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* In most versions of ''VideoGame/DwarfFortress'', dwarves will occasionally enter a "Fell Mood" - leading them to kill a nearby dwarf, process his carcass in the nearest Butcher's Shop, and turn it into an artifact. (And just to twist the knife, if the dwarf is female, there’s a good chance the nearest handy dwarf to murder will be ‘’her own child.’’) This being VideoGame/DwarfFortress, nine times out of ten it's something like a dwarf-bone scepter decorated with an image of a dwarf-bone scepter in dwarf leather. The other dwarfs, operating under [[BlueAndOrangeMorality the unique strictures of Dwarvern morality]], don't freak out when one of their number starts murdering people. Engravings, sewn images, and such will be made to ''celebrate the creation of this fine dwarf bone scepter.''

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* In most versions of ''VideoGame/DwarfFortress'', dwarves will occasionally enter a "Fell Mood" - leading them to kill a nearby dwarf, process his carcass in the nearest Butcher's Shop, and turn it into an artifact. (And just to twist the knife, if the dwarf is female, there’s a good chance the nearest handy dwarf to murder will be ‘’her her own child.’’) ) This being VideoGame/DwarfFortress, nine times out of ten it's something like a dwarf-bone scepter decorated with an image of a dwarf-bone scepter in dwarf leather. The other dwarfs, operating under [[BlueAndOrangeMorality the unique strictures of Dwarvern morality]], don't freak out when one of their number starts murdering people. Engravings, sewn images, and such will be made to ''celebrate the creation of this fine dwarf bone scepter.''
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* In most versions of ''VideoGame/DwarfFortress'', dwarves will occasionally enter a "Fell Mood" - leading them to kill a nearby dwarf, process his carcass in the nearest Butcher's Shop, and turn it into an artifact. This being VideoGame/DwarfFortress, nine times out of ten it's something like a dwarf-bone scepter decorated with an image of a dwarf-bone scepter in dwarf leather. The other dwarfs, operating under [[BlueAndOrangeMorality the unique strictures of Dwarvern morality]], don't freak out when one of their number starts murdering people. Engravings, sewn images, and such will be made to ''celebrate the creation of this fine dwarf bone scepter.''

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* In most versions of ''VideoGame/DwarfFortress'', dwarves will occasionally enter a "Fell Mood" - leading them to kill a nearby dwarf, process his carcass in the nearest Butcher's Shop, and turn it into an artifact. (And just to twist the knife, if the dwarf is female, there’s a good chance the nearest handy dwarf to murder will be ‘’her own child.’’) This being VideoGame/DwarfFortress, nine times out of ten it's something like a dwarf-bone scepter decorated with an image of a dwarf-bone scepter in dwarf leather. The other dwarfs, operating under [[BlueAndOrangeMorality the unique strictures of Dwarvern morality]], don't freak out when one of their number starts murdering people. Engravings, sewn images, and such will be made to ''celebrate the creation of this fine dwarf bone scepter.'' ''
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** A variation horrific even by the standards of this trope. [[spoiler: Sin, the SpaceWhale [[PersonOfMassDestruction being of mass destruction]], is sustained and kept alive by the Final Aeon of the summoner that defeats it [[HeroicSacrifice with their life]], which just so happens to be a Guardian of their choosing. The Guardian will then assimilate into Sin and keep it alive until another summoner and their Final Aeon come along. The kicker? The Final Aeon confronted by the party of the game is [[ArchnemesisDad Jecht]], the father of [[PlayerCharacter Tidus]].]]

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** A variation particularly horrific example even by the standards of this trope. [[spoiler: Sin, the SpaceWhale [[PersonOfMassDestruction being of mass destruction]], is sustained and kept alive by the Final Aeon of the summoner that defeats it [[HeroicSacrifice with their life]], which just so happens to be a Guardian of their choosing. The Guardian Final Aeon will then assimilate into Sin and keep it alive until another summoner and their Final Aeon come along.along. During all of this, the Final Aeon still retains their sense of self, but lose it over time, and they're unable to control Sin completely (with that instead being done by [[GodIsEvil Yu Yevon]], [[AndIMustScream leaving them trapped inside Sin's mind]]. The kicker? The Final Aeon confronted by the party of the game is [[ArchnemesisDad Jecht]], the father of [[PlayerCharacter Tidus]].]]

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* Each summonable creature in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX'' is powered by a different Fayth, [[spoiler:a person willingly [[AndIMustScream entombed in crystal]] specifically for that purpose.]] Look at the lovingly rendered [[spoiler:temple wall decorations incorporating the body of the sacrificed Summoner.]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Ffx-fayth_Bahamut.jpg They're]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Faythanima.jpg really]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Magussisters_fayth_ff10.jpg quite]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Ffx-fayth_shiva.jpg lovely]]. [[spoiler:You don't even notice the protruding parts of the entombed human body unless you look closely!]] Somebody put real care and artistic vision into those, which is morbid beyond belief when looked at in this context. The Fayth are on call for the summoners at all times; [[spoiler:whether they're pulled from their slumber every time a summoner needs help, or deprived of rest completely like those on Mt. Gagazet, it sounds like a pretty miserable way to pass the centuries.]]

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* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX''
**
Each summonable creature in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX'' is powered by a different Fayth, [[spoiler:a person willingly [[AndIMustScream entombed in crystal]] specifically for that purpose.]] Look at the lovingly rendered [[spoiler:temple wall decorations incorporating the body of the sacrificed Summoner.]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Ffx-fayth_Bahamut.jpg They're]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Faythanima.jpg really]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Magussisters_fayth_ff10.jpg quite]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Ffx-fayth_shiva.jpg lovely]]. [[spoiler:You don't even notice the protruding parts of the entombed human body unless you look closely!]] Somebody put real care and artistic vision into those, which is morbid beyond belief when looked at in this context. The Fayth are on call for the summoners at all times; [[spoiler:whether they're pulled from their slumber every time a summoner needs help, or deprived of rest completely like those on Mt. Gagazet, it sounds like a pretty miserable way to pass the centuries.]]
** A variation horrific even by the standards of this trope. [[spoiler: Sin, the SpaceWhale [[PersonOfMassDestruction being of mass destruction]], is sustained and kept alive by the Final Aeon of the summoner that defeats it [[HeroicSacrifice with their life]], which just so happens to be a Guardian of their choosing. The Guardian will then assimilate into Sin and keep it alive until another summoner and their Final Aeon come along. The kicker? The Final Aeon confronted by the party of the game is [[ArchnemesisDad Jecht]], the father of [[PlayerCharacter Tidus]].
]]
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* ''[[VideoGame/ExtrapowerStarResistance EXTRAPOWER Star Resistance]]'': The Shakun Star central computer is powered by a PowerCrystal inside its head. And powering the PowerCrystal... is a mysterious and unknown woman trapped inside of it. She gets spirited off by Astral Gather the moment she is freed, taking her mystery with him.
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* Fate/stay night has the Fate Route and what happened to the other survivors of the fire ten years ago. On a completely unrelated note one wonders what's under the church... Makes it worse that Shiro must to visit it and see the "survivors" barely alive after being turned into Gilgamesh's sources of mana, unless the player wants him to get storyline killed.

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* Fate/stay night ''VisualNovel/FateStayNight'' has the Fate Route and what happened to the other survivors of the fire ten years ago. On a completely unrelated note one wonders what's under the church... Makes it worse that Shiro must to visit it and see the "survivors" barely alive after being turned into Gilgamesh's sources of mana, unless the player wants him to get storyline killed.
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* In ''VideoGame/{{Xenoblade}}'', the Mechon are draining the ether (basically the life-blood) from the slumbering god/titan Bionis and converting it into a universal poison for all life-forms that were born from the Bionis. [[spoiler:It turns out they were doing this to stop the Bionis from absorbing said life-forms and using them to refill its life energy, making an even straighter example.]]

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* In ''VideoGame/{{Xenoblade}}'', ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles1'', the Mechon are draining the ether (basically the life-blood) from the slumbering god/titan Bionis and converting it into a universal poison for all life-forms that were born from the Bionis. [[spoiler:It turns out they were doing this to stop the Bionis from absorbing said life-forms and using them to refill its life energy, making an even straighter example.]]
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* ''VideoGame/ParasiteEve'' features [[spoiler:[[GreaterScopeVillain the original Eve]] inhabiting the body of [[LongLostRelative the protagonist's missing sister, Maya]], who is still as young as the day they were separated]].

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* Heroic spirits in ''VisualNovel/FateStayNight'' agree to fight in the Grail Wars because they believe it will grant them a wish, usually to let them live a second life or fix a past mistake. However, [[spoiler:a defeated Servant is actually drawn into the Grail where it is turned into pure magical energy, and the 'winning' Servant that touches the Grail is ''also'' subject to this. This is what powers the Grail. Only the last remaining Master really gets a wish.]] However, very few of the main characters actually know this while competing, possibly only Ilya and Zouken Matou.
** [[spoiler:All the Servants participating in the holy grail wars, except [[Myth/KingArthur Arturia]] (who's not truly dead, but in Avalon), and Emiya!Archer (who made a [[DealWithTheDevil contract with the world]]) are actually spiritual 'copies' created from the immortal concept of the hero, which exists beyond time and will remain inviolate no matter what happens to the copies. The same hero can therefore potentially participate in any number of Grail Wars (and theoretically, for heroes that qualify for more than one of the Grail War's seven classes, multiple aspects of the same hero could fight at once), as it's only the copy that's absorbed. It's still pretty ghastly, though; copies or no, they're still sentient beings.]]
** [[spoiler:Gilgamesh and Kotomine]] have another (and very literal) use of this trope going straight into horror, no questions asked. [[spoiler:Shirou wasn't the only survivor of the fire ten years ago - all the other orphaned children have been imprisoned in the basement of Kotomine's church for the last ten years, [[AndIMustScream unable to move, deprived of all their senses, being kept alive only by the barest thread and only barely recognizable as human]] so that Gilgamesh may take mana from them.]]

