In other words, you'll be hanging onto that baby for a long time.
** When you find the mother she is extremely relieved, but rather than actually taking her child herself she asks you to put the kid in his crib, in the next room. She doesn't get any further dialogue on the topic, and the game actually doesn't have a function for putting the kid IN the crib (a mod corrects this), although you can balance the tyke on the edge with no problem. Or you can put the kid on the bed, never go back, and just pretend that the mother eventually stopped walking around whining about her lost kid and dealt with it.
** In ''Serpent Isle'', you're attacked by a woman who carries a DEAD child. If you click on it, the avatar or a companion will lament the tragedy. (Curiously, the dead baby is just as effective as a live one at soiling diapers, which are super-effective fear inducers, so you can get some use out of it if you don't mind being a psycho.)
*** A possible implication is that the woman was actually pregnant, and the child you find is a fetus.
* ''Franchise/{{Ultima}}'':
** In all ''Franchise/{{Ultima}}s'' after the first three games, you can initiate combat with and kill the children you meet. In ''VideoGame/UltimaVIII'', there's no KarmaMeter, so there's not even any consequences for killing them.
** In ''VideoGame/UltimaIX'', the aversion and the karma penalty are lampshaded and delivered as a PlayerPunch, twice. One is a hostile spellcaster and the other is doomed whether you show the mercy to kill her or not.
* The beginning of ''VideoGame/ZoneOfTheEnders'' has several of the kids Leo knows tied to a light pole. As BAHRAM begins their invasion of the Jupiter space station, one of the station's mechs is hit and topples right on the kids. They even have a close up of a pool of blood seeping out from under the wreckage.
* At one point in ''ArmyOfTwo: The 40th Day'', Salem and Rios encounter a little boy and have to escort him to safety. During a firefight, the boy sees a sniper rifle and asks if he should try to get it or stay in hiding. If you let him go for the gun, he will die. [[EvilPaysBetter It's also the only way to unlock that particular sniper rifle for you to use yourself, and it's the strongest one in the game]].
* Harshly averted in ''VideoGame/DantesInferno''. The player is presented with already dead unbaptized babies that can be absolved, punished, or simply slaughtered.
** Though a lot of players seem to [[VideoGameCaringPotential just absolve them instead.]]
* Completely averted within the first minutes of ''PoliceQuest: Open Season''. In the exposition crime scene at the start of the game, open the dumpster at the back to find [[spoiler: the corpse of an 8-year-old riddled with bullets]].
* In the beginning of ''VideoGame/AssassinsCreedII'', as part of a PlayerPunch, [[spoiler:Ezio's thirteen-year-old brother is killed alongside his father and teenaged brother.]]
** Namely by being [[spoiler: hung. In front of the player; even swaying slightly in the breeze]]
* Obscure arcade ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBros'' inspiration ''The Outfoxies'' averts this with [[CreepyChild creepy siblings]] Danny and Demi, playable characters who die just as violently as the rest of the cast. Some argue this is part of the reason the game wasn't found in more locales.
* [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZqrG1bdGtg The trailer]] for ''VideoGame/DeadIsland'' shows us a little girl getting bitten by a zombie, dying, and then turning into a zombie herself before biting her dad, who throws her out a window to kill her ''again''.
* Very very VERY averted in the Flash game: ''VideoGame/GretelAndHansel'', most of the achievements are based on finding all the different ways to die in the game. And they are heartrendingly painfull to watch.
* ''JaggedAlliance 2'' allows you to kill children just like anyone else. It comes with a massive penalty to Loyalty, like killing any other innocent civilian (or being wrongly blamed for killing one, which also can happen). The worst is when children run between you and your enemies during a firefight - they're veritable bullet magnets.
* In intro for ''VideoGame/MassEffect3'' during the [[EldritchAbomination Rea]][[AbusivePrecursors per]] invasion of Earth, Shepard sees a child in a vent and tries to get the child to come with them. The child refuses and disappears. [[YankTheDogsChain Eventually the child is seen getting on board an evacuation vessel.]] Said vessel is blown to smithereens by a Reaper.
* The plot of ''SilentHillHomecoming'' involves the founders of Shepard's Glen sacrificing one of their own offspring (though age range isn't specified), and [[spoiler: the one child your character sees several times throughout the game itself turns out to have been DeadAllAlong]].
** SilentHillDownpour makes it its ''[[UpToEleven mission]]'' to inform you that horrible, horrible things both can and will happen to children, and how devastating it is for those left behind. In fact, with one possible exeption, ''every'' kid either shown or referred to in-game ends up dead before the end, with the molestation and murder of [[spoiler:protagonist Murphy Pendleton's son Charlie]] and the actions this lead him to commit serving as the games central theme.
** All of the Silent Hill games seem to have a little bit of this; a lot of them refer to [[CreepyChild Alessa Gillespie]] being burned alive by [[ApocalypseCult the Order]], and in ''VideoGame/SilentHill3'' you can occasionally hear babies cry in the background, though it's unclear whether this is [[ThroughTheEyesOfMadness real]]. It was originally planned for the player to hear crying babies when standing in certain locations during ''VideoGame/SilentHill2'', but the sounds were removed because it was "too much".
* Although you can't kill any children in-game, the story for ''VideoGame/{{Diablo}}'' states that the titular BigBad possessed a young prince's body. When Diablo is finally defeated in the end of the first game, his body turns back into that of the dead prince. Made even more tragic by ''VideoGame/DiabloIII'', which reveals that the Warrior who canonically defeated Diablo [[spoiler:was the prince's older brother Aidan. The guilt Aidan felt from killing his little brother made it easier for Diablo to possess him.]]
* In ''VideoGame/GodOfWar'', a major plot point consists of Kratos' guilt at having murdered his wife and young daughter in a blind frenzy.
* Averted in Story Mode of ''VideoGame/MortalKombat9''. A flashback reveals that Scorpion's wife and infant son were killed by Sub-Zero [[spoiler: (AKA Quan Chi disguised as Sub-Zero)]]
* Averted in NaziZombies mode of Call of Duty. Richtofen Kills Samantha by locking her and her father in a room with a hellhound.
* ''VideoGame/CallOfDuty: ModernWarfare 3'': [[WhamEpisode Davis Family Vacation, Day 3.]] A young American girl on vacation in London with her family ends up being killed by a truck bomb explosion. [[spoiler: Which may have been a small bit of mercy, as this meant she did not suffer the effects of the nerve toxin released by the bomb that ended up killing many others.]]
* Early in ''VideoGame/CallOfCthulhuDarkCornersOfTheEarth'', the player accidentally releases a monster that [[spoiler: kills Tom Waits' daughter]]. It looks at first like the death will only be off-screen and you'll never get to see the body beyond the screaming and tearing sounds, but then you wake up and hear her father crying as you go downstairs....
* Averted in Videogame/ClockTower, where the first game features the 14-15 year old Jennifer and her friends of the same age locked in Barrows Mansion. Depending on how you play the game, all four of them can all die. But no matter what, at least one (be it a friend or Jennifer, the player character) has to die.
* Averted in ''LiberalCrimeSquad'', where the Conservatives will happily force children to work and execute them for any crimes - and the player has the option to free said children to participate in armed terrorism. It is possible to build an army out of liberated child workers. The only thing children are exempt from is sex - children under a certain age can't prostitute or seduce [=NPCs=].
* Surprisingly averted in ''VideoGame/SonicAdventure''. Tikal, who is 14, is trapped in the Master Emerald and dies from unknown causes.
** Likewise averted with Maria Robotnik, who was shot down by G.U.N. when she was only twelve years old.
* In the first episode of ''VideoGame/TheWalkingDead'', [[spoiler:Duck survives whether you try to save him or not, but...]]
** [[spoiler:Averted in episode 3 in the [[TearJerker most depressing way possible]], with Duck getting bitten and slowly dying. Kenny and Katjaa eventually makes the painful decision of [[MercyKill making sure that he won't return as a walker and end his suffering]]. The result? Katjaa ends up [[DrivenToSuicide shooting herself]], [[DespairEventHorizon not being able to live with the thought of her son dead or as a walker]]. Depending on the player's choice, either Kenny or Lee ends up shooting him (and yes, [[PlayerPunch you have to manually aim and fire the gun if Lee does it]]) or they both leave him in the woods if Lee remains silent when Kenny tries to shoot Duck]].
** In Episode 4, the group comes across a boy who starved to death and became [[UndeadChild undead]], and yes, it will be someone's job to put him down. In the same Episode they learn of [[spoiler:Crawford, a walled-off fortress of survivors that weeded out the elderly, disabled, sick, wounded...and children under the age of fourteen]].
** Also averted on two occasions with [[spoiler:Clementine, one when escaping from the drugstore at the end of episode 1 and the other when she is locked up with a walker in the train station at the end of episode 3. [[HeroicBSOD Both of these times Lee just stops fighting and becomes paralysed with despair]]]]. Both are treated as Game Overs.
* In ''{{Minecraft}}'', villager children can be killed, and can even be turned into zombies.