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* Heroic spirits in ''VisualNovel/FateStayNight'' agree to fight in Fate/stay night has the Grail Wars because they believe it will grant them a wish, usually to let them live a second life or fix a past mistake. However, [[spoiler:a defeated Servant is actually drawn into the Grail where it is turned into pure magical energy, Fate Route and the 'winning' Servant that touches the Grail is ''also'' subject to this. This is what powers the Grail. Only the last remaining Master really gets a wish.]] However, very few of the main characters actually know this while competing, possibly only Ilya and Zouken Matou.
** [[spoiler:All the Servants participating in the holy grail wars, except [[Myth/KingArthur Arturia]] (who's not truly dead, but in Avalon), and Emiya!Archer (who made a [[DealWithTheDevil contract with the world]]) are actually spiritual 'copies' created from the immortal concept of the hero, which exists beyond time and will remain inviolate no matter what happens
happened to the copies. The same hero can therefore potentially participate in any number of Grail Wars (and theoretically, for heroes that qualify for more than one of the Grail War's seven classes, multiple aspects of the same hero could fight at once), as it's only the copy that's absorbed. It's still pretty ghastly, though; copies or no, they're still sentient beings.]]
** [[spoiler:Gilgamesh and Kotomine]] have another (and very literal) use of this trope going straight into horror, no questions asked. [[spoiler:Shirou wasn't the only survivor
other survivors of the fire ten years ago - all ago. On a completely unrelated note one wonders what's under the other orphaned children have been imprisoned in church... Makes it worse that Shiro must to visit it and see the basement of Kotomine's church for the last ten years, [[AndIMustScream unable to move, deprived of all their senses, being kept alive only by the barest thread and only "survivors" barely recognizable as human]] so that Gilgamesh may take mana from them.]]alive after being turned into Gilgamesh's sources of mana, unless the player wants him to get storyline killed.
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* In ''VideoGame/FugaMelodiesOfSteel'', the ultimate DesperationAttack in the Taranis' arsenal, the Soul Cannon, is the single most powerful option the player has in battle, but using it requires sacrificing one of the twelve children in your party. There exist items called "Dummy Souls" (one of which is included in the Deluxe Edition as a bonus item) which allow you to use the Soul Cannon once without sacrificing any of the children, but they seem to be exceptionally rare.
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* In the last part of the Verdant Wind route of ''VideoGame/FireEmblemThreeHouses'', we learn that [[spoiler:the Heroes' Relics are made of the bones and hearts of slaughtered Nabateans—this Fire Emblem entry's version of the Manaketes, humans who can turn into dragons. There are hints of this throughout the game, too; Hilda, the second-in-command of the Verdant Wind route, notes in her paralogue that her family's Relic Freikugel appears to be pulsating if you look at it closely, and other Relics such as Aymr and the Lance of Ruin ''twitch'' when idle.]]
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** [[spoiler:All the Servants participating in the holy grail wars, except [[KingArthur Arturia]] (who's not truly dead, but in Avalon), and Emiya!Archer (who made a [[DealWithTheDevil contract with the world]]) are actually spiritual 'copies' created from the immortal concept of the hero, which exists beyond time and will remain inviolate no matter what happens to the copies. The same hero can therefore potentially participate in any number of Grail Wars (and theoretically, for heroes that qualify for more than one of the Grail War's seven classes, multiple aspects of the same hero could fight at once), as it's only the copy that's absorbed. It's still pretty ghastly, though; copies or no, they're still sentient beings.]]

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** [[spoiler:All the Servants participating in the holy grail wars, except [[KingArthur [[Myth/KingArthur Arturia]] (who's not truly dead, but in Avalon), and Emiya!Archer (who made a [[DealWithTheDevil contract with the world]]) are actually spiritual 'copies' created from the immortal concept of the hero, which exists beyond time and will remain inviolate no matter what happens to the copies. The same hero can therefore potentially participate in any number of Grail Wars (and theoretically, for heroes that qualify for more than one of the Grail War's seven classes, multiple aspects of the same hero could fight at once), as it's only the copy that's absorbed. It's still pretty ghastly, though; copies or no, they're still sentient beings.]]

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** At some point shortly before the beginning of the game, a plasmid has been developed that will allow someone to destroy the sea slug from within, yielding a considerably lesser amount of usable ADAM but rendering the girl a normal human being again. [[spoiler:In most cases.]]
* Nearly everything in ''VideoGame/BlazBlue'' is Powered by a Forsaken Child. The Magitek that the world is so heavily dependent on for its survival relies on seithr, TheCorruption created by the [[EldritchAbomination Black Beast]] that made it necessary in the first place, [[spoiler: and the Beast itself was an attempt to gather the souls needed to create a magical superweapon that went horribly wrong]]. The Nox Nyctores that several characters use in battle [[spoiler: were also created by sacrificing thousands of human lives to create each one.]]

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* ''VideoGame/BlazBlue''
** At some point shortly before the beginning of the game, a plasmid has been developed that will allow someone to destroy the sea slug from within, yielding a considerably lesser amount of usable ADAM but rendering the girl a normal human being again. [[spoiler:In most cases.]]
*
Nearly everything in ''VideoGame/BlazBlue'' is Powered by a Forsaken Child. The Magitek that the world is so heavily dependent on for its survival relies on seithr, TheCorruption created by the [[EldritchAbomination Black Beast]] that made it necessary in the first place, [[spoiler: and the Beast itself was an attempt to gather the souls needed to create a magical superweapon that went horribly wrong]]. The Nox Nyctores that several characters use in battle [[spoiler: were also created by sacrificing thousands of human lives to create each one.]]



* In the ''Videogame/DarkSouls'' series, this is the dark secret of the Age of Fire. [[spoiler:The First Flame that sustains the Age of Fire (and more importantly keeps the Dark Soul from becoming an Abyss that consumes everything) must be rekindled every now and then with a sacrifice. Not just anyone will do either, the sacrifice must have a very powerful soul. In the first game's backstory, GodEmperor Gwyn sacrificed himself to Link the Fire, and one of the endings has the player character repeating the sacrifice having proved themselves to be worthy by passing all of the trials needed to reach the Kiln. In the sequel, the Undead Hero does the same thing in the end. One ending of the third game, however, shows that the Linking was at best a stopgap measure, so by that time the sacrifices are no longer enough to sustain the First Flame, which is dying regardless.]]
** [[spoiler:To make it worse, turns out the "seal of fire" warding the Abyss and feeding the First Flame was ''entirely unnecessary'' and only got put in place, screwing the entire natural order of the world, due to Gwyn's absolute paranoia.]]

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* In the ''Videogame/DarkSouls'' series, this is the dark secret of the Age of Fire. [[spoiler:The First Flame that sustains the Age of Fire (and more importantly keeps the Dark Soul from becoming an Abyss that consumes everything) must be rekindled every now and then with a sacrifice. Not just anyone will do either, the sacrifice must have a very powerful soul. In the first game's backstory, GodEmperor Gwyn sacrificed himself to Link the Fire, and one of the endings has the player character repeating the sacrifice having proved themselves to be worthy by passing all of the trials needed to reach the Kiln. In the sequel, the Undead Hero does the same thing in the end. One ending of the third game, however, shows that the Linking was at best a stopgap measure, so by that time the sacrifices are no longer enough to sustain the First Flame, which is dying regardless.]]
** [[spoiler:To
To make it worse, turns out the "seal of fire" warding the Abyss and feeding the First Flame was ''entirely unnecessary'' and only got put in place, screwing the entire natural order of the world, due to Gwyn's absolute paranoia.]]



*** Though there is a work around. If you have a Dead Thrall spell - which, unlike the lower level Zombie spell, doesn't reduce the target to dust when they're killed - you can kill a single companion, then resurrect them, then kill them again. Rinse and repeat. Because of the way the game is coded, undead Thralls count as Followers, and thus count towards murders with the Ebony Blade.



*** Doubly ghastly when you consider that the spoilered part must be the fate of Miyu Edelfelt [[spoiler:Emiya]] in any universe except the one in the spin-off Manga/FateKaleidLinerPrismaIllya.



* Each summonable creature in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX'' is powered by a different Fayth, [[spoiler:a person willingly [[AndIMustScream entombed in crystal]] specifically for that purpose.]] Look at the lovingly rendered [[spoiler:temple wall decorations incorporating the body of the sacrificed Summoner.]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Ffx-fayth_Bahamut.jpg They're]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Faythanima.jpg really]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Magussisters_fayth_ff10.jpg quite]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Ffx-fayth_shiva.jpg lovely]]. [[spoiler:You don't even notice the protruding parts of the entombed human body unless you look closely!]] Somebody put real care and artistic vision into those, which is morbid beyond belief when looked at in this context.
** The Fayth are on call for the summoners at all times; [[spoiler:whether they're pulled from their slumber every time a summoner needs help, or deprived of rest completely like those on Mt. Gagazet, it sounds like a pretty miserable way to pass the centuries.]]
*** [[spoiler: ''The entire game'' is the Fayths' GambitRoulette to free themselves.]]
* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX-2'''s Dresspheres are created from memories of past people, in fact Yuna being overcome by the memory of the Songstress Sphere is a major plot point. Now keep in mind there are about 40 of these dressspheres, most of them created by Shinra 'during' gameplay. [[spoiler: However, Lenne sealed herself in the songstress dressphere entirely by choice, and can clearly leave anytime she wants; she's just waiting for Shuyin to be saved before she does. The person whose memories are recorded in the BlackMage dressphere is met by the player and clearly not trapped.]]
* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXI'', [[PowerCopying learning blue magic]] involves "absorbing" the "essences" of monsters. [[NeverSayDie Translate the euphemisms yourself.]] Furthermore, it's dangerous to do this, as a blue mage grows gradually less human as they gain more spells. It's implied that any character who actually ''does'' pursue the path of blue magic is amoral and ambitious. [[spoiler:It is revealed that at the end of their life they transform into [[EldritchAbomination soulflayers]]. ]]
** It's true that [[TheAgeless the Aht Urhgan Immortals]], a sect of Blue Mages who've sworn their eternal servitude to the Empress, [[spoiler:become Soulflayers when they die]]--but after the Blue Mage LB5 fight, it's strongly implied that [[spoiler:because ''adventurers'' live a completely different lifestyle according to completely different ideals, their will is strong enough to fight [[Main/EnemyWithin the Beast]] indefinitely. ]]

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* Each summonable creature in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX'' is powered by a different Fayth, [[spoiler:a person willingly [[AndIMustScream entombed in crystal]] specifically for that purpose.]] Look at the lovingly rendered [[spoiler:temple wall decorations incorporating the body of the sacrificed Summoner.]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Ffx-fayth_Bahamut.jpg They're]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Faythanima.jpg really]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Magussisters_fayth_ff10.jpg quite]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Ffx-fayth_shiva.jpg lovely]]. [[spoiler:You don't even notice the protruding parts of the entombed human body unless you look closely!]] Somebody put real care and artistic vision into those, which is morbid beyond belief when looked at in this context.
**
context. The Fayth are on call for the summoners at all times; [[spoiler:whether they're pulled from their slumber every time a summoner needs help, or deprived of rest completely like those on Mt. Gagazet, it sounds like a pretty miserable way to pass the centuries.]]
*** [[spoiler: ''The entire game'' is the Fayths' GambitRoulette to free themselves.]]
*
%%* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX-2'''s Dresspheres are created from memories of past people, in fact Yuna being overcome by the memory of the Songstress Sphere is a major plot point. Now keep in mind there are about 40 of these dressspheres, most of them created by Shinra 'during' gameplay. [[spoiler: However, Lenne sealed herself in the songstress dressphere entirely by choice, and can clearly leave anytime she wants; she's just waiting for Shuyin to be saved before she does. The person whose memories are recorded in the BlackMage dressphere is met by the player and clearly not trapped.]]
* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXI'', ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXI'',:
**
[[PowerCopying learning Learning blue magic]] involves "absorbing" the "essences" of monsters. [[NeverSayDie Translate the euphemisms yourself.]] Furthermore, it's dangerous to do this, as a blue mage grows gradually less human as they gain more spells. It's implied that any character who actually ''does'' pursue the path of blue magic is amoral and ambitious. [[spoiler:It is revealed that that, unless they're strong enough to fight the beast, at the end of their life they transform into [[EldritchAbomination soulflayers]]. ]]
** It's true that [[TheAgeless the Aht Urhgan Immortals]], a sect of Blue Mages who've sworn their eternal servitude to the Empress, [[spoiler:become Soulflayers when they die]]--but after the Blue Mage LB5 fight, it's strongly implied that [[spoiler:because ''adventurers'' live a completely different lifestyle according to completely different ideals, their will is strong enough to fight [[Main/EnemyWithin the Beast]] indefinitely. ]]
soulflayers]]]].