* ''VideoGame/LeagueOfLegends'': One of the playable champions is Annie, [[EnfantTerrible the Dark Child]], and you can score a kill on her like on any other enemy.
* Indie horror game ''VideoGame/CalmTime'' is all about people who get murdered during a NastyParty in a countryside house. There is a little boy among the characters, and he can be killed just like everyone else. In fact, he is ''easier'' to kill than the other guests.

to:

[[folder:Video Games]]
[[folder: Western Animation]]
* In the classic Commodore 64 game Mad Nurse, the entire premise is trying to prevent wandering babies from blundering into poison, electrical sockets, high-flush-power toilets and even elevator shafts. If you do nothing, almost every baby in the ward is guaranteed a gruesome death.
* In ''VideoGame/{{Fallout}}'' and ''VideoGame/{{Fallout 2}}'' it is possible for the player to kill very young children, though doing so earns you the "Childkiller" title and greatly decreases your reputation. The European release of the game was {{Bowdlerise}}d specifically to prevent
''WesternAnimation/DannyPhantom'' generally plays this (to the extent that certain quests cannot be completed, and the player can have their items stolen without realizing it). This is [[LampshadeHanging commented on]] in ''VideoGame/{{Fallout 2}}''.
** The first two ''Fallout''s avert this trope
straight, with such fierce glee that probably some of the most vivid and horrifying descriptions of critical hit damage in the games come from shooting a child in the eye, or blowing off a leg, or firing a minigun at a groin, and so on.
** For reference
one player semi-famously played through the entire game exception in a completely non-violent manner as even the final boss fight can be resolved with words. He did, however, kill every single child in the game.
** ''Fallout'''s spiritual predecessor, ''VideoGame/{{Wasteland}}'', has Camp Highpool, a [[TeenageWasteland town populated entirely by kids]]
[[TheMovie The Ultimate Enemy]] where this trope is in full aversion.
* Horribly, horribly averted in ''VideoGame/DwarfFortress'' - children can die in any number of ways, and military mothers will carry their infants into combat, where they are very likely to get impaled and upset said parent. On the other hand, if you can offset the mood loss, children make excellent body armor.
** Moreover, sometimes the mother ''uses the child as a blunt weapon''
* ''ShadowHearts: Covenant'' subverts this, albeit with a young girl, not a true baby. Early in the game, a young girl is taken hostage by one of the villains apparent. In keeping with the trope, she apparently escapes in the scuffle... but shortly thereafter, we find out she was killed off-screen when she appears as Yuri's SpiritAdvisor.
* Averted in the ''Franchise/StarWars: ThePhantomMenace'' game. You can kill children who conveniently run in front of you, even after already killing a few of them.
* In ''DeadRising'', the hero offers to help a hysterical mother find her missing baby only to be told that she saw it eaten by zombies. She is so distraught that she refuses to save herself and must be carried to safety.
** Actually, I'm pretty sure she was willing to be saved...she did have an ankle injury, though. Making it a difficult run if you swing through with Jeff, Natalie, Bill, Aaron, and Burt, and then have to go pick up Sophie.
** The opening cinematic has a woman and her child trying to escape the zombie horde in a car, but they crash. It fades out with the zombies surrounding the car, with the child trapped inside.
* ''VideoGame/TalesOfTheAbyss'' subverts this during the [[spoiler: destruction of Akzeriuth. After the city's complete decimation, the first thing of the aftermath that the heroes see is a small child crying out in pain and screaming to
Danny watches, among others, his parents, dying as he sinks into the hot mud of the Qliphoth]]. Kinda chilling and really hits home at how horrible the devastation is.
** Zig-zagged with the death of [[spoiler: Fon Master Ion.]] He's almost old enough not to count... except that [[spoiler: he's a replica, so while being physically fourteen might disqualify him, he's mentally ''2 years old.'']]
* ''FireEmblem: Radiant Dawn'' has a scene where [[KickTheDog Begnion soldiers shoot a bunch of arrows into a crowd of Daein civilians]]. Everyone stops when an arrow hits a small boy. Cue female using HealingHands on the boy, both exit stage right. What really makes the scene guilty of this trope is Jarod's arrival moments later. After finding out his men failed to apprehend Micaiah, he promptly kills three (adult) civilians.
** Averted later when Fiona and her troops attempt to rescue several civilians,
two of whom are children. If the knight carrying the child dies, the kid will be exposed to enemy units who are almost guaranteed to make a beeline for it.
*** ''Seisen no Keifu'' also features child civilians, and yes, enemies will kill them given the chance. Given that saving one grants ''an automatic Level Up'', it's in your
best interests to save them.
* Averted in ''VideoGame/MaxPayne'', in which Max's newborn daughter is murdered at the start of the game, though the body is mostly concealed in the PC version,
friends and completely concealed in the PS2 port. Still, there's no mistaking the rag-covered lump in the bloody cradle for anything else.
* Avoided numerous times in ''Videogame/AlterEgo''. At several points during childhood and infancy, it's possible to inadvertently kill yourself or severely injure yourself by food poisoning, a falling iron, or numerous other means.
** At one point, a bad choice can result in your character (while a child) being kidnapped, molested, and murdered by a pedophile.
* In ''VideoGame/CliveBarkersJericho'', some of the enemies that the Jericho squad have to face are simply known as the Children: hideously mutilated, demonic child spectres, who are the souls of a child army that was massacred during the time of the Crusades.
* Subtly averted in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyII''. In the beginning of the game, in the various towns you can travel to, here are many child [=NPCs=] you can talk to! After the Imperial Dreadnaught goes on its first run...there are significantly fewer child sprites left, and some shell-shocked adults [=NPCs=] grieving their sons and daughters. And then the Cyclone starts its world tour...
* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI'', Kefka wipes out the kingdom of Doma via poison. One of the main character's family is in Doma, and as he rushes in to warn about the poison, he discovers
his wife dead, and as sister die; and, he opens the door, the corpse of his son falls out of the bed. And [[OurGhostsAreDifferent or rather human half]] gets [[MoralEventHorizon that was killed by his ghost self]], who then goes on a [[OmnicidalManiac ten year rampage]]. Quite impressive as those are the moment]] where Kefka lost his [[AffablyEvil charm]].
* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX'', there is a cutscene in Kilika where children
only deaths explicitly seen on the entire show.
** On the other hand, [[spoiler:those deaths
are playing with a blitzball near a mother with her baby. Then Sin comes and attacks the villiage. The last thing that you see is the blitzball in the wreckage. Later, all erased when Yuna does the Sending, you can see a very small casket among the dozens in the water, and you see the mother breaking down back on shore.
* ''VideoGame/DeusEx'' has a number of (male only) kids around, all of whom are viable targets. One of them is, in fact, a Jerkass most players relish killing. The sequel, ''[[VideoGame/DeusExInvisibleWar Invisible War]]'', is no different: you can go on a rampage in a girls' elementary school.
-->'''Scott''': You can [[LudicrousGibs gib]] a child with one stroke of the [[CoolSword nanosword!]]\\
'''Chris''': That’s because children have fewer hit points. They are inferior and weak.
-->-- ''VideoGame/DeusEx developer quote''
* ''VideoGame/AmericanMcGeesGrimm'' has children die all over the place,
he [[ScrewDestiny changes his decision]], which is played for BlackComedy.
* ''AdvanceWars'': Days of Ruin features a virus (Endoflorus Terriblis) which kills ''only'' children [[spoiler:though it mutates into killing ''anyone'' later]]. To drive the point home, photos are shown of a child with ''[[GrimFandango flowers sprouting out of his body]]''.
-->Lin: He had roots and leaves growing under his skin... In his ears... In his eyes... Little roots creeping behind the eyes... ...What if you could hear them...?
-->Dr. Morris: Lin, please! Stop talking about it! Curiously, the virus seems to only infect young people. [[KidHero You're in the right age range, Will, which means you're at risk.]] If you meet anyone suffering from this, you must stay away! Is
[[SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong would have]] [[ForWantOfANail caused that clear?
-->Lin: Starvation, raiders, and flowers that kill you. [[CrapsackWorld Gotta love this place.
future]].]]
** Theoretically another aversion; the [[spoiler: perfect clone in "Kindred Spirits". Since the series constantly plays out the idea that [[OppositeSexClone Danielle is]] treated as a living soul, then the perfect clone, which is the final step above her, counts. And he dies, ''on camera while reaching out for Vlad, his appointed father'']]. It doubles as a TearJerker moment for Vlad.
* ''WesternAnimation/TransformersPrime'' comes pretty damn close to averting this. When Megatron attacks Bumblebee he unknowingly hits Raf as well, who was inside Bumblebee's vehicle mode at the time. When Megatron learns that Raf is dying because of him, he practically ''gloats'' about it. Ratchet manages to save Raf at the last minute.
* In ''{{Drakengard}}'', Leonard is forced to kill child soldiers employed by the Empire.
** Drakengard goes against this trope. The Verses full of child conscript enemies are only one example.
* In ''MegaManZero 3'', Zero finally
''WesternAnimation/TheBatman,'' a time-controlling villain releases a poison that kills Crier many Gothamites, including Robin. He's unconscious already, so you (and more importantly the censors) are spared the sight of him actually dropping dead, but it does pass over him as it spreads through town. [[spoiler: No, it's not Jason Todd. When the villain's own (adult) son dies, he has a MyGodWhatHaveIDone moment that lets him push past the limits of how far he can change time, rewinding all the way back to his StartOfDarkness and Prier, never becoming a bad guy in the Mother Elf's two children. While they were trying to stop the hero from stopping [[BigBad Dr. Weil]], they are really [[HorribleJudgeOfCharacter bad at discerning good guy from bad guy.first place.]]
* In ''UltimaVII: The Black Gate'' you can find a small bundled-up baby held captive by harpies outside Near the first town. As the baby is considered an ''object'', it's impossible to harm, and you don't have to feed it or change diapers, can keep it in the bottom of your pack or drop it wherever you stash your spare loot, and it doesn't make a sound. Your party member Iolo will helpfully mention that his mother is lady Tory and you should bring him to her, but doesn't mention WHERE she lives - you have to actually get a transport to get there, it's out end of the way of second ''MyLittlePony'' episode the plot and you'll probably stumble across her by mistake. In other words, you'll be hanging onto that baby for a long time.
** When you find the mother she is extremely relieved, but rather than actually taking her child herself she asks you to put the kid in his crib, in the next room. She doesn't get any further dialogue on the topic, and the game actually doesn't have a function for putting the kid IN the crib (a mod corrects this), although you can balance the tyke on the edge with no problem. Or you can put the kid on the bed, never go back, and just pretend that the mother eventually stopped walking around whining about her lost kid and dealt with it.
** In ''Serpent Isle'', you're attacked by a woman who carries a DEAD child. If you click on it, the avatar or a companion will lament the tragedy. (Curiously, the dead baby is just as effective as a live one at soiling diapers, which are super-effective fear inducers, so you can get some use out of it if you don't mind being a psycho.)
*** A possible implication is that the woman was actually pregnant, and the child you find is a fetus.
* ''Franchise/{{Ultima}}'':
** In all ''Franchise/{{Ultima}}s'' after the first three games, you can initiate combat with and kill the children you meet. In ''VideoGame/UltimaVIII'', there's no KarmaMeter, so there's not even any consequences for killing them.
** In ''VideoGame/UltimaIX'', the aversion and the karma penalty are lampshaded and delivered as a PlayerPunch, twice. One is a hostile spellcaster and the other is doomed whether you show the mercy
BigBad attempts to kill a filly. Thankfully they save her or not.
* The beginning of ''VideoGame/ZoneOfTheEnders'' has several of the kids Leo knows tied to a light pole. As BAHRAM begins their invasion of the Jupiter space station, one of the station's mechs is hit and topples right on the kids. They even have a close up of a pool of blood seeping out from under the wreckage.
* At one point in ''ArmyOfTwo: The 40th Day'', Salem and Rios encounter a little boy and have to escort him to safety. During a firefight, the boy sees a sniper rifle and asks if he should try to get it or stay in hiding. If you let him go for the gun, he will die. [[EvilPaysBetter It's also the only way to unlock that particular sniper rifle for you to use yourself, and it's the strongest one in the game]].
* Harshly averted in ''VideoGame/DantesInferno''. The player is presented with already dead unbaptized babies that can be absolved, punished, or simply slaughtered.
** Though a lot of players seem to [[VideoGameCaringPotential
just absolve them instead.]]
* Completely averted within the first minutes of ''PoliceQuest: Open Season''. In the exposition crime scene at the start of the game, open the dumpster at the back to find [[spoiler: the corpse of an 8-year-old riddled with bullets]].
* In the beginning of ''VideoGame/AssassinsCreedII'', as part of a PlayerPunch, [[spoiler:Ezio's thirteen-year-old brother is killed alongside his father and teenaged brother.]]
** Namely by being [[spoiler: hung. In front of the player; even swaying slightly
in the breeze]]
time.
* Obscure arcade ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBros'' inspiration ''The Outfoxies'' averts this with [[CreepyChild creepy siblings]] Danny and Demi, playable characters who die just as violently as the rest of the cast. Some argue this is part of the reason the game wasn't found PlayedForDrama in more locales.
*
[[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZqrG1bdGtg com/watch?v=Aa782wOrUVM this UNICEF]] {{Smurfs}} short. The trailer]] for ''VideoGame/DeadIsland'' shows us only onscreen survivor is a little girl getting bitten by a zombie, dying, and then turning into a zombie herself before biting her dad, who throws her out a window to kill her ''again''.
crying baby.
* Very very VERY ''Almost'' averted in the Flash game: ''VideoGame/GretelAndHansel'', most WesternAnimation/TomAndJerry short ''Heavenly Puss'', where Tom is in line at the pearly gates. One of the achievements are based on finding all entrants in front of him is a ''bag full of recently drowned kittens''. "Almost", in this case, because the different ways to die in the game. And they are heartrendingly painfull to watch.
* ''JaggedAlliance 2'' allows you to kill children just like anyone else. It comes with a massive penalty to Loyalty, like killing any other innocent civilian (or being wrongly blamed for killing one, which also can happen). The worst is when children run between you and your enemies during a firefight - they're veritable bullet magnets.
* In intro for ''VideoGame/MassEffect3'' during the [[EldritchAbomination Rea]][[AbusivePrecursors per]] invasion of Earth, Shepard sees a child in a vent and tries to get the child to come with them. The child refuses and disappears. [[YankTheDogsChain Eventually the child is seen getting on board an evacuation vessel.]] Said vessel is blown to smithereens by a Reaper.
* The plot of ''SilentHillHomecoming'' involves the founders of Shepard's Glen sacrificing one of their own offspring (though age range isn't specified), and [[spoiler: the one child your character sees several times throughout the game itself
episode turns out to have been DeadAllAlong]].
** SilentHillDownpour makes
be AllJustADream.
* Though
it its ''[[UpToEleven mission]]'' to inform you that horrible, horrible things both can and will happen to children, and how devastating it is for those left behind. In fact, with one possible exeption, ''every'' kid either shown or referred to in-game ends up dead before was an alien case, WesternAnimation/Ben10AlienForce ''almost'' averted the end, with the molestation and murder Trope in "Con of [[spoiler:protagonist Murphy Pendleton's son Charlie]] and the actions this lead him to commit serving as the games central theme.
** All of the Silent Hill games seem to have a little bit of this; a lot of them refer to [[CreepyChild Alessa Gillespie]] being burned alive by [[ApocalypseCult the Order]], and in ''VideoGame/SilentHill3'' you can occasionally hear babies cry in the background, though it's unclear whether this
Rath". The main cast is [[ThroughTheEyesOfMadness real]]. It was originally planned for the player to hear crying babies when standing in certain locations working during ''VideoGame/SilentHill2'', but the sounds were removed because it was "too much".
* Although you can't kill any children in-game,
whole episode to bring a cute alien child, the story for ''VideoGame/{{Diablo}}'' states that the titular BigBad possessed a young prince's body. When Diablo is finally defeated in the end of the first game, his body turns back into that of the dead prince. Made even more tragic by ''VideoGame/DiabloIII'', which reveals that the Warrior who canonically defeated Diablo [[spoiler:was the prince's older brother Aidan. The guilt Aidan felt from killing his little brother made it easier for Diablo Tiffin, to possess him.]]
* In ''VideoGame/GodOfWar'', a major plot point consists of Kratos' guilt at having murdered his wife and young daughter in a blind frenzy.
* Averted in Story Mode of ''VideoGame/MortalKombat9''. A flashback reveals that Scorpion's wife and infant son were killed by Sub-Zero [[spoiler: (AKA Quan Chi disguised
another alien planet as Sub-Zero)]]
* Averted in NaziZombies mode of Call of Duty. Richtofen Kills Samantha by locking her and her father in
a room with a hellhound.
* ''VideoGame/CallOfDuty: ModernWarfare 3'': [[WhamEpisode Davis Family Vacation, Day 3.]] A young American girl on vacation in London with her family ends up being killed by a truck bomb explosion. [[spoiler: Which may have been a small bit of mercy, as
"peace offering", only to find out this meant she did not suffer the effects of the nerve toxin released by the bomb that ended up killing many others.]]
* Early in ''VideoGame/CallOfCthulhuDarkCornersOfTheEarth'', the player accidentally releases a monster that [[spoiler: kills Tom Waits' daughter]]. It looks at first like the death will only be off-screen and you'll never get to see the body beyond the screaming and tearing sounds, but then you wake up and hear her father crying as you go downstairs....
* Averted in Videogame/ClockTower, where the first game features the 14-15 year old Jennifer and her friends of the same age locked in Barrows Mansion. Depending on how you play the game, all four of them can all die. But no matter what, at least one (be it a friend or Jennifer, the player character) has to die.
* Averted in ''LiberalCrimeSquad'', where the Conservatives will happily force children to work and execute them for any crimes - and the player has the option to free said children to participate in armed terrorism. It is possible to build an army out of liberated
child workers. The only thing children are exempt from is sex - children under was going to be offered as a certain age can't prostitute or seduce [=NPCs=].