** Wasn't the entire point that [[spoiler:the Fal'cie of both cocoon and Pulse were working together, pretty much raising the cocoon population for the mass sacrifice, and that the entire plot is them trying to do it again since the chosen pulse L'cie didn't do the job 400 years previous?]]



* Creator/BioWare had this trope running in ''VideoGame/JadeEmpire''. [[spoiler:The Emperor has ordered Death's Hand and the Lotus Assassins to hire slavers to raid "insignificant" villages. These villagers are brought to the Lotus Assassin base and killed by some kind of alchemical acid, leaving behind a SoulJar that's used to power the terracotta army they're building]].

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* Creator/BioWare had this trope running in ''VideoGame/JadeEmpire''.
**
[[spoiler:The Emperor has ordered Death's Hand and the Lotus Assassins to hire slavers to raid "insignificant" villages. These villagers are brought to the Lotus Assassin base and killed by some kind of alchemical acid, leaving behind a SoulJar that's used to power the terracotta army they're building]].



* ''All'' of ''VideoGame/{{Pathologic}}'''s healers' techniques involve this to some extent.

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* %%* ''All'' of ''VideoGame/{{Pathologic}}'''s healers' techniques involve this to some extent.



* In ''VideoGame/QuakeIV'', the main character eventually gains the ability to use a miracle healing fluid called Stroyent... which is created by using a bizarre cyborg monster to process liquefied human bodies. Indications in both this game and predecessor ''VideoGame/QuakeII'' are that the humans are usually alive when they're liquefied -- fortunately, the liquefaction process, although gruesome, does seem to kill them.

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* ''VideoGame/{{Quake}}''
**
In ''VideoGame/QuakeIV'', the main character eventually gains the ability to use a miracle healing fluid called Stroyent... which is created by using a bizarre cyborg monster to process liquefied human bodies. Indications in both this game and predecessor ''VideoGame/QuakeII'' are that the humans are usually alive when they're liquefied -- fortunately, the liquefaction process, although gruesome, does seem to kill them.



* Quite a few magical rituals used in ''VideoGame/TheSecretWorld'' require particularly gruesome materials or conditions in order to work properly; given the Grey and Grey Morality at work in this game, quite a few of the perpetrators are still considered the player's allies.

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* Quite a few magical rituals used in ''VideoGame/TheSecretWorld'' require particularly gruesome materials or conditions in order to work properly; given the Grey and Grey Morality GreyAndGreyMorality at work in this game, quite a few of the perpetrators are still considered the player's allies.



*** Also from Innsmouth, the protective wards require sacrifices of Anima in their construction. Thankfully, due to the sheer number of feral familiars roaming the grounds, no morally-ambiguous deaths are required this time.

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*** ** Also from Innsmouth, the protective wards require sacrifices of Anima in their construction. Thankfully, due to the sheer number of feral familiars roaming the grounds, no morally-ambiguous deaths are required this time.



** In a much more villainous example, the events of ''The Park'' reveal that [[AmusementParkOfDoom Atlantic Island Park]] was created with this in mind: [[spoiler: wanting to achieve [[IJustWantToBeSpecial ultimate magical power]] and [[ImmortalityImmorality immortality]], Nathaniel Winter outfitted his park with machines to [[EmotionEater siphon off the happiness of guests]], which he would then use to unlock the dark energy sealed under Solomon Island and imbue himself with it. Trouble is, some people responded very badly to having their happiness removed: just setting up the machines resulted in dozens of workers dying in "accidents" or committing suicide. Once the park was opened, the accidents escalated to full-blown murders when depressive carnival workers found themselves DrivenToMadness by the siphoning process. Winter didn't care much -- up until the authorities had the park shut down; resolving to find a way of getting the machines to work, he stayed in the abandoned park until he was able to capture a thrillseeking Innsmouth student and literally tickle him him to death -- a sacrifice enough to transform Winter into the Bogeyman.]]

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** In a much more villainous example, the events of ''The Park'' spinoff ''VideoGame/ThePark'' reveal that [[AmusementParkOfDoom Atlantic Island Park]] was created with this in mind: [[spoiler: wanting to achieve [[IJustWantToBeSpecial ultimate magical power]] and [[ImmortalityImmorality immortality]], Nathaniel Winter outfitted his park with machines to [[EmotionEater siphon off the happiness of guests]], which he would then use to unlock the dark energy sealed under Solomon Island and imbue himself with it. Trouble is, some people responded very badly to having their happiness removed: just setting up the machines resulted in dozens of workers dying in "accidents" or committing suicide. Once the park was opened, the accidents escalated to full-blown murders when depressive carnival workers found themselves DrivenToMadness by the siphoning process. Winter didn't care much -- up until the authorities had the park shut down; resolving to find a way of getting the machines to work, he stayed in the abandoned park until he was able to capture a thrillseeking Innsmouth student and literally tickle him him to death -- a sacrifice enough to transform Winter into the Bogeyman.]]



** [[https://twitter.com/SkeletonDeity/status/698596647585083392 This tweet claims]] that it's possible to start one's family with a "painting goblin": a sim who loves to paint and be alone, hates the outdoors, and is then trapped in the basement with an easel and the basic necessities of life. Over time, the "goblin" becomes very good at painting, and the player can sell its paintings for lots of money. "My family always ends up feeling blessed because of their fortune, and they never find out about the horrible secret living beneath their home."

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** %%** [[https://twitter.com/SkeletonDeity/status/698596647585083392 This tweet claims]] that it's possible to start one's family with a "painting goblin": a sim who loves to paint and be alone, hates the outdoors, and is then trapped in the basement with an easel and the basic necessities of life. Over time, the "goblin" becomes very good at painting, and the player can sell its paintings for lots of money. "My family always ends up feeling blessed because of their fortune, and they never find out about the horrible secret living beneath their home."



* ''VideoGame/{{Xenogears}}'' has a variation on this; the murderous pseudo-undead monsters known as Wels are revealed to be the byproducts of Solaris' human experimentation projects. At first, this causes the [=PCs=] to wonder if it's actually right to kill them... but then, it's further revealed that the reason they're murderous is that the experiments leave them in constant, maddening agony which they lash out with violence to try to relieve, and death is the only true escape left to them.
** Also in ''Xenogears'', the meat made in [[ShoutOut Soylent]] in Solaris is made of Wels.
*** In fact, the entire Soylent System -- a mechanism used to reabsorb mankind and Wels for their raw materials -- is a reference to the actual ''Soylent Green'' movie.

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* ''VideoGame/{{Xenogears}}'' has a ''VideoGame/{{Xenogears}}'':
** A
variation on this; the murderous pseudo-undead monsters known as Wels are revealed to be the byproducts of Solaris' human experimentation projects. At first, this causes the [=PCs=] to wonder if it's actually right to kill them... but then, it's further revealed that the reason they're murderous is that the experiments leave them in constant, maddening agony which they lash out with violence to try to relieve, and death is the only true escape left to them.
** Also in ''Xenogears'', the meat made in [[ShoutOut Soylent]] in Solaris is made of Wels.
***
Wels.
**
In fact, the entire Soylent System -- a mechanism used to reabsorb mankind and Wels for their raw materials -- is a reference to the actual ''Soylent Green'' movie.
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* In the short game [[https://ribyrnes.itch.io/candypink Candypink]], you're starting work at a candy factory and are tasked with making their most popular product, pink heart marshmallows. Turns out they're made pink by putting human fingers in the mixture, and your supervisor Almond gives you a knife and tells you to cut your finger off. You can either do it, or use the knife to stab her instead.

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* In the short game [[https://ribyrnes.''[[https://ribyrnes.itch.io/candypink Candypink]], Candypink]],'' you're starting work at a candy factory and are tasked with making their most popular product, pink heart marshmallows. Turns out they're made pink by putting human fingers in the mixture, and your supervisor Almond gives you a knife and tells you to cut your finger off. You can either do it, or use the knife to stab her instead.
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* In the short game [[https://ribyrnes.itch.io/candypink Candypink]], you're starting work at a candy factory and are tasked with making their most popular product, pink heart marshmallows. Turns out they're made pink by putting human fingers in the mixture, and your supervisor Almond gives you a knife and tells you to cut your finger off. You can either do it, or use the knife to stab her instead.
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* ''VideoGame/{{Control}}'' has a particularly nutty case that's not actually relevant to the game's plot, but [[AllThereInTheManual is spelled out in hidden background text]]. The entirety of [[EldritchLocation the Oldest House's]] main power grid gets its energy from from the corpse of former Director Broderick Northmoor -- the [[ArtifactCollectionAgency Federal Bureau of Control's]] very first Director -- whose body is so "radioactive" with [[PsychicPowers psychic energy]] even after death that since the FBC had to contain him anyway, [[MundaneUtility they decided to design his housing as a power plant, using him as their infinite energy resource]]. After all, it's the Director's job to keep the lights on.
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* It's rumored in ''VideoGame/RType'' that the R-9/0 Ragnarok has a 23 year old girl stuck in a biologically 14 year old body as the biological computer, but the military has denied the speculation.

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** [[spoiler:Argus]] has been used as a power source for the Legion, allowing their soldiers to resurrect whenever they are slain. He has spent ''eons'' being used for this purpose while simultaneously being tortured into insanity, unable to resist because he [[spoiler:hasn't been ''born'' yet]].

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** [[spoiler:Argus]] [[spoiler:The gestating Titan Argus]] has been used as a power source for the Legion, allowing their soldiers to resurrect whenever they are slain. He has spent ''eons'' being used for this purpose while simultaneously being tortured into insanity, unable to resist because he [[spoiler:hasn't been ''born'' yet]].yet]].
** The Jailer has perfected the conversion of mortal souls damned to his realm into everything from perfectly loyal minions to power sources. Even the residue from the destruction of a soul can be condensed into a useful material for use in armor and construction. And with the events of ''Shadowlands'', the vast majority of souls flowing into the Maw are underserving of this fate.
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* In ''VideoGame/AmnesiaTheDarkDescent'', [[spoiler:Vitae, a substance containing the cosmic lifeforce Baron Alexander needs for his alchemy, can only be obtained through the prolonged torture and suffering of human beings. This, more than anything else, is why Castle Brennenburg is such a gallery of horrors.]]