* Surprisingly averted in ''VideoGame/SonicAdventure''. Tikal, who is 14, is trapped in
snack to the Master Emerald and dies from unknown causes.
** Likewise averted with Maria Robotnik, who was shot down by G.U.N. when she was only twelve years old.
* In the first episode of ''VideoGame/TheWalkingDead'', [[spoiler:Duck survives whether you try to save him or not, but...]]
** [[spoiler:Averted in episode 3 in the [[TearJerker most depressing way possible]], with Duck getting bitten and slowly dying. Kenny and Katjaa eventually makes the painful decision of [[MercyKill making sure
planet's king. When this happens, [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold Rath]] is so mad that he won't return as a walker and end his suffering]]. The result? Katjaa ends up [[DrivenToSuicide shooting herself]], [[DespairEventHorizon not being able to live with jump inside the thought of her son dead or as a walker]]. Depending on king's ''throat'' to take the player's choice, either Kenny or Lee ends up shooting Tiffin back, saving him (and yes, [[PlayerPunch you have to manually aim and fire the gun if Lee does it]]) or they both leave him in the woods if Lee remains silent when Kenny tries to shoot Duck]].
** In Episode 4, the group comes across a boy who starved to death and became [[UndeadChild undead]], and yes, it will be someone's job to put him down. In the same Episode they learn of [[spoiler:Crawford, a walled-off fortress of survivors that weeded out the elderly, disabled, sick, wounded...and children under the age of fourteen]].
** Also averted on two occasions with [[spoiler:Clementine, one when escaping from the drugstore at the end of episode 1 and the other when she is locked up with a walker in the train station at the end of episode 3. [[HeroicBSOD Both of these times Lee
just stops fighting and becomes paralysed with despair]]]]. Both are treated as Game Overs.
* In ''{{Minecraft}}'', villager children can be killed, and can even be turned into zombies.
* ''VideoGame/LeagueOfLegends'': One of the playable champions is Annie, [[EnfantTerrible the Dark Child]], and you can score a kill on her like on any other enemy.
* Indie horror game ''VideoGame/CalmTime'' is all about people who get murdered during a NastyParty
in a countryside house. There is a little boy among the characters, and he can be killed just like everyone else. In fact, he is ''easier'' to kill than the other guests.time.



[[folder:Webcomics]]
* Averted in WeaponBrown with Cal V1-n, who has absolutely no qualms about killing children right in front of their parents. His casual apathy for infants [[http://www.whatisdeepfried.com/2011/03/07/weapon-brown-217/ can be]] [[http://www.whatisdeepfried.com/2011/03/09/weapon-brown-218/ witnessed]] [[http://www.whatisdeepfried.com/2011/03/14/weapon-brown-219/ here]].
* In ''OffWhite,'' this is averted when Gebo returns home to find that his entire pack has been shot by humans, and the puppies are dead.
* Also completely averted in ''AnsemRetort'', where an orphanage was burned in the ''very first comic'' and Axel and Zexion's 'Spock diet' consists of force feeding blended babies to Sora.
* ''Salt The Holly'': Cade has a flashback to when an assassin squad massacred his family. Not even a baby girl is spared.
* Averted repeatedly in ''{{Drowtales}}'', given its [[CrapsackWorld setting]]. Several children, including infants, die on screen, and the drow equivalent of a 7 year old child not only dies (mostly) on screen, but is killed by another child the same age as part of a SadisticChoice.
* ''WebComic/DragonBallMultiverse'': [[spoiler: Averted in Chapter 9, when Bojack snaps U16 Pan's neck.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Original]]
* In ''Roleplay/TheGamersAlliance'', children are just just as likely to die as adults...[[FateWorseThanDeath or become ravenous zombies if they end up infected with the Plague of Undeath]]. The senseless deaths of children play a plot point as watching an innocent child die in the hands of merciless thugs and being unable to stop it is what eventually prompts Bishop [[KnightTemplar Arbriel Conrad]] to stray from the Path of Light and join the [[ReligionOfEvil Totenkopfs]] with the intention of "purging" the world from those who in his view don't deserve to live in it.
* In the [[http://akaichounokoe.deviantart.com/gallery/38542206 M,WDYD?]][[http://akaichounokoe.deviantart.com/gallery/43453866 Series]] seems to be pretty consistant with killing people off in a "Kenny Death", children, especially the titular Madgie, included.
** Actually the reason as to why she has it that is to usually make the story poignant and just to show anyone can die in those stories. Don't worry, they get better when time is reversed.
* In ''Literature/{{Worm}}'', [[spoiler:the protagonist]] {{Mercy Kill}}s a toddler.
** The Slaughterhouse Nine also attacked a nursery at one point, albeit offscreen.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* In the ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' Episode "Canada On Strike", all of the [[MemeticMutation Internet Memes]] die except for the Laughing Baby, so the Infant Immortality in ''South Park'' applies to ages seven and below.
** Well, better make it four and below. It's just that whole "Stanley's Cup" thing...
** This obviously doesn't apply to Kenny, as for the first few seasons he dies violently in every single episode. Though they later had one where he was dying slowly in the hospital, where for the first time his death was treated with the gravitas a child's death actually would.
* Averted in ''HappyTreeFriends'' with the characters Pop and Cub. Their gimmick is mainly that Pop is not a competent parent and his negligence constantly costs the life of Cub, and sometimes of himself, in very gruesome ways as is the norm for ''HappyTreeFriends'' episodes. Examples include when he tries to wash him in the sink and accidentally scalds his lower half, then slices him up below the waist in the garbage disposal and when he is cutting the hedge and accidentally slices the top part of his head off.
* ''WesternAnimation/ThePrinceOfEgypt''. Because of its [[Literature/TheBible particular source material]], the child-killing would have been practically impossible to avoid, but still, they do quite a good and discreet job of showing it.
* In ''Disney/{{Tarzan}}'' [[spoiler:an ape baby dies]] at the beginning, so it's a partial example.
* One episode of ''WesternAnimation/{{Superjail}}'' centered largely over whether or not this would apply to a little girl that Jailbot accidentally brought with him during the opening. [[spoiler:It's mostly an aversion: Multiple inmates kill each other after being turned temporarily into babies, and the girl herself dies, albeit in a much less gruesome fashion than anyone else (from a combination of a bunch of boxes falling on top of her and the cancer which she already had). Also worth noting is that when the Warden finds her, he's so disgusted by her cuteness that he actually tells Jailbot to ''throw her into the furnace'', while most of the inmates [[PetTheDog were pretty nice to her]].]]
* In ''FarthingWoodFriends'', after the rodents have babies, the little ones are killed and impaled by a bird of prey in the very next episode, thus simultaneously averting Infant Immortality and WhatMeasureIsANonCute.
** This has happened a few more times; one of Mr. and Mrs. Rabbit's offspring is shot by a hunter then fed to his dog, and Dreamer, one of Fox and Vixen's cubs, is killed by Scarface.
* ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' takes BlackComedy literally:
-->'''Brian''': Stewie I killed one of my own kind! I mean how would you feel if you killed a baby!
-->'''Stewie''': Well actually I've killed seven...
** Peter has killed many children both intentionally and unintentionally.
* Averted in a TreehouseOfHorror special, where Film/KingKong Homer eats a little girl.
** Heavily {{lampshade|Hanging}}d in ''TheSimpsons'' Treehouse of Horror V, where the teachers at Springfield Elementary are trying to kill Bart, Lisa, and Milhouse:
--->'''Bart''': Don't worry guys, something [[LeaningOnTheFourthWall always comes along to save us.]]
--->'''(Milhouse falls backwards into a meat grinder)'''
--->'''Bart''': Nevertheless, [[WideEyedIdealist I remain confident that someone will come along and save the Simpson children.]]
* In "Yesteryear," generally considered the best episode of ''WesternAnimation/StarTrekTheAnimatedSeries,'' Spock tries to restore his personal timeline, but doesn't get it quite right, and [[spoiler: his childhood pet I-Chaya dies heroically to save his young self from a wild animal.]]
* In the ''WesternAnimation/AmericanDad'' episode "100 A.D." junior reporter Matty Moyer is among the characters killed in a bus crash.
* ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheCloneWars'' tends to go out of it's way to avert this.
** "ARC Troopers" shows towers of cloning tanks being destroyed during an attack on Kamino. That is ''hundreds of babies dying on-screen''.
** In "Padawan Lost", Kalifa, a tweenaged girl was murdered by Garnac, a [[LizardFolk Trandoshan]] EgomaniacHunter.
** In "A Friend in Need" Pre Vizsla leader of Death Watch, killed a teenage girl because her grandfather ''dared'' to speak up against the way his gang treated their village.
** In the season 4 finale [[spoiler: Darth Maul slaughters a village, including children, to get the Jedi's attention. [[FamilyUnfriendlyDeath For once]], Clone Wars plays it safe and keeps the slaughter largely offscreen.]]
[[/folder]]



[[folder:Real Life]]
* Animals. In fact, the vast majority die in juvenile stage.
** Special mentioning goes to reptiles that hunt on eggs and birds that destroy eggs to favour their own children.
* Rather common for humans too, especially in developing countries.
** Common enough to be the norm in developed countries before about 1900. To give an example, a typical 18th century English nobleman could be expected to father ten to fifteen legitimate children, but he'd be lucky to be survived by more than two of them. (High rates of death in childbirth even among the rich also meant that these children would likely be from two or three wives.)
* RealLife [[AnyoneCanDie has the annoying habit of letting anyone die]]. Even children. Mother Nature has no mercy.
* In a more brutal way, sometimes children are killed by other humans.
** Most abducted children are found within a few hours, or not. The core of all AdultFear.
** Frau Goebbels personally poisoned her six children to "save" them from a world without Nazism. As noted in the [[TruthInTelevision film section]].
** One of the staples of organized massacres and genocides is wiping out the next generation. Numerous examples can be found throughout history of children being specifically targeted for extermination, most notably in the Holocaust and Rwandan genocide.
** In many conflicts, children have been used for all kinds of tasks. The most direct version would include ChildSoldiers, although messengers and scouts are known as well. Goes without saying that WarIsHell.
** Historically, many forms of child labor were not only abusively grueling, but downright dangerous. Children were preferred for mining or some kinds of factory work because they or their hands could fit into small spaces, often spaces that were surrounded with crumbling rockfaces or industrial machinery with NoOSHACompliance.
* The Time of Troubles was one of the most traumatic times in Russian history. It started off with a famine that killed two million people and the death of the last tsar of the Rurik Dynasty, one of the worst leaders in Russia's history. Invasions, civil conflicts, large gangs of bandits roaming the countryside. Many people believed that Ivan the Terrible's son Dimitri was still alive somewhere and several impostors took advantage of this, seizing the throne with the support of foreign invaders. The end of the Time of Troubles came when Micheal Romanov took the throne, and he decided to be rid of the threat of any more "false Dimitris" or any of their ties. While his mother was strangled, Tsar Micheal had the son of the second false Dimitri hanged. ''He was three years old.'' WarIsHell, indeed, but politics can have their moments.
* In 1969, a group of Viet Cong attacked a girls' school in South Vietnamese territory. The teachers and girls -- some as young as six -- were raped and murdered. American and South Vietnamese forces followed the trail and caught up with the culprits close to the Cambodian border. It did ''not'' end well for the VC.
* In a more recent example, about 20 children were shot dead at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newton, Connecticut on December 14, 2012.
[[/folder]]

!!Partial Aversions:

[[folder: Anime and Manga]]
* Averted in Anime/KillLaKill, where Ragyo Kiryuuin is shown conducting horrible experiments on her newborn daughter, and then, when the experiment fails and she dies, drops her down a trash chute in the laboratory without even giving her a name. [[spoiler: But it's then subverted when it's revealed that the newborn daughter was actually Ryuko, the protagonist!]]
* ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure'' both plays it straight and subverts it in the first part. On the straight-up scale, this is how Jonathan and, later, [[spoiler:Lisa Lisa]] live to maturity. On the subversion scale, Dio is confronted with a mother that begs him to kill her and spare her baby. He takes her up on it. Unfortunately for the kid, the now-vampirized mother is both ravenous and lacking in maternal feelings... Thank the ''gods'' the scene cuts away at that point.
** Later, an old woman with the power to control the dead and wounded uses corpses as weapons, needing to only wound someone once to win a fight. The corpse that deals a wound? It's a baby. Using its tongue. As a knife.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Board Games]]
* In ''Shadow Hunters'', one of the characters is a young girl. If you're playing her, the only way to win is to survive until the end of the game (there are several ways of ending the game besides killing everyone).
** In a reversal, the oldest looking character of the game, who is smiling and wearing a noose, wins if he dies first.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Comic Books]]
* In ''ComicBook/BatmanNoMansLand'', SelfDemonstrating/TheJoker seems perfectly okay with shooting a baby. Commissioner Gordon's wife Sarah begs him not to, and trades her own life for theirs.
** This is notable in that this is the only time the Joker is ever sad after he kills someone.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Film]]
* In ''TheIncredibles'', Elastigirl warns her children that bad guys ''will'' actually ''try'' to kill them ([[ThisIsReality as opposed to what the kids might have seen on TV]]). The children are not actually killed, but they do come darn close a few times.
** In fact, Syndrome's unwillingness to hold to this rule is the first thing that starts to shake Mirage's faith in him -- having him try to goad Mister Incredible into killing her immediately after doesn't exactly help matters.
* Averted, but also played straight in the ''Film/FinalDestination'' series.
** Averted in ''Final Destination'' when both an infant AND a mentally handicapped individual die in the plane crash/explosion, even when one of the characters declares that the plane can't possibly crash due to this trope:
-->[Alex sees a crying baby upon boarding the plane]\\
'''George:''' That's a good sign. Younger, the better. It'd be a fucked up God to take down this plane.\\
[they see a mental patient in the front row]\\
'''George:''' A ''really'' fucked up God.
** The trope was ''supposed'' to be averted in ''Final Destination 2''. Tim was originally going to be a little kid but the director wanted to keep the movie "fun" and thus bumped up his age to 15 so we wouldn't be subjected to seeing a little kid [[spoiler:being splattered by a falling pane of glass.]] Although another younger kid is decapitated by an [[spoiler:exploding barbecue in the final scene.]]
** Played straight in ''Final Destination 3'' when a group of young boys try to bluff their way onto the roller coaster, but are kicked off by the carnival staff for not being tall enough to ride it. Thus, the boys avoid dying in the crash, without any need for psychic visions to warn them away.
** Played straight in ''The Final Destination''. One of the victims is a mother of two and her kids are seen escaping the accident at the start while she gets separated and killed off.
* ''Film/TheButterflyEffect'' is almost an exception: [[spoiler: a baby ''and'' a dog both suffer gruesome deaths, but the movie's protagonist uses freshly-discovered revisit-the-past skills to go back in time and prevent either death from happening.]] In the AlternateEnding, however, [[spoiler: the main character travels back in time to when he was a fetus in the womb and strangles himself with his own umbilical cord to prevent all the suffering he has unwittingly caused. Almost certainly the only pre-natal suicide scene ever.]]
* In WildAtHeart we have [[spoiler: Lula, who realizes she's pregnant halfway through the movie: she's a healthy mother of a young child in the ending.]]
* In TheMovie of ''Film/VForVendetta'', we see a girl of about ten shot by a police officer, who is presumably killed by the people who see it. (She is seen at the end, yes, but so are all the others who died in the movie).
* In ''Film/ShootEmUp'', Hertz (Paul Giamatti) and his {{Mooks}} are gunning for baby Oliver, but Smith (Clive Owen) foils him at every turn with gun(s) blazing, starting from Oliver's delivery, and Smith even [[spoiler: fakes Hertz out with an animatronic baby that Hertz runs over in the street with his van]].
** We also find out that several other babies were not so lucky.
* At the end of ''PansLabyrinth'', [[spoiler: 11-year-old protagonist Ofelia dies. Or does she?]]
** Either way, that's [[spoiler:after she refuses to let the faun stab her baby brother. So it could be argued that the movie does uphold the trope, with Ofelia being over the upper age limit.]]
* A classic aversion took place in the Russian film ''Film/BattleshipPotemkin'', in which a mother and her wounded child are charged over by governmental soldiers while other people are being gunned down all around them. This was a classic theme in quite a few Russian films with political influences during the 30's.
* ''Film/SweeneyToddTheDemonBarberOfFleetStreet'' has no kids dying on screen, but it does depict a child being sentenced to death for theft (by the film's villain). Interestingly, the ending also contains [[spoiler:an inversion, with a child (Toby) committing murder (of Todd)]].
* ''Film/{{Eraserhead}}'''s climax starts [[spoiler: with [[FetusTerrible Henry's baby]] being murdered by him.You'll wish it had stayed dead.]]
* Played semi-straight in ''Film/TropicThunder'': [[spoiler:despite the movie subverting ChildrenAreInnocent, by having the two children in the film being a ''12-year-old ringleader of a massive drug ring'' and a toddler who ''stabs'' one of the main characters ''repeatedly on the neck'', they managed to survive unscathed from being apparently crushed by a falling Jack Black and being tossed off a bridge respectively. However, the latter could count as a lampshade/parody seeing as when the toddler is shown to be OK, he crosses his arms and pouts.]]
* The bomb that sets off federal investigations by Elliot Ness in ''Film/TheUntouchables'' goes off in the hands of a well-meaning little girl ("Mister, you forgot your bag!"). This trope is later honored with an actual infant, who emerges unscathed from a shootout at the train station, despite flying lead and a bumpy baby-carriage ride down the staircase.
** Ironically, the baby carriage rolling down the staircase is a visual reference to Battleship Potemkin, mentioned above.