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* In ''VideoGame/AmnesiaTheDarkDescent'', [[spoiler:Vitae, a substance containing the cosmic lifeforce Baron Alexander needs for his alchemy, can only be obtained through the prolonged torture and suffering of human beings. This, more than anything else, is why Castle Brennenburg is such a gallery of horrors. The [[LaserGuidedAmnesia amnesia potion]] was created to ensure the torture victims wouldn't grow conditioned and numb to their suffering, thus producing less vitae, and as such could provide a fresh and steady supply until/unless they actually died.]]
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** Throughout the series, [[CrystalPrison Soul Gems]]. They are used to [[YourSoulIsMine trap the souls]] of slain creatures, and the resulting soul can then be used to [[ItemCrafting enchant an item]]. Black Soul Gems take this even further. They are a variant of soul gem, favored by {{Necromancer}}s, which allows the trapping of sapient (Men, [[OurElvesAreBetter Mer]], {{Beast |Man}}Race) souls. In fact, sapient souls create some of the most powerful enchantments in the series.

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** Throughout the series, [[CrystalPrison Soul Gems]]. They are used to [[YourSoulIsMine trap the souls]] of slain creatures, and the resulting soul can then be used to [[ItemCrafting enchant an item]]. Black Soul Gems take this even further. They are a variant of soul gem, favored by {{Necromancer}}s, which allows the trapping of sapient (Men, [[OurElvesAreBetter [[OurElvesAreDifferent Mer]], {{Beast |Man}}Race) souls. In fact, sapient souls create some of the most powerful enchantments in the series.
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* ''VideoGame/DoomEternal'' reveals that Hell's Argent Energy, the energy alternative UAC is trying to harness for Earth, [[spoiler:is processed from the souls of humans suffering in Hell.]]
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** Unsurprisingly, the Burning Legion fortress the Fel Hammer is powered by souls. Despite they themselves being empowered by consuming the souls of demons, the Illidari are quite emphatic that YouDontWantToKnow what it does to said souls.

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** Unsurprisingly, the Burning Legion fortress the Fel Hammer is powered by souls. Despite they themselves being empowered by consuming the souls of demons, the Illidari are quite emphatic that YouDontWantToKnow YouDoNOTWantToKnow what it does to said souls.


** Throughout the series, [[CrystalPrison Soul Gems]]. They are used to [[YourSoulIsMine trap the souls]] of slain creatures, and the resulting soul can then be used to [[ItemCrafting enchant an item]]. Black Soul Gems take this even further. They are a variant of soul gem, favored by {{Necromancer}}s, which allows the trapping of sapient (Men, [[OurElvesAreBetter Mer]], [[PettingZooPeople Beast Race]]) souls. In fact, sapient souls create some of the most powerful enchantments in the series.

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** Throughout the series, [[CrystalPrison Soul Gems]]. They are used to [[YourSoulIsMine trap the souls]] of slain creatures, and the resulting soul can then be used to [[ItemCrafting enchant an item]]. Black Soul Gems take this even further. They are a variant of soul gem, favored by {{Necromancer}}s, which allows the trapping of sapient (Men, [[OurElvesAreBetter Mer]], [[PettingZooPeople Beast Race]]) {{Beast |Man}}Race) souls. In fact, sapient souls create some of the most powerful enchantments in the series.
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* ''VideoGame/SamuraiShodown'': The Gandara is a huge hulking monster created by Yuga the Destroyer. If you're wondering how it was created... [[http://snk.wikia.com/wiki/Talk:Gandara Have a look at the details of how it was created (it'll be too long to list on this very page)]] and then [[NightmareFuel you may start shivering.]]
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* The Neuromods of ''VideoGame/Prey2017'' can make anyone an InstantExpert, in almost any field, after nothing more than a very unpleasant injection. They are also created [[spoiler: from the remains of extremely hostile StarfishAliens, disconcerting enough its own right... but said aliens also reproduce by consuming human minds, and if you want a reliable supply of neuromods, well...]]
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* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIV'''s Dark Knight Cecil and the Fake King have a few shadows of this. The former's Dark Knight Armor is aparently powered by Cecil's own Spirit (it actually reduces the stat), while the King's ''first mission'' is to destroy a town to gain power.

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* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIV'''s Dark Knight Cecil and the Fake King have a few shadows of this. The former's Dark Knight Armor is aparently apparently powered by Cecil's own Spirit (it actually reduces the stat), while the King's ''first mission'' is to destroy a town to gain power.



* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX-2'''s Dresspheres are created from memories of past people, in fact Yuna being overcome by the memory of the Songstress Sphere is a major plot point. Now keep in mind there are about 40 of these dressspheres, most of them created by Shinra 'during' gameplay. [[spoiler: However, Lenne sealed herself in the songstress dressphere entirely by choice, and can clearly leave anytime she wants; she's just waiting for Shuyin to be saved before she does. The person who's memories are recorded in the BlackMage dressphere is met by the player and clearly not trapped.]]

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* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX-2'''s Dresspheres are created from memories of past people, in fact Yuna being overcome by the memory of the Songstress Sphere is a major plot point. Now keep in mind there are about 40 of these dressspheres, most of them created by Shinra 'during' gameplay. [[spoiler: However, Lenne sealed herself in the songstress dressphere entirely by choice, and can clearly leave anytime she wants; she's just waiting for Shuyin to be saved before she does. The person who's whose memories are recorded in the BlackMage dressphere is met by the player and clearly not trapped.]]



** The Sentinels that watch over the City of the Sun God were created through a particularly tragic example of this: with no other way to keep the [[DarkMessiah Black Pharoah]] [[SealedEvilInACan sealed inside his Pyramid]], High Priest Ptahmose sacrificed his children and transferred their souls into seven giant statues designed to keep Akhenaten imprisoned for all time with their unified song. About half the family were adults at the time of their deaths; the other... wasn't.

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** The Sentinels that watch over the City of the Sun God were created through a particularly tragic example of this: with no other way to keep the [[DarkMessiah Black Pharoah]] Pharaoh]] [[SealedEvilInACan sealed inside his Pyramid]], High Priest Ptahmose sacrificed his children and transferred their souls into seven giant statues designed to keep Akhenaten imprisoned for all time with their unified song. About half the family were adults at the time of their deaths; the other... wasn't.
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[[folder:V]]
* ''VideoGame/ValkyriaChronicles4:'' The battleship's super secret reactor stops working around the time that a young girl with amnesia is found in the engine room. You can probably see where this is going, but wait! It gets worse! [[spoiler:If you overload a working reactor, then it will cause a nuclear-level explosion. The enemy's capital city is on the coast. The reactor only works if the girl wants to go in, but she just thinks that she is powering the ship, and does not know that she is the true payload.]]
[[/folder]]
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* ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}:

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* ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}:''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'':

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* ''VideoGame/PokemonXAndY'' features the [[spoiler:"Ultimate Weapon" created by Kalos's king, AZ, three thousand years ago. It sucks life of dozens, maybe hundreds, of Pokémon and can be used as either a device to give eternal life or basically a nuke. AZ used it in the past to revive his beloved Floette, and in the present Team Flare plans on using it to wipe out all people for the sake of the planet.]]
* In ''[[VideoGame/PokemonRubyAndSapphire Pokémon Omega Ruby and Alpha Sapphire]]'', [[spoiler:the Infinity Energy used by Devon Corp. is based on the same idea as the energy used in AZ's Ultimate Weapon, using Pokémon's bioenergy to power machines and such.]]