* The outset of ''Disney/TheHunchbackOfNotreDame'' has the main villain almost tossing baby Quasimodo into a well. Doubly subverted when the Archdeacon shows up to just in the nick of time to stop him. Later he, villain that is, sets alight a house with a whole family inside.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Nine}}'' subverts this trope by having 9 come across the corpses of a mother and her baby [[spoiler: but sort of plays it straight by having [[SingleMindedTwins 3 and 4]], the most childlike of the group, surviving]].
* In the [[Film/Halloween4TheReturnOfMichaelMyers fourth]], [[Film/Halloween5TheRevengeOfMichaelMyers fifth]], and [[Film/HalloweenTheCurseOfMichaelMyers sixth]] ''Franchise/{{Halloween}}'' films, Michael's main targets are two children: His six-year old niece, Jamie, and later (when the niece is about fifteen), her infant son. He manages to kill Jamie in the sixth film, by which time she is a teenager, but fails to kill her child.
* In ''TheGodfatherPartII'', 9-year-old Vito Andolini is the last survivor of his family but the local crime boss has put a price on his head. He escapes. The crime boss' vendetta begins when Vito's dad insulted him. The dad is killed. Vito's older brother tries to avenge his father but is also killed. His age is not given but he seems quite young (his body is found onscreen).
* In TheBirds, groups of children are attacked by the birds several times, but none of them die.
* Averted and played straight in ''Film/{{Alligator}}''.
** Averted when on a dare, a kid jumps off the diving board of his backyard swimming pool at night while the alligator is momentarily staying in it. He realizes at the last moment what is happening and tries to step back, but his friends push him in anyway because they didn't see it and think he chickened out.
** However, it was played straight when a little girl toddler was in the back yard with her mother's wash. Mom hears the phone ring, goes in to answer it, and along comes the beast. Mom sees the monster leave the yard, screaming and crying as she looks for her child. Then the little girl lifts up the clothes basket she was hiding under!
* In the 2005 ''House of Wax'' remake, Paris Hilton's character is going through a pregnancy scare. She is killed before it's confirmed whether or not she is pregnant.
* In ''Disney/TheGreatMouseDetective'' Olivia survives the film but she is put in life-threatening danger several times. She comes quite close to being squashed by the gears in Big Ben - and is literally saved at the last second by Basil. Professor Ratigan also threatens to kill her when he kidnaps her.
* In ''{{Film/Jumanji}}'' [[spoiler: Judy]] is shot in the neck with a barb from a poisonous plant. It's heavily implied that she is dying. [[spoiler: But time resets itself back to 1967]] so she is alive at the end.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]
* ''Literature/HarryPotter'' is the exception that proves the rule. BigBad Voldemort tries to kill him when he's a baby, but fails (leaving the iconic lightning-shaped scar). In the end, the cause turns out to be ThePowerOfLove by way of magical AppliedPhlebotinum. Let's recap: '''''The BigBad can't even kill a baby'''''.
* In ''Literature/EndersGame'', Ender [[spoiler:kills ''two'' other children with his ''bare hands''. The adults don't tell him, trying to keep him marginally sane]].
* ''Several'' children die in ''Literature/SalemsLot'' - and most of them [[CameBackWrong end up as vampires]].
* One of ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles'' books opens with Harry and Michael fighting the ghost of a woman who accidentally killed her own child (they were hiding from her drunk and abusive husband and the little girl started crying, so she covered her mouth to keep her quiet and when she looked down...) and is now insane and gunning for a whole hospital nursery full of newborns. She comes very close to killing them all before being stopped.
* In Morgan Howell's ''Queen Of The Orcs: King's Property'' novel, they rather subvert this. After the main character, Dar, presides over the birth of her friend's child, and swears to the dying mother that she'll take care of the baby (typical fantasy novel thoroughfare), she allows the baby to be taken by her father, High Murdant Kol. He then ''casually'' tosses the baby in the river and walks away. This is never spoken of again. Similarly, Twea, the seven-year-old girl Dar more or less adopts, is murdered by soldiers near the end of the book.
* In Juliet Marillier's ''Literature/HeirToSevenwaters'', the changeling Clodagh was caring for is murdered by Mac Dara in an effort to lure Cathal (Clodagh's love interest) into his hall. However, the good fairies help her repair the baby's body and bring him to life again.
* As always with Robert Cormier and the tropes that have no place in a CrapsackWorld, this is often quietly averted, with the only subversion coming if you expected the book to run on the TheoryOfNarrativeCausality and not on [[ThisIsReality the rules of Cormier's bleak worldview]]. For instance, in ''After The First Death'' twenty kindergarteners are kidnapped by terrorists and used as hostages. [[spoiler:One dies of an allergic reaction to the substance used to put them to sleep, one is killed for refusing to eat the candies that contain a second dose of the substance, and one is shot during their attempted liberation. The rest live, because there was no reason to ShootTheShaggyDog.]]
* Max Brooks somewhat adhered to this trope in ''TheZombieSurvivalGuide'', mostly by barely ever mentioning that children exist (e.g. he recommends hiding from the ZombieApocalypse in schools, even though any school that's in session when news breaks of a zombie attack would be a ''madhouse'' of PapaWolf & MamaBear panic). He threw it out the window for ''WorldWarZ'', in which children starve, get eaten alive by zombies, or are mercy-killed by their own parents.
* Averted in a rather {{Narm}}y way in ''Literature/InheritanceCycle'': in the very first book, Eragon and Brom enter a town that was slaughtered by the BigBad's minions, leaving behind a pile of corpses... at the top of which is a baby impaled on a spike. A gruesome image normally, but the way it plays out in the books is ''very'' hard to take seriously, making it a failed attempt and a MoralEventHorizon.
* In ''{{Metro 2033}}'', [[spoiler:''every'' time]] Artyom travels with a child in the group, they die. First it's a man's [[spoiler:retarded grandson, who is shot by fascists, then it's Oleg who jumps into some weird sentient murk beneath the Kremlin]].
* Averted in ''Literature/TheHungerGames'' (see Film) and especially ''Mockingjay'' - in the aftermath of the climactic attack President Snow tells Katniss he's not above killing children [[spoiler: but he had no reason for firebombing a whole load of children being held in front of the presidential residence. Or the medical teams coming to help them. Including Katniss' sister Prim, ''who she sees incinerated right before her eyes'']].
* Initially played straight, but later averted, in Chelsea Quinn-Yarbro's novel ''Tempting Fate''. Saint-Germain finds a young girl as the only one alive in her house during the Russian Revolution and takes her in as his ward. Later, though, [[spoiler: she is killed by Nazi brownshirts, triggering a HeroicBSOD]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Live Action TV]]
* ''Series/{{Bones}}'' has dealt with child victims, notably in The Boy in the Bush, The Mother and Child in the Bay, and The Girl with the Curl, along with numerous teen victims. However, in The Baby in the Bough, a baby in a car seat is ''blown free from a car crash and fired into a tree''.
* An episode of ''Series/PowerRangersInSpace'', "Carlos on Call", reveals that a boy of about twelve died of an undefined circumstance (probably illness or injury). Not ''that'' incredible since the death occurred offscreen and we never meet the character but...it's [[NeverSayDie Power Rangers for god's sake!]]
** Not just that, but a character explicitly states that the boy "died a few months back". Not "passed away", and not (considering this is Power Rangers) "destroyed", or "lost," but ''"died"''. A subversion of NeverSayDie indeed.
** ''Series/PowerRangersWildForce'' has an ancient sentient Megazord who has taken on the form of a child. He dies in this form.
* ''{{Primeval}}'' played the trope straight throughout the first three seasons where if there was ever a child involved in an anomaly attack they would be rescued or helped out but it was averted in the fourth episode of season 4 where an anomaly opened up in a school and a pack of prehistoric wild dogs ran loose. It resulted in a girl around 14 being eaten after [[TooDumbToLive she wandered out of detention and into the gym]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Religion&Mythology]]
* In ClassicalMythology, the goddess Hera tries to subvert this, attempts are made on almost all of Zeus' misbegotten get. Heracles and Dionysus of example just to name a few. Oddly enough she never seems to succeed.
** The stories in which she succeeded may have simply not been interesting enough to be told as much as those that have reached us. Dead babies don't grow up to become heroes and/or gods.
*** Also, the heroes occasionally have their dad's help as well as have powers of their own.
* It's not just Hera. A lot of Greek stories concern the attempt to kill a child before he can fulfill his destiny and kill someone else. It never works.
** Not just Greeks, either, Jesus pulls this... although a lot of other babies die.
** That blood is on Herod's hands, though. He was trying to stop a perceived threat to his throne. (Though Jesus was never meant to be that type of king, and fled the people when he heard they were wanted to make him such. (John 6:15)
* The tenth plague visited upon Egypt, the Slaying of the Firstborn, did not discriminate by age or species; he even killed the firstborn cattle (which had already been killed in the fifth plague). The only families spared were the Hebrews who had painted their doorposts with lamb's blood.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Video Games]]
* In ''Metro2033'', you come across the shadow of a young child. You hear him cry out for his mother, and see a shadow of a mutant leap at him. Where his shadow disappears you can find a small skull.