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* ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}:
**
''VideoGame/PokemonXAndY'' features the [[spoiler:"Ultimate Weapon" created by Kalos's king, AZ, three thousand years ago. It sucks life of dozens, maybe hundreds, of Pokémon and can be used as either a device to give eternal life or basically a nuke. AZ used it in the past to revive his beloved Floette, and in the present Team Flare plans on using it to wipe out all people for the sake of the planet.]]
* ** In ''[[VideoGame/PokemonRubyAndSapphire Pokémon Omega Ruby and Alpha Sapphire]]'', [[spoiler:the Infinity Energy used by Devon Corp. is based on the same idea as the energy used in AZ's Ultimate Weapon, using Pokémon's bioenergy bio-energy to power machines and such.]]
** The [[SecretCharacter Mythical Pokémon]] Magearna is an [[RobotGirl automaton]] that has a central component known as a "Soul-Heart", which is the Pokémon's true body. [[spoiler: Unsurprisingly, its Soul-Heart was also created using the same technology of using Pokémon bio-energy.
]]
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Phlebotinium [[PoweredByAForsakenChild powered by forsaken children]] in video games.
----
[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:A]]
* In ''VideoGame/AdVentureCapitalist'', restarting the game earns angel investors that increase your profits. Some of the upgrades require sacrificing angels, although you must careful consider the cost of losing their multiplier vs the benefit of the upgrade. (At first anyway. Eventually you have so many angels it's a non-issue.)
%%* It looks like this is the truth behind [[spoiler: the existence of [[TankGoodness the Blitztanks]] ]] in ''Videogame/AkatsukiBlitzkampf''.
* ''VideoGame/AliceMadnessReturns'' has the Dollmaker power the infernal train with the bodies of insane children, which reaches horror levels when you realise the very deliberate pedophilia subtext in that level.
* In ''VideoGame/{{Alundra}}'', it's no coincidence that you gain new items whenever someone dies: [[spoiler:Jess is able to craft new weapons thanks to the spirits of deceased villagers who wants to help Alundra.]]
* In ''VideoGame/AmnesiaTheDarkDescent'', [[spoiler:Vitae, a substance containing the cosmic lifeforce Baron Alexander needs for his alchemy, can only be obtained through the prolonged torture and suffering of human beings. This, more than anything else, is why Castle Brennenburg is such a gallery of horrors.]]
-->'''Baron Alexander:''' [[spoiler:As long as the body suffers, it will continue to produce the vitae and saturate the blood with its properties.]]
* In ''VideoGame/AmnesiaAMachineForPigs'', children have proven indispensable for maintenance work in the pipe system of the evil machine. Mandus regularly sends down orphaned children into the steam pipes to clean them up. They often get scalded to death in the process.
* This is why the Seven Deities kidnapped Mithra in ''VideoGame/AsurasWrath'', as they need her to power their Mantra Reactor and gather enough Mantra to destroy Gohma Vlitra. The main problem with this plan (other than their callous slaughter of innocents for their Mantra, which they call "purification") is that the process makes poor Mithra suffer ''horribly''. And her father, the title character, is [[PapaWolf about as happy with this state of affairs]] [[UnstoppableRage as you can imagine from the title]].
* ''VideoGame/AthenaAwakeningFromTheOrdinaryLife'':
** Towards the end of the game, it's shown that [[spoiler: the CreepyChild with PsychicPowers whom Athena befriended, Masato Kurihara, is hooked up into the Super Computer that handles the whole Tantauls system... and said super computer is the FinalBoss that Athena must destroy. ''And there's no way to save Masato'', as destroying the machine will kill him. When Athena destroys it, she manages to pull the dying Masato out, [[DiedInYourArmsTonight and he dies in her arms]].]]
** In the third CD's Game Over sequence, [[spoiler: instead of dying of what's implied to be a psychic backlash coming from overusing ''her'' PsychicPowers, Athena herself is seized by the Tantauls System and [[FateWorseThanDeath forcibly made into the new core]]. She's last seen hooked-up to the Computer, as a SingleTear rolls down her cheek.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:B]]
* The Angelic Rifle in ''VideoGame/{{Baroque}}'' fires bullets that contain [[spoiler: the Littles, which are living incarnations of pain extracted from the Absolute God and look like winged, misshapen human babies.]]
* In ''VideoGame/BatenKaitosOrigins'', Baelheit's machina is powered by [[spoiler:afterlings, gigantic creatures that are the result of a failed experiment to implant pieces of a dead god into humans]]. It's never made clear if the victims are still aware.
* In ''VideoGame/BioShock1'', the Plasmids are marvels of superscience that give powers from generating electricity, to telekinesis, to shooting swarms of angry wasps from your arm, through genetic engineering far ahead of their time -- or our time. But to obtain ADAM, the AppliedPhlebotinum needed to make new plasmids, sea slugs have to be implanted into little girls -- it must be little girls, for reasons that are never explained.
-->'''Tenenbaum:''' I know why it has to be children, but why just girls? This I cannot determine why, but I know it is so. Fontaine says, "Ah, one less bathroom to build in the orphanage".
** At some point shortly before the beginning of the game, a plasmid has been developed that will allow someone to destroy the sea slug from within, yielding a considerably lesser amount of usable ADAM but rendering the girl a normal human being again. [[spoiler:In most cases.]]
* Nearly everything in ''VideoGame/BlazBlue'' is Powered by a Forsaken Child. The Magitek that the world is so heavily dependent on for its survival relies on seithr, TheCorruption created by the [[EldritchAbomination Black Beast]] that made it necessary in the first place, [[spoiler: and the Beast itself was an attempt to gather the souls needed to create a magical superweapon that went horribly wrong]]. The Nox Nyctores that several characters use in battle [[spoiler: were also created by sacrificing thousands of human lives to create each one.]]
** [[spoiler:On the subject of Nox Nyctores, nasty bastard though he may be, Relius states that it is possible to use fewer souls to make a Nox Nyctores, but the reduction is highly dependent on the quality of the souls used. A focused soul is higher-quality than a scattered soul, and a multilateral soul higher quality than a unilateral one. By that logic, a focused soul, pointing in multiple directions, is of the highest quality possible, and could very well be used to make a Nox or "detonator" on its own. [[FridgeHorror That should explain a lot more about his "obsession" with Makoto...]]]]
* In ''[[VideoGame/{{Borderlands2}} Borderlands 2]]'', the main plot revolves around stopping the BigBad from activating a LostSuperweapon. It turns out the price of activating that superweapon is [[spoiler:keeping his own daughter locked away. The player(s) [[MercyKill end her suffering]] at her request, but the CorruptCorporateExecutive kidnaps an allied character to activate the superweapon instead--cue Boss Battle]].
* In ''VideoGame/BreathOfFireIV'', TheEmpire has a long range "[[FantasticNuke hex cannon]]" that's powered by torturing people to death, and is more effective if the victim has a strong connection of some sort to the affected region. [[spoiler: When Fou-Lou proves virtually unkillable by all other means, his girlfriend Mami is used to power the cannon, with the shot centered directly on him. [[PhysicalGod He survives]], [[LaughingMad but he's not exactly sane afterwards]].]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:C]]
* In ''VideoGame/ChaosLegion'', [[spoiler:the legions Sieg uses are made by sacrificing wandering human souls, a fact [[{{Foreshadowing}} foreshadowed]] by a line in its opening cinematic.]]
* As a result of ContinuityDrift in ''VideoGame/{{Crysis}} 2'', your [[PoweredArmor Nanosuit]] is [[spoiler:alive. And it's slowly preforming a [[ClingyCostume permanent]] FusionDance. After a while, it breaks down most of your vital organs so it can do your breathing, digesting, and subconscious thinking for you. Anyone else wear your Nanosuit before you? It secretly performed a BrainUploading and might try to [[CompositeCharacter merge their personality with yours]].]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:D]]
* In the ''Videogame/DarkSouls'' series, this is the dark secret of the Age of Fire. [[spoiler:The First Flame that sustains the Age of Fire (and more importantly keeps the Dark Soul from becoming an Abyss that consumes everything) must be rekindled every now and then with a sacrifice. Not just anyone will do either, the sacrifice must have a very powerful soul. In the first game's backstory, GodEmperor Gwyn sacrificed himself to Link the Fire, and one of the endings has the player character repeating the sacrifice having proved themselves to be worthy by passing all of the trials needed to reach the Kiln. In the sequel, the Undead Hero does the same thing in the end. One ending of the third game, however, shows that the Linking was at best a stopgap measure, so by that time the sacrifices are no longer enough to sustain the First Flame, which is dying regardless.]]
** [[spoiler:To make it worse, turns out the "seal of fire" warding the Abyss and feeding the First Flame was ''entirely unnecessary'' and only got put in place, screwing the entire natural order of the world, due to Gwyn's absolute paranoia.]]
* In ''VideoGame/DeusExHumanRevolution'', the Hyron Project [[spoiler: is a immense quantum computer/security system powered by three women trapped in life support pods, who constantly beg to be allowed to sleep. To increase the creepy factor, it acts like a normal computer system, but ends its official announcements with disturbing messages. These women don't survive for very long and a DLC reveals there is a secret base which kidnaps women, "processes" them and ships them to the Hyron Project. Their experiences throughout this are suffering defined.]] And those system generated passwords? Hyron employees keep complaining in internal email how ''creepy'' they sound...
* ''VideoGame/DiabloIII'' has the Dark Coven, whose BlackMagic is fueled by human suffering and sacrifice, usually with ColdBloodedTorture involved.
* ''VideoGame/DragonAgeOrigins'':
** The golems, who [[spoiler:were created out of people. Some of them volunteered to have molten rock poured over them and give up their free will. When they began running short on volunteers (and when the dwarf who invented the technology [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone suffered an attack of conscience]]), the king started conscripting his subjects and sent the inventor through the process himself.]]
** A defeated blood mage will offer to magically increase your strength and endurance in return for his life, [[spoiler:all it takes is sacrificing the lives of all the elf slaves you came to free, one of whom, if your character is a City Elf, is your father]].
* In most versions of ''VideoGame/DwarfFortress'', dwarves will occasionally enter a "Fell Mood" - leading them to kill a nearby dwarf, process his carcass in the nearest Butcher's Shop, and turn it into an artifact. This being VideoGame/DwarfFortress, nine times out of ten it's something like a dwarf-bone scepter decorated with an image of a dwarf-bone scepter in dwarf leather. The other dwarfs, operating under [[BlueAndOrangeMorality the unique strictures of Dwarvern morality]], don't freak out when one of their number starts murdering people. Engravings, sewn images, and such will be made to ''celebrate the creation of this fine dwarf bone scepter.''
[[/folder]]

[[folder:E]]
* The manual for the RTS ''VideoGame/{{Earth 2150}}: The Moon Project'' contains several essays to bring the player up to date with the plot. One of the more memorable ones is a request for asylum from a disillusioned soldier formerly of the United Civilized States military forces, describing how the cyborg battalions of the last war disappeared only just prior to the invention of a portable AI module, large enough to store a human brain and a few electronics, that also has a very large warning stating the type of execution awaiting anyone who opens it. In another essay this is alluded to, as well as praising the soldier for anticipating the turn of events and defecting.
* In the section of ''VideoGame/EccoTheDolphin: Defender of the Future'' where dolphins turn into jerkasses and take over the world, the three highest members of the ruling class have sequestered themselves off in giant water bubbles high in the sky. The only way up to them is to turn on the Hanging Waters tube system. The only thing that can power the Hanging Waters is the life force of enslaved whales.
* ''Franchise/TheElderScrolls''
** Throughout the series, [[CrystalPrison Soul Gems]]. They are used to [[YourSoulIsMine trap the souls]] of slain creatures, and the resulting soul can then be used to [[ItemCrafting enchant an item]]. Black Soul Gems take this even further. They are a variant of soul gem, favored by {{Necromancer}}s, which allows the trapping of sapient (Men, [[OurElvesAreBetter Mer]], [[PettingZooPeople Beast Race]]) souls. In fact, sapient souls create some of the most powerful enchantments in the series.
** In ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIIIMorrowind Morrowind]]'', due to the weakening state of [[PhysicalGod the Tribunal]] as a result of being [[DeityOfHumanOrigin cut off from their divine power source]], they were no longer able to sustain the [[TheGreatWall Ghost Fence]] around [[{{Mordor}} Red Mountain]] by their power alone. As a result, [[spoiler: the Dunmer began interring the bones of their dead in such a way that their spirits would power the Ghost Fence. That's why it's called the "Ghost" Fence and not the "God" Fence]].
** The ''Shivering Isles'' expansion to ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIVOblivion Oblivion]]'' takes this a step further with Dawnfang/Duskfang. To start with, it's a magical weapon and so must be recharged with soul gems (although see below). What's worse, it changes damage type with the day/night cycle (fire by day, frost by night), and each time it switches it can become (for the next 12 hours) a stronger version of itself... if the other form was "fed" 12 souls. So in order to keep the blade perpetually in its Superior state, one has to let it claim 24 souls EVERY DAY * and* make sure the enchantment itself is charged with souls. Add that to the rather disconcerting toothy maw of the blade, and one begins to wonder what sane hero would willingly carry this on her person. (You find it in the Shivering Isles, also known as the Realm of Madness. [[FridgeBrilliance What did you expect?]]) One advantage of Dawnfang/Duskfang is that it refills its charges every 12 hours, when it changes form. This, technically, makes it the only magic weapon in the game which ''doesn't'' have to be recharged with soul gems, and some players use it exactly for this reason.
** In ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim Skyrim]]'', the Ebony Blade has turned into this as well. In the previous games, it was merely a particularly powerful Ebony Dai-Katana with some nice buffs. In ''Skyrim'', it has a Life-Steal power that can be enhanced... by using it to kill people who love you. (In in-game terms, any NPC you've completed enough quests for to make them 'like' you.) In its base form, it's marginally useful. Fully-boosted - which requires you to murder 10 people who consider you a friend at the very least - it provides a powerful life-steal with infinite charges, making you extremely hard to kill in a melee.
*** Though there is a work around. If you have a Dead Thrall spell - which, unlike the lower level Zombie spell, doesn't reduce the target to dust when they're killed - you can kill a single companion, then resurrect them, then kill them again. Rinse and repeat. Because of the way the game is coded, undead Thralls count as Followers, and thus count towards murders with the Ebony Blade.
** In the backstory, [[OurDwarvesAreDifferent the Dwemer]] did ''something'' to the Snow Elves to turn them into the modern Falmer. Snow Elves as sentient beings would require a very rare black soul gem to put their souls into soul gems but as Falmer much cheaper soul gems work. It just so happens that [[{{Magitek}} a lot of Dwemer technology relies on soul gems]] to function, in fact.
** Daedric equipment is this by default: each piece of Daedric equipment is Ebony with a Daedric soul infused into it at creation. In ''Skyrim'', the first installment that actually lets you craft Daedric equipment, this manifests in having to spend a Daedra Heart (a rare alchemical ingredient gained from killing certain Daedra) on each crafted piece.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:F]]
* ''VideoGame/FableII'' features Reaver. First, [[spoiler:his eternal youth and good looks were put in place by sacrificing the entire population of Oakvale, albeit by accident.]] Second, [[spoiler:continuing to have those good looks comes at the price of tricking someone to give up their own youth and beauty.]] Not to mention his company Reaver Industries from ''VideoGame/FableIII'', which heavily depends on child labor. It's up to the player whether or not to continue the child labor once they become a monarch.
* In the ''VideoGame/{{Fallout 3}}'' DLC ''The Pitt'', obtaining a cure for TheVirus requires kidnapping a baby.
* In ''VideoGame/FatalFrame1'', the reward for the eight-year-old who wins a game of demon tag is to spend ten years locked in total isolation before being torn apart by ropes, all to keep the HellGate closed. The loser doesn't fare much better, having stakes stabbed into her eyes and becoming "it" for the next game of demon tag.
* Heroic spirits in ''VisualNovel/FateStayNight'' agree to fight in the Grail Wars because they believe it will grant them a wish, usually to let them live a second life or fix a past mistake. However, [[spoiler:a defeated Servant is actually drawn into the Grail where it is turned into pure magical energy, and the 'winning' Servant that touches the Grail is ''also'' subject to this. This is what powers the Grail. Only the last remaining Master really gets a wish.]] However, very few of the main characters actually know this while competing, possibly only Ilya and Zouken Matou.
** [[spoiler:All the Servants participating in the holy grail wars, except [[KingArthur Arturia]] (who's not truly dead, but in Avalon), and Emiya!Archer (who made a [[DealWithTheDevil contract with the world]]) are actually spiritual 'copies' created from the immortal concept of the hero, which exists beyond time and will remain inviolate no matter what happens to the copies. The same hero can therefore potentially participate in any number of Grail Wars (and theoretically, for heroes that qualify for more than one of the Grail War's seven classes, multiple aspects of the same hero could fight at once), as it's only the copy that's absorbed. It's still pretty ghastly, though; copies or no, they're still sentient beings.]]
** [[spoiler:Gilgamesh and Kotomine]] have another (and very literal) use of this trope going straight into horror, no questions asked. [[spoiler:Shirou wasn't the only survivor of the fire ten years ago - all the other orphaned children have been imprisoned in the basement of Kotomine's church for the last ten years, [[AndIMustScream unable to move, deprived of all their senses, being kept alive only by the barest thread and only barely recognizable as human]] so that Gilgamesh may take mana from them.]]
*** Doubly ghastly when you consider that the spoilered part must be the fate of Miyu Edelfelt [[spoiler:Emiya]] in any universe except the one in the spin-off Manga/FateKaleidLinerPrismaIllya.
* The trope is the force that drives the plot of all the ''[[VideoGame/FirstEncounterAssaultRecon F.E.A.R]]'' games. [[spoiler: Defense contractor Armacham Technology Corporation started a project to train psychic commanders to lead mass produced clone soldiers. To get adequate, controllable psychics (the goal was for them to eventually be reliably producible as products), the head researcher believed the commander embryos can't just come from a psychic's DNA but also need to gestate inside a psychic... so... they take Alma, a disturbed, psychic 8 year old girl, put her in an induced coma, lock her away in a machine in "The Vault" underground for years until she's ready for pregnancy, and pump two children out of her, putting her back into a coma each time. Did we mention that the father of those children is ''Alma's father?'' Despite being in a coma she's eventually able to psychically reach out to one of the young commanders and get him to kill some of the researchers in revenge. This convinces the researchers to shut down the power to the facility holding Alma, so naturally she dies a few days later. Turns out when you forsake a psychic child that badly, ''being dead'' doesn't stop her from taking revenge... Alma reaches out to the psychic commander again, jump starting the plot.]]
* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIV'''s Dark Knight Cecil and the Fake King have a few shadows of this. The former's Dark Knight Armor is aparently powered by Cecil's own Spirit (it actually reduces the stat), while the King's ''first mission'' is to destroy a town to gain power.
* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI'':
** The {{Magitek}} and Magitek Knights come from draining a still-living Esper, and siphoning its power into weaponry and human soldiers such as [[PsychoPrototype Kefka]] and [[HeelFaceTurn Celes]]. The very [[GreenRocks Magicite]] that the player characters can equip and use in order to [[PowersAsPrograms learn magic and enhance their skills]] is actually the crystallized remains of a dead Esper -- to the point that many living Espers [[BetterToDieThanBeKilled deliberately reduce themselves to Magicite]] either to strike back at TheEmpire or to assist the party members, but the latter never show any regret for using the crystals.
** The World of Ruin is created by 3 statues sacrificing, well, everything.
* VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII has this on a global scale. Mako Energy is powered by the life of the planet, or the latent life force that is currently cycling around waiting to be reborn.
* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVIII'', [[spoiler:it turns out that Guardian Forces actually carve out a space in their hosts' heads for themselves, destroying memories in the process. The heroes continue to use Guardian Forces after learning this and [[GameplayAndStorySegregation no further memory loss occurs]].]] Additionally, the final Guardian Force, Eden, has an ability called Devour, which enables Eden's host to eat his or her opponent in order to gain various benefits from HP to stat increases - although depending on the opponent, the effect could be negative instead. Either way, the game cheerfully acknowledges the rather {{Squick}}y implications of this: the animation for the ability involves cutting to a [[RelaxOVision screenshot of a serene landscape,]] over which is played the very loud, messy slurping and smacking noises of the target being messily eaten.
* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIX'' has Quina the Blue Mage. To learn blue magic spells, s/he has to ''eat'' the enemy. His/her weapon? An oversized fork. Additionally, the fuel everybody uses to power airships, Mist, is made of souls barred from the afterlife, but it's never made quite clear whether they're actually consumed in the process.
* Each summonable creature in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX'' is powered by a different Fayth, [[spoiler:a person willingly [[AndIMustScream entombed in crystal]] specifically for that purpose.]] Look at the lovingly rendered [[spoiler:temple wall decorations incorporating the body of the sacrificed Summoner.]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Ffx-fayth_Bahamut.jpg They're]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Faythanima.jpg really]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Magussisters_fayth_ff10.jpg quite]] [[http://finalfantasy.wikia.com/wiki/File:Ffx-fayth_shiva.jpg lovely]]. [[spoiler:You don't even notice the protruding parts of the entombed human body unless you look closely!]] Somebody put real care and artistic vision into those, which is morbid beyond belief when looked at in this context.
** The Fayth are on call for the summoners at all times; [[spoiler:whether they're pulled from their slumber every time a summoner needs help, or deprived of rest completely like those on Mt. Gagazet, it sounds like a pretty miserable way to pass the centuries.]]
*** [[spoiler: ''The entire game'' is the Fayths' GambitRoulette to free themselves.]]
* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX-2'''s Dresspheres are created from memories of past people, in fact Yuna being overcome by the memory of the Songstress Sphere is a major plot point. Now keep in mind there are about 40 of these dressspheres, most of them created by Shinra 'during' gameplay. [[spoiler: However, Lenne sealed herself in the songstress dressphere entirely by choice, and can clearly leave anytime she wants; she's just waiting for Shuyin to be saved before she does. The person who's memories are recorded in the BlackMage dressphere is met by the player and clearly not trapped.]]
* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXI'', [[PowerCopying learning blue magic]] involves "absorbing" the "essences" of monsters. [[NeverSayDie Translate the euphemisms yourself.]] Furthermore, it's dangerous to do this, as a blue mage grows gradually less human as they gain more spells. It's implied that any character who actually ''does'' pursue the path of blue magic is amoral and ambitious. [[spoiler:It is revealed that at the end of their life they transform into [[EldritchAbomination soulflayers]]. ]]
** It's true that [[TheAgeless the Aht Urhgan Immortals]], a sect of Blue Mages who've sworn their eternal servitude to the Empress, [[spoiler:become Soulflayers when they die]]--but after the Blue Mage LB5 fight, it's strongly implied that [[spoiler:because ''adventurers'' live a completely different lifestyle according to completely different ideals, their will is strong enough to fight [[Main/EnemyWithin the Beast]] indefinitely. ]]
** Scholars too. The Grimoire--the source of a Scholar's power and versatility--only achieves its true power after several rituals. The first one? [[spoiler:Soaking it in the blood of other magic users--''especially'' other Scholars.]]
* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIII'', [[spoiler: the fal'Cie [[MeaningfulName Orphan]] powers the entirety of Cocoon, especially the antigravity tech that keeps it from falling onto Pulse]]. Of course, this gets more complicated when you find out that [[spoiler: most of the game has been [[EvilPlan orchestrated]] by Barthandelus (possibly under Orphan's influence, depending on interpretation) just to get you to kill Orphan, destroying Cocoon and killing millions of people in the hope that the Maker will return to the humans and fal'Cie alike, who are seen as having been forsaken by him]].
** Wasn't the entire point that [[spoiler:the Fal'cie of both cocoon and Pulse were working together, pretty much raising the cocoon population for the mass sacrifice, and that the entire plot is them trying to do it again since the chosen pulse L'cie didn't do the job 400 years previous?]]
* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIV'', the false moon Dalamud which was used to hold the elder Primal Bahamut captive also contained [[spoiler:thousands of captured dragons in stasis pods which have kept them alive and in pain for over 5000 years by the time the events of the game take place. This ensured that their cries and prayers would keep their deity Bahamut summoned inside the moon's core, preventing him from escaping his prison. Dalamud itself was used by the Allagan empire to syphon energy from Bahamut and power their advanced technology. [[ApocalypseHow It didn't turn out well for the Allagans in the end.]] ]]
* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyAdventure'' and its remake ''VideoGame/SwordOfMana'', the [[WorldTree Mana Tree]] that sustains the world will grant its power to the first person who touches it and then dies. The only way to save the balance of nature is for a woman of the Mana tribe to become a new tree in its place, a fate that befell [[spoiler: the heroine's mother and eventually the heroine herself.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:G]]
* In ''VideoGame/GalacticCivilizations'' there is a chance that any particular planet that is being colonized will have something special on it that lets the player choose from three options: Good, Neutral, and Evil. Many of the evil options (and some of the neutral options) are of the Forsaken Child variety. For example, a life form on the planet links people together to create a psychic network that gives a huge improvement to science production on the planet, but the people must permanently enter the life form's pods (signified by a reduction in population). The options are: (Good) Cordon off the area and allow NO ONE to enter.(Neutral) Hook up only the infirm and the elderly. (Evil) Excellent! Hook up a random selection of the population.
* In ''Ghosts of the Past: Bones of Meadows Town'' Loki's medallion can open a path to Valhalla - if the user sacrifices five human souls.
* In ''VideoGame/GuiltyGear Xrd REVELATOR'', [[spoiler: [[LoveFreak Elphelt]] [[ManchurianAgent Valentine]]'s Story Mode reveals that [[BigBad the Universal Will/Ariels]] (also Elphelt's creator/[[AbusiveParents "mother"]]) has put her mind in a LotusEaterMachine-dream state while using her body as the core of [[TheAntichrist Justice]]. Towerds the end of her Story [[CreepyChild Bedman]] tries to keep her from waking up, [[EveryoneHasStandards afraid for her sanity]], but she defeats him and then remembers that she's become this.]]
-->"Now I remember! I'm... I'm... [[spoiler: Going to become JUSTICE]]!"
[[/folder]]