* The [[CreepyChild Little Sisters]] of ''Franchise/BioShock'' have turned Infant Immortality into an actual superpower. Having their bodies infused with [[AppliedPhlebotinum ADAM]] makes them indestructible to anything and everything in your arsenal... unless you "harvest" them, which removes the symbiont that stores their ADAM and kills them in the process.
** The "desperate, grieving mother" splicer has a line which goes "Shh, oh no... Of course you're not dying my little one. You're just a baby... Babies don't die."
** Rescued Little Sisters can also die after you save them if a stray turret rocket or fireball from a Splicer hits them, but this is unintentional.
* While earlier ''VideoGame/{{Fallout}}'' games avert this trope (as discussed above) ''VideoGame/{{Fallout 3}}'' and ''VideoGame/FalloutNewVegas'' feature unkillable children. Upon taking normally mortal damage, they'll fall unconscious for a while before getting back up (similar to what plot-critical [=NPCs=] do.) This can be a problem for sociopath characters [[spoiler: in Little Lamplight as it's entirely populated by children and necessary to pass through]] since it forces you into a diplomatic solution.
* The heroes of the second ''{{Onimusha}}'' game manage to save a baby that has been kidnapped by demons. The baby's crying, however, gives one of the secondary characters a flashback to how he was unable to save his own baby daughter from a fire.
* In ''VideoGame/ClockTower 3'', one of the first scenes is a young girl, around ten or eleven, being viciously beaten to death with a sledge hammer.
* ''FireEmblem: Genealogy of the Holy War'' has an empire that believes that children are only good as conscripts or to sacrifice to the SealedEvilInACan (makes you wonder what they would have done in a generation or two). The games final bosses also consist of three children and a creepy old guy. One child is brainwashed and can be recruited while another is possessed by Sealed Evil in a Can but the third is a genuinely good person who has fallen in love with the aforementioned possessed demon child and is only fighting you after you killed her entire family. Doesn't help that the main antaognist of the second generation doing all this killing is a child himself.
** For the series in general, while you'll almost never see children among the enemy's ranks, enemy units hold no pretense when it comes to killing ''your'' army's ChildSoldiers, and since they typically have low HP compared to adult units, they often have to be guarded by someone with more endurance.
* In two of the four endings of ''{{Splatterhouse}} 3'', Rick's son is killed.
* ''VideoGame/ResidentEvil4'' leaves hints of what happened to the children of the village. Early in the game a very small skeletal hand can be found on a bench near an impaled woman, and the ending credits shows children in the village, the last shot showing a child playing while a ganado sharpens a knife.
** [[WordOfGod The booklet]] that came with the ''Biohazard 4 Incubate'' DVD confirms that the children were injected with the same parasites as the adults, but their small bodies were unable to contain them.
* Averted in ''VideoGame/{{Psychonauts}}'', though she's only a thought in a paranoid schizophrenic's mind:
-->'''[[GirlScoutsAreEvil Rainbow Squirt]]''':[''pointing gun''] Freeze! Don't come any closer! I'll never tell you the location of [[MilkmanConspiracy the Milkman]]! Never!\\
'''Raz''': Okay, let's all just settle down and talk--\\
''[She throws herself out the window.]''\\
'''TheMenInBlack''': Where is the Milkman? Who is the Milkman? What is the mission of the Milkman?\\
'''Rainbow Squirt''': [''dying''] Come closer...and I'll tell you...\\
''[Her cookie box explodes, blowing them all away.]''\\
'''Raz''': Glad I never bought any of those.
** Also, averted more [[TearJerker seriously]], in one of Milla Vodello's memory vaults: [[spoiler: Before joining the Psychonauts, she was in charge of an orphanage, which burned down with the children inside, while she was unable to save them.]] This vault is easy to miss, as it is locked away in a far corner of her mind, presumably her way of trying to forget it and move on, despite the fairly strong implication that she's still haunted by the memory.
* In ''VideoGame/FableII'', an early quest has you attempting to rescue a man's son from a gang of hobbes. You don't reach the child in time, and he has been turned into a hobbe, which you then kill. You never actually saw the child as a human, and he looks like an ordinary hobbe, so it's a lot less heartrending than if you had.
* In the "They Hunger" mod for ''VideoGame/HalfLife1'', in the hospital, you hear a baby crying. When you get to the room, near a window and press the button to call for the nurse, you see the nurse open the window, and it's revealed she was zombified. When you take a look at the baby crib, you see a blanket and bloodstains.
* In ''VideoGame/ResidentEvil2'', it is possible to witness the death of Sherry Birkin, a twelve-year old, if the player allows her to take too much damage.
** Which is rather hard to do, as the kid takes more damage than Ada Wong, superspy, can. Kid drinks her milk.
* In ''Franchise/DeadSpace'', babies have been transformed into hideous monstrosities that are still recognizable as babies. Protagonist Isaac can kill them by shooting them, or, if they latch on to his face, ripping them off, ''power-bombing them to the ground, '''and then punting them'''''. There's an achievement for doing it enough times.
** The sequel cranks the aversion up to eleven. Not only are there infected kids running amok, [[spoiler:but there are also EXPLODING BABIES. One poor social worker tries to empathise with a cooing one. Guess how you first figure out the exploding part.]]. Messed up as he is, Issac has no explicit qualms about cutting off their limbs and stomping their torsos. On the plus side, they are easier to defeat.
** Which leads to more than a few chuckles when you say to yourself, "Ready Issac? Kick the Baby!"
* ''VideoGame/{{Doom}} 3'' also had mutated babies with wings as monsters, appropriately called "cherubs".
* ''VideoGame/Left4Dead'' does not have children as humans or zombies anywhere in the game, but it does say that many died during the crisis. Inside the church in the end of Chapter 3 on the Death Toll campaign there are written memorials to dead family, friends, and pets with their birthdays and days of death listed under them. A lot of the people listed as killed end up being less than 5-years-old.
* In ''VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIVOblivion'', as a testament to quite how evil the Night Mother is, she has in her tomb the only infant skeletons in the game.
* In ''VideoGame/{{Siren}}'' (also known as ''Forbidden Siren''), the characters of [[spoiler:Miyako]] and [[spoiler:Tomoko]], both of whom are aged [[spoiler:14 (though the instruction manual of the US release states their ages as 17)]], meet their untimely ends: [[spoiler:Miyako is sacrificed in a ritual (although her spirit lives on), and Tomoko transforms into one of the undead Shibito]]. It is also possible to see them both die if they sustain too much damage in-game. However, ten-year old Harumi of the same game is never even seen being attacked if she is discovered by a Shibito, so perhaps the game developers didn't want to go '''too''' far.
* ''VideoGame/MetalGear2'' for the [=MSX2=] actually allows the player to shoot the small children wandering around Zanzibarland. Doing so will cause the player to be penalized with loss of health.
* Averted in ''{{Stuntman}}: Ignition''. In the trailer for the film ''Aftershock'' -- one of the films you do stunts for -- the first scene features firemen trying to get a little girl's cat out of a tree... when an enormous wave of lava flows through and kills all of them. The little girl ''is'' conveniently off-camera when this happens, but...
** Softened somewhat by the fact that it's entirely fictional, even within the context of the game it happens in.
* Somewhat averted in ''VideoGame/DragonAgeOrigins''. For the most part, this trope is played straight; children don't generally show up in any combat situations and you can't randomly slaughter most of the children you do see. But there are storyline-related exceptions where children DO die. In the Human Noble origin, the PlayerCharacter's endearingly cute nephew is killed alongside his mother by Arl Howe's men. In Redcliffe, any PlayerCharacter may opt to slay a demon-possessed child. And in Orzammar, a PC can convince a mother to abandon her casteless child in the Deep Roads to starve to death or worse.
** The DLC "The Stone Prisoner" also features a little girl who can become possessed by a demon in front of your party. You can then [[ShootTheDog kill her and then go back and tell her father that she's dead]].
* Let's be fair, most games where you play as a kid avert this trope (to maintain challenge), though usually only for that playable character, and only when you mess up, rather than in the story.
* In ''Dark Fall: Lost Souls'', one of the haunted rooms at the hotel contains a cradle, from which the cries of an infant can be heard. Followed by the sound of a bomb exploding, which presumably killed the infant when the hotel got bombed in WorldWarII.
* Almost all the characters in ''RuleOfRose'' are children, but the game masterfully skirts around the issue by hinting, rather than showing the horrors which they endure. Not one dead child is actually shown, but it's made painfully clear that many end up dead in the course of the story.
* Averted in some places in ''GoldenSunDarkDawn'', as a sign that the stakes have been raised [[spoiler: and the Grave Eclipse is deathly serious.]]
** If you go for the Crystallux summon in the Belinsk Opera House, [[spoiler: a cute violinist girl tries to defend her friend the chandelier-dragon from a trio of Eclipse monsters, one of which casually crushes her. [[RoaringRampageOfRevenge Matthew avenges her]] as [[TearJerker the dragon bids her goodbye]].]]
** If you return to Harapa, [[spoiler: one of the kids you demonstrated Psynergy to earlier in the game tells you that [[PlayerPunch his friend got killed by the Eclipse monsters]].]]