[[folder:H]]
* Try almost every enemy in ''VideoGame/HalfLife2''. There's a reason the Big Bads are known as the Combine (as in harvest). Combine mooks? Normal people with most people-bits taken out and cyborg alien science put in. The Headcrab zombies? Turns out the 'zombies' underneath the Headcrabs aren't all the way dead (and their screaming is some of the most potent nightmare fuel in the game). This makes the ''Zombine'' (a Combine soldier zombified by a Headcrab) a double-whammy. The Striders? Same thing as the "human" soldiers, but with another alien race. The same goes for their Dropships and Gunships, by the way. And who's in charge of assembling these things? The Stalkers. Humans with their limbs cut off and their vital organs removed, but kept alive and ''utterly'' dependent on obeying their orders. Walking is a privilege they have to earn, as are eyes. Without effort on the viewer's part, they're no longer recognisable as human. Alyx puts it best. "I hope you don't remember who you were."
* The Garland device in ''VideoGame/{{Hellsinker}}'' is powered by four dead children buried beneath it. [[spoiler:To get the best ending, you must face Garland, then defeat the spirits of the children, who have taken a great interest in a cat and insist on bringing it into battle.]]
* This appears pretty often in ''VideoGame/HeroesOfMightAndMagic V''. The Necropolis Town has a building that can convert living units into Undead. There's an adventure map building where a Hero can sacrifice units in exchange for experience. The Demon Lord Heroes' "Consume Corpse" ability removes dead creature stacks from the battlefield to replenish mana. The Stronghold faction introduced in ''Tribes of the East'' ''owns'' this trope though. First, there's the "Slave Market" town building that lets you sell units for resources (ironic, given the Orcs' history as oppressed slaves). The Wyvern Upgrade, the Pao-kai, can consume dead creature stacks to heal and ''revive'' their own numbers. Their strongest unit, the Cyclops, can use Goblins (the weakest unit) as food and ''ammunition'', making the poor saps ''literal'' cannon fodder. The Shaman upgrades, the Sky and Earth Daughters, are both able to sacrifice Goblins to replenish their own mana. In fact, this is the only way the Sky Daughter can use her [[ShockAndAwe "Chain Lightning" ability]] since she doesn't start battle with enough mana to use it. Her in-game creature description ends with this little gem: "Because of this, they are greatly feared by their opponents - and by Goblins". Not to mention that the Cyclop's description mentions that the Orcs bought the Cyclops' allegiance by offering them their favorite food: Goblins. Yeah, Goblins are pretty much the Stronghold's {{Buttmonkey}}s.
* The Kushan mothership in both ''VideoGame/{{Homeworld}}'' games is so large and complicated that no conventional computer system or crew can manage it. As a result, a system is created that involves permanently surgically implanting a living person into a WetwareCPU so that the various subsystems can be managed directly. The system's creator, Karan S'jet, volunteers herself, partly because she understands it best, and partly because she wouldn't trust anyone else with it. At the end of the game, Karan is disconnected from the Mothership. In ''Homeworld 2'', taking place several decades later, she connects herself to the new and improved mothership ''Pride of Hiigara'' to serve in the same capacity.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:I]]
* In ''Immortal Love 2: The Price of a Miracle'' the blue side of a two-faced amulet can heal any injury and grant special powers, in exchange for using the red side to sacrifice a human being.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:J]]
* Creator/BioWare had this trope running in ''VideoGame/JadeEmpire''. [[spoiler:The Emperor has ordered Death's Hand and the Lotus Assassins to hire slavers to raid "insignificant" villages. These villagers are brought to the Lotus Assassin base and killed by some kind of alchemical acid, leaving behind a SoulJar that's used to power the terracotta army they're building]].
** That's just an extension of the worst act. [[spoiler:The Water Dragon's mutilated body is kept as a trophy in the Palace. Its power is siphoned by the Emperor to grant him strength and vitality. The Dragon's blood is water, and so its body was carved open, allowing a flood of water to pour out of the Palace and into the Empire's rivers and lakes.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:L]]
* In ''Labyrinths of the World: Shattered Soul'' the villain uses the hero's sister's soul to power an invention allowing him to travel to different realities.
* The Soul Reaver in the ''VideoGame/LegacyOfKain'' series [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin drains the souls of enemies]] in order to power itself up. However, the whole reason it can do this in the first place is that a maddened, ravenous spirit is trapped inside the blade...[[spoiler: a spirit that just happens to belong to the protagonist of two of the games.]]
* In ''VideoGame/LostKingdoms 2'', it is strongly implied that the artificial Runestones [[spoiler: are made from people's souls.]] You only find this out if you go back and check [[spoiler:Sol's body in the Royal Tower, Lower]] [[MultipleEndings without meeting the requirements for the Good ending.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:M]]
* ''VideoGame/MassEffect2'':
** [[spoiler:In order to reproduce, the Reapers have to capture alive billions of sentient beings, liquefy them (which you potentially see done to most of your crew first hand), and inject the genetic material into the mechanical portion of the Reaper. This makes ONE Reaper. In ''VideoGame/MassEffect3'', a dead Reaper is confirmed to be one ''billion'' years old; assuming that this was the first cycle, and that's a big assumption, there are at ''least'' 20,000 Reapers.]]
** In [[spoiler:the Overlord DLC, David, an autistic man, was hooked up to a VI so that he could communicate with the geth, perhaps control them. His physical body is suspended, naked, in the centre of the machine, wires jammed beneath his skin, into his mouth, and his eyelids pinned back. Arguably even more horrifying is the ''mental'' effect, however - the over-stimulation is obviously near-unbearable even before David enters the machine. When he does, he begins screaming in agony and terror... Those horrible high-pitch distorted screams you heard all mission? That was David ''desperately pleading'' with you: "Quiet! Make it stop!!!"]]
* ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolidVThePhantomPain'' has [[spoiler:Metal Gear Sahelanthropus, which was designed to use a combination of a human pilot with an artificial intelligence. The presented challenges in its construction: to accommodate the AI's computer, the cockpit had to be downscaled, as making the cockpit larger would make it too top-heavy to be practical. As such, no adult could pilot it. The cockpit, however, was perfectly sized for children. It is piloted by two children during the game: a psychic child from Russia, and an African child soldier.]]
* In ''VideoGame/MetroidPrime 3: [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Corruption]]'', you awaken after an [[CurbStompBattle unfortunate encounter]] with [[EvilTwin Dark Samus]] to find that your weapons, your suit and your ''body'' now run on [[ToxicPhlebotinum Phazon]].
* Averted in ''VideoGame/MetroidFusion'' (which takes place after the ''Prime'' trilogy). Samus survives her initial encounter with the X Parasite due to a vaccine derived from a baby Metroid; however, all study by the scientists was carried out either humanely or [[spoiler:posthumously after Mother Brain killed it in ''VideoGame/SuperMetroid'']].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:N]]
%%* In ''VideoGame/{{Neopets}}'', Caption Contest #214 featured [[http://www.neopets.com/games/caption/caption_archive.phtml?place=214 this alarming image]]. Knowing TNT, though, it's probably a joke.
* In the ''VideoGame/NeverwinterNights2'' expansion ''Mask of the Betrayer'' the player is afflicted with a curse that makes him or her hunger for spirits, and able to choose to increase his or her power by eating said spirits. In addition to being obviously morally questionable, spirit-eating on a regular basis also has the downside of increasing the player's hunger to the point that he or she requires multiple spirits per day just to keep from dying.
* The Void Walker skill Breath Of The Dead Child from ''VideoGame/NexusWar'' does ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin. [[GameplayAndStorySegregation in-game]] it's powered by [[{{Mana}} magic points]], but according to the fluff, the demon infiltrates the paediatric ward of hospitals, harvests the dying breaths of children, and unleashes them later, causing the children's tormented souls to bite and gnash at his foes. Hope you weren't planning to sleep tonight.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:O]]
* In ''VideoGame/{{Overlord}}'', your armor and weapons are forged with fires fueled by the deaths of your minions, [[WeHaveReserves not that you care.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:P]]
* ''All'' of ''VideoGame/{{Pathologic}}'''s healers' techniques involve this to some extent.
* ''VideoGame/PlanescapeTorment'':
** [[spoiler:the Nameless One's immortality is fueled by other people's lives. To be more specific, whenever he gets killed, the force keeping him alive casts about the Planes, steals someone's life force, and forces it onto the Nameless One]]. Naturally, the people this happens to aren't terribly happy about it: [[spoiler:they compose the [[LivingShadow monstrous shadows]] that stalk you through the game]].
** In a shop run by an AlwaysChaoticEvil [[OurDemonsAreDifferent Tanar'ri]] there is a "baby oil" [[MadeFromRealGirlScouts literally made from children]]. The merchant would be glad to describe the gruesome process in detail.
* ''VideoGame/PokemonXAndY'' features the [[spoiler:"Ultimate Weapon" created by Kalos's king, AZ, three thousand years ago. It sucks life of dozens, maybe hundreds, of Pokémon and can be used as either a device to give eternal life or basically a nuke. AZ used it in the past to revive his beloved Floette, and in the present Team Flare plans on using it to wipe out all people for the sake of the planet.]]
* In ''[[VideoGame/PokemonRubyAndSapphire Pokémon Omega Ruby and Alpha Sapphire]]'', [[spoiler:the Infinity Energy used by Devon Corp. is based on the same idea as the energy used in AZ's Ultimate Weapon, using Pokémon's bioenergy to power machines and such.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Q]]
* In ''VideoGame/QuakeIV'', the main character eventually gains the ability to use a miracle healing fluid called Stroyent... which is created by using a bizarre cyborg monster to process liquefied human bodies. Indications in both this game and predecessor ''VideoGame/QuakeII'' are that the humans are usually alive when they're liquefied -- fortunately, the liquefaction process, although gruesome, does seem to kill them.
** It also shows up in ''VideoGame/EnemyTerritoryQuakeWars'' as a dual health/ammo pickup for the Strogg team, and destroying a processing plant for it is the GDF objective for one stage, but its origins aren't directly addressed in that game.
** Though it is part of the advertising campaign for ''Quake Wars''. In spite of its Soylent origins, the advert that features it is rather hilarious.
** You also see dismembered humans powering certain devices around the Strogg factories, as well as one powering [[spoiler:the Makron]], and they are also ''alive'' and at times trying to escape. Most of them appear to be heavily drugged, a state in which they're probably better off.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:R]]
* In ''VideoGame/RadiantHistoria'', the world relies on Sacrifices willingly giving up their souls to keep it from becoming a lifeless desert. The entire plot is kicked off by one intended Sacrifice's attempt to ScrewDestiny not only for his own sake but for the sake of the next chosen Sacrifice [[spoiler:the player character]].
* Yuri's household in ''VideoGame/RedAlert2: Yuri's Revenge'' would make even NOD shiver with unease. He got power from bio-generators (like in ''Matrix'') that could be enhanced by placing additional humans in them. His primary harvesting facility was a [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Slave miner]] and the secondary one was a huge [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Grinder]] that processed humans into credits. He used cloning vats to churn out infantry and his super-weapon turned humans into bulky brute mutants. Oh, and all his army was mindcontrolled by him. What a jerk.
* It's not surprising that his spiritual successor in ''VideoGame/RedAlert3'', Yuriko, runs on the same logic. However, she ''is'' the forsaken child. As ''Uprising'' reveals, her PsychicPowers alienated her from everyone in her village, and she was taken by the government at a young age and brainwashed into being a mindless killing machine. Even when she breaks free after the war, she's forced to [[spoiler:kill her own sister, and her revenge leaves her feeling empty inside.]] That's not even mentioning the thousands of {{expendable clone}}s, all of whom apparently felt the same things she did.
* ''[[VideoGame/ResidentEvilGunSurvivor ResidentEvil: Survivor]]'' reveals that the process used to create Tyrants (one of the toughest enemies in the game) involves [[spoiler: removing the pituitary glands from the brains of teenage boys after first producing a massive quantity of a chemical created by fear. The "improvement" Umbrella comes up with is to perform the surgery without anesthetic.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:S]]
* Quite a few magical rituals used in ''VideoGame/TheSecretWorld'' require particularly gruesome materials or conditions in order to work properly; given the Grey and Grey Morality at work in this game, quite a few of the perpetrators are still considered the player's allies.
** [[WizardingSchool Innsmouth University]] is outfitted with a network of magical batteries that supply the Illuminati staff with additional [[{{Mana}} Anima]] - drawn from magicians who've been buried alive in the foundations, all of whom are still [[AndIMustScream fully conscious]]; in one mission, the player is given the task of sealing a few escapees back into the wards in order to prevent any further occult disasters.
*** Also from Innsmouth, the protective wards require sacrifices of Anima in their construction. Thankfully, due to the sheer number of feral familiars roaming the grounds, no morally-ambiguous deaths are required this time.
** The Sentinels that watch over the City of the Sun God were created through a particularly tragic example of this: with no other way to keep the [[DarkMessiah Black Pharoah]] [[SealedEvilInACan sealed inside his Pyramid]], High Priest Ptahmose sacrificed his children and transferred their souls into seven giant statues designed to keep Akhenaten imprisoned for all time with their unified song. About half the family were adults at the time of their deaths; the other... wasn't.
** Theodore Wicker's [[HellSeeker journey to Hell]] and transformation into a [[DemonOfHumanOrigin half-demonic immortal]] required numerous human sacrifices in order to complete; though not reflected on in great detail, it ended up killing all the other tenants at the Overlook Motel - if not dragging them to Hell along with Wicker.
** In a much more villainous example, the events of ''The Park'' reveal that [[AmusementParkOfDoom Atlantic Island Park]] was created with this in mind: [[spoiler: wanting to achieve [[IJustWantToBeSpecial ultimate magical power]] and [[ImmortalityImmorality immortality]], Nathaniel Winter outfitted his park with machines to [[EmotionEater siphon off the happiness of guests]], which he would then use to unlock the dark energy sealed under Solomon Island and imbue himself with it. Trouble is, some people responded very badly to having their happiness removed: just setting up the machines resulted in dozens of workers dying in "accidents" or committing suicide. Once the park was opened, the accidents escalated to full-blown murders when depressive carnival workers found themselves DrivenToMadness by the siphoning process. Winter didn't care much -- up until the authorities had the park shut down; resolving to find a way of getting the machines to work, he stayed in the abandoned park until he was able to capture a thrillseeking Innsmouth student and literally tickle him him to death -- a sacrifice enough to transform Winter into the Bogeyman.]]
** The [[MegaCorp Orochi Group]] excels at this, from the research facility that only uses child test subjects to the constantly-regenerating being forced to suffer through being butchered for meat. However, the crown goes to Project Odyssey, in which one of Gaia's Chosen ends up being used as an organ donor, forced to spend the rest of eternity being operated without anesthetic, dying as a result of overharvesting, and then respawning so that more organs can be removed.
* ''Franchise/ShinMegamiTensei: VideoGame/DigitalDevilSaga,'' in a rather disturbing version. Your characters (and, by extension, your enemies, who have the same power) get stronger by ''[[ImAHumanitarian eating other people]]''. Which they do. With frequency and sometimes gusto. Other demons, to be more exact. Killing humans actually gives you no Atma and you can't use Hunt skills on them either. It's definitely as per the above as far as the backstory is concerned, though. In the main franchise, there are several examples of farming of a substance needed to soothe demonic hunger, called variably Magatsuhi, Magnetite, or Red Pills, which is just as variably identified [[spoiler:as a distilled, concentrated form of human souls, emotions or neurotransmitters. It's perfectly possible for a single human to generate enough to sustain a small team, but larger operations like the Nightmare System or Reverse Hills require ''massive'' PeopleFarms.]]
* In ''[[VideoGame/TheSims The Sims 2]]'', a [[ManEatingPlant Cowplant's]] milk can grant the drinker an extra five days of life, at the price of one human life a pop. Sims can roll wants to "drink" their enemies. If you want to be especially evil you can feed your entire neighbourhood to the Cowplant, making your own Sim immortal by eating the souls of children, so to speak.
** [[https://twitter.com/SkeletonDeity/status/698596647585083392 This tweet claims]] that it's possible to start one's family with a "painting goblin": a sim who loves to paint and be alone, hates the outdoors, and is then trapped in the basement with an easel and the basic necessities of life. Over time, the "goblin" becomes very good at painting, and the player can sell its paintings for lots of money. "My family always ends up feeling blessed because of their fortune, and they never find out about the horrible secret living beneath their home."
* In the doujin game ''VideoGame/{{Sora}}'', Starbreaker has to tie herself to a satellite in order to [[ColonyDrop attack the earth]].
* In ''[[VideoGame/StarControl Star Control 2]]'', the sinister Druuge's entire culture revolves around this. They consist of just one company, the Crimson Corporation, which owns everything. So any Druuge that transgresses is fired, which immediately leads to them being guilty of stealing Corporation resources (such as air), at which point they feed the furnaces. The creators of the game are quite proud of this little bit of nastiness.
* In ''VideoGame/StarFlight'', it is revealed that [[spoiler:the fuel used to travel in hyperspace is actually the long 'lost' ancients. Even more, the mysterious crystal planet that is the big threat of the series is actually a defense system constructed by the ancients to fight the mysterious and horrible monsters that are kidnapping their people and burning them alive to power their star ships.]]
* ''Franchise/StarWarsLegends'': In ''VideoGame/KnightsOfTheOldRepublicIITheSithLords'', the Jedi Masters explicitly state that the Exile is a "Wound in the Force," and not truly connected to it. Due to your connection to the Force being severed and your powers stripped, throughout your whole adventure, you siphon the Force energy from those you kill and ''your own party members'' (most of whom are Force-Sensitive and all of whom are in some sense bound to you) to stay alive, become stronger and use your Force powers.
* In the original ''VideoGame/{{Suikoden|I}}'', the Rune that Governs Life and Death works like this - it's pretty powerful even at the worst of times, but it grows stronger by devouring the souls of people loved by the wielder. Friends, family, 's all good. He doesn't have to kill them directly, but nor does he get to choose - the Rune itself seems to employ some form of [[WindsOfDestinyChange probability manipulation]] to bring about the death of the loved ones so it can grow stronger. On the bright side, it's literally the most fearsomely powerful Rune that has ever appeared in any of the games, so hey, at least you got something OUT of all those tragically dead family-members and close, long-time friends...
* ''Videogame/SunlessSea:''
** Downplayed with the Milebreaker, a sinister-looking contraption you can install on your ship. It'll make your vessel significantly more fuel-efficient, but it also unnerves the hell out of the crew with how evil it looks (which is reflected in a blow to the Hearts stat, which in many ways represents morale and the captain's charisma); apparently, the crew being terrified of the thing is fundamental to its function.
** Played straighter with the Fulgent Impeller, the [[InfinityPlusOneSword single best engine in the game]]. You need several freaky things to assemble it, such as a piece of a MechanicalAbomination and sea monster bones, but all of these aren't what counts. What ''does'' count is that the engine "needs a heart", and that heart is a person that must be sealed shut inside a steel capsule at the heart of the engine, never to be let out. The Unsettling Sage that helped you build it (after getting him out of TheAlcatraz) thankfully volunteers because he really wants to see it done, and he's treated as a martyr to progress. But, if the dreams your sailors can have are anything to go by (who will try to join him in the capsule), he's still inside there as you sail, [[AndIMustScream screaming and burning]]…
* In ''VisualNovel/{{Sunrider}}'', the [[AbusivePrecursors ancient Ryuvians]] had a DoomsdayDevice called the Sharr’Lac which could obliterate everything within a half-lightyear radius. To prevent the abuse of such destructive power, it was designed so that it can only be piloted by the Sharr (or crown princess) of Ryuvia, and can only be activated at the cost of her life. Thus, the Ryuvian God-Emperors would have to decide whether using the Sharr’Lac was worth the sacrifice of their daughters.
* In ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWars'', Jurgen's ODE System which was used to command the Bartolls which required living humans hooked up to cores. The Mironga, a variant merely has the pilot using the system linking them directly while maintaining some will of their own. The ATX and SRX team were shocked to learned about this, the fact that Lamia was used as the main nexus of the core prevented further victims from being used for the ODE System as the newer ones were totally unmanned.
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[[folder:T]]
* ''VideoGame/TalesOfInnocence'' has a line of giant war mechas called the Gigantess. These happen to be powered by the bodies of captured humans with magical powers like a [[PeopleJars literal battery]].
* ''VideoGame/TalesOfSymphonia'' features Exspheres, a form of {{Magitek}} symbiote mass-produced by the villains that empower their wielders with superhuman abilities and can be used to power Magitek devices. [[spoiler:They are eventually revealed to be powered by the soul of a living being that has been killed slowly and painfully in the process of activating the Exsphere for use. What's more, those belonging to a few of the main characters turn out to contain the lives of their loved ones, and two more had "different", experimental ones that were stealing ''their'' lives.]] The heroes must use them anyway, because the villains certainly won't stop doing it.
-->'''Zelos''': This is the grand Tethealla Bridge, powered by FIVE THOUSAND EXPHERES.
* The blastia in ''VideoGame/TalesOfVesperia'' are a widely used technology made partly from the souls of sentient monsters known as Entelexeia.
* In the third ''VideoGame/{{Thief}}'' game (''Deadly Shadows''), [[spoiler:the Old Gray Lady has killed an orphan to use her shape as a disguise. Garrett restores the orphan's soul to her body, which destroys the disguise and advances the plot.]]
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[[folder:W]]
* ''VideoGame/{{Warframe}}'': [[spoiler:The warframes themselves are actually piloted by the surviving children caught from a botched [[FasterThanLightTravel void jump]] aboard a colony ship called the ''Zariman 10-0''. With the children's exposure to the Void, the [[AbusivePrecursors Orokin]] exploited their ability to manifest its energy and link with the warframes like an avatar as a means to fight a war against their previous creations, [[StarfishAliens the Sentients]].]]
* In ''Videogame/WhiteKnightChronicles'', the Knights' pact-makers were originally adult warriors. Then the first pact-maker of the White Knight turned on Madoras since he couldn't stomach working for such an evil bastard anymore. After the rebellion failed, Madoras decided the best way to avoid a repeat incident would be to [[spoiler