** Oddly enough, played straight (maybe) if you return to Kaocho. [[spoiler: Several of the rotting corpses you find there, when Spirit Sensed, mention that the kids were all evacuated to the palace, which is shut tight. [[FridgeLogic How straight this plays it]], considering that Kaocho Palace is not exactly a fortress and the king's a [[ItsAllAboutMe war-hungry narcissist]], is up for debate.]]
* There are no children at all in the Postal games, because even the game designers felt that putting children into a world where the player can kill everyone would be horribly wrong. However, dogs and cats are open targets starting in Postal 2 and Postal 3 promises even more. Cats may be used as pistol silencers in Postal 2 by shoving a pistol up the cat's butt.
** The trope is played around with in the first game. The final level of the game is at a school, and the Postal Dude appears right in front of a playground full of kids. [[spoiler: He then proceeds to open fire on them, but doesn't hit anything, nor do the kids even react, suggesting that they might be some kind of hallucination. The Postal Dude then suffers a [[HeroicBSOD Villainous BSOD]] and is captured right after.]]
* Consider the fate of Mobliz in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI''. Somehow not one of the town's adults survives the end of the world, yet every single one of the children does. The [[HandWave explanation given]] is that all the adults perished trying to save their children, but still...
* Averted and played straight in ''RuneScape''. There are no attackable human, elf or troll children, but players can freely slaughter gnome children (another of the civilised races in game), calves and baby dragons.
* The "hero" of ''VideoGame/PeasantsQuest'' throws a baby into a river, nearly trades it for pills and generally abuses it. The baby never dies, and a text part once it runs away permanently tells you it grows up reasonably well-adjusted, but he eventually "develops a severe mead problem and blames you for never being there."
** You can also leave the baby in a well, but if you leave the area, the game will scold you for trying to ditch the baby, then kill you.
* Ambiguous in ''VideoGame/{{Xenoblade}}''. Near the end of the game, [[spoiler:the pure-blooded High Entia are turned into monsters, and for all intents and purposes killed. You can look at the affinity chart screen after this point, and many of the High Entia [=NPCs=] have their icons darkened indicating they've been transformed. This includes two young children. However, unlike many of the adults, there isn't a quest that opens up after this point requiring you to kill the monsters that the kids turned into. There's another quest that indicates that there may be a way to return the transformed people to normal, so it's up to the player's imagination whether the children will live or die.]]
* Something of an aversion in ''VideoGame/TalesOfSymphonia.'' [[spoiler: Governor-General Dorr's young daughter is killed and replaced by a lookalike demon thing.]] It's averted because the death supposedly happens before the game starts, so we never see the death or the corpse, and we do not interact with the [[spoiler: real]] girl before she dies.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Webcomics]]
* Black Mage of ''WebComic/EightBitTheater'' consistently fails to kill a single orphan boy, instead destroying everything else around him, dooming him to live in a hell far worse than death could ever be.
** He also destroys a barge full of medicine and food for orphans.
*** And an orphanage.
* Lampshaded and subverted in Ebenezer Splooge's (NSFW, we warned you) Pronquest, where killing them is all you CAN do to kids, due to the adult nature of the strip.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Western Animation]]
* ''WesternAnimation/DannyPhantom'' generally plays this straight, with one exception in [[TheMovie The Ultimate Enemy]] where Danny watches, among others, his two best friends and his sister die; and, he [[OurGhostsAreDifferent or rather human half]] gets [[MoralEventHorizon killed by his ghost self]], who then goes on a [[OmnicidalManiac ten year rampage]]. Quite impressive as those are the only deaths explicitly seen on the entire show.
** On the other hand, [[spoiler:those deaths are all erased when he [[ScrewDestiny changes his decision]], which [[SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong would have]] [[ForWantOfANail caused that future]].]]
** Theoretically another aversion; the [[spoiler: perfect clone in "Kindred Spirits". Since the series constantly plays out the idea that [[OppositeSexClone Danielle is]] treated as a living soul, then the perfect clone, which is the final step above her, counts. And he dies, ''on camera while reaching out for Vlad, his appointed father'']]. It doubles as a TearJerker moment for Vlad.
* ''WesternAnimation/TransformersPrime'' comes pretty damn close to averting this. When Megatron attacks Bumblebee he unknowingly hits Raf as well, who was inside Bumblebee's vehicle mode at the time. When Megatron learns that Raf is dying because of him, he practically ''gloats'' about it. Ratchet manages to save Raf at the last minute.
* In ''WesternAnimation/TheBatman,'' a time-controlling villain releases a poison that kills many Gothamites, including Robin. He's unconscious already, so you (and more importantly the censors) are spared the sight of him actually dropping dead, but it does pass over him as it spreads through town. [[spoiler: No, it's not Jason Todd. When the villain's own (adult) son dies, he has a MyGodWhatHaveIDone moment that lets him push past the limits of how far he can change time, rewinding all the way back to his StartOfDarkness and never becoming a bad guy in the first place.]]
* Near the end of the second ''MyLittlePony'' episode the BigBad attempts to kill a filly. Thankfully they save her just in time.
* PlayedForDrama in [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aa782wOrUVM this UNICEF]] {{Smurfs}} short. The only onscreen survivor is a crying baby.
* ''Almost'' averted in the WesternAnimation/TomAndJerry short ''Heavenly Puss'', where Tom is in line at the pearly gates. One of the entrants in front of him is a ''bag full of recently drowned kittens''. "Almost", in this case, because the episode turns out to be AllJustADream.
* Though it was an alien case, WesternAnimation/Ben10AlienForce ''almost'' averted the Trope in "Con of Rath". The main cast is working during the whole episode to bring a cute alien child, the Tiffin, to another alien planet as a "peace offering", only to find out this meant the child was going to be offered as a snack to the planet's king. When this happens, [[JerkWithAHeartOfGold Rath]] is so mad that he jump inside the king's ''throat'' to take the Tiffin back, saving him just in time.
[[/folder]]
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* At one point in ''ArmyOfTwo: The 40th Day'', Salem and Rios encounter a little boy and have to escort him to safety. During a firefight, the boy sees a sniper rifle and asks if he should try to get it or stay in hiding. If you let him go for the gun, he will die.

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* At one point in ''ArmyOfTwo: The 40th Day'', Salem and Rios encounter a little boy and have to escort him to safety. During a firefight, the boy sees a sniper rifle and asks if he should try to get it or stay in hiding. If you let him go for the gun, he will die. [[EvilPaysBetter It's also the only way to unlock that particular sniper rifle for you to use yourself, and it's the strongest one in the game]].
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* [[BrainwashedAnCrazy The Traitor Legions]] of ''FanFic/TheGodEmpressOfPonykind'' aren't too picky when it comes to massacres; when Celestia's forces arrive in Manehattan shortly after a battle, they find plenty of dead civilians, including foals and unborn children.

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* [[BrainwashedAnCrazy [[BrainwashedAndCrazy The Traitor Legions]] of ''FanFic/TheGodEmpressOfPonykind'' aren't too picky when it comes to massacres; when Celestia's forces arrive in Manehattan shortly after a battle, they find plenty of dead civilians, including foals and unborn children.

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*[[BrainwashedAnCrazy The Traitor Legions]] of ''FanFic/TheGodEmpressOfPonykind'' aren't too picky when it comes to massacres; when Celestia's forces arrive in Manehattan shortly after a battle, they find plenty of dead civilians, including foals and unborn children.
**Scorpan in the sequel ''The Warmistress of Equestria'' kills an entire family of griffons in order to use BloodMagic, even taking time to note that the family had three children.



** ''AliensVsPredatorRequiem'' really goes against the trope. A father and his son have gone into the woods, where [[spoiler: facehuggers give them both a FaceFullOfAlienWingWong.]] Later, [[spoiler:the predalien finds its way into a maternity ward, where it impregnates a pregnant mother and several babies with soon-to-be chestbursters.]] The resulting bodies are partially seen later on in the movie.

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** ''AliensVsPredatorRequiem'' ''[[Film/AlienVsPredator]] Aliens Vs Predator: Requiem'' really goes against the trope. A father and his son have gone into the woods, where [[spoiler: facehuggers give them both a FaceFullOfAlienWingWong.]] Later, [[spoiler:the predalien finds its way into a maternity ward, where it impregnates a pregnant mother and several babies with soon-to-be chestbursters.]] The resulting bodies are partially seen later on in the movie.
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* In ''Film/SleepyHollow'', [[spoiler: Lady Van Tassel]] has the Headless Horseman [[spoiler: massacre the Killian family, including the young son]] because she overheard the young wife speaking of a certain "inheritance." Before the boy's time comes, he [[spoiler: gets to see the severed head of his mother stare at him]]. TimBurton has gone on record to state he disagrees with the trope.

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* In ''Film/SleepyHollow'', [[spoiler: Lady Van Tassel]] has the Headless Horseman [[spoiler: massacre the Killian family, including the young son]] because she overheard the young wife speaking of a certain "inheritance." Before the boy's time comes, he [[spoiler: gets to see the severed head of his mother stare at him]]. TimBurton Creator/TimBurton has gone on record to state he disagrees with the trope.

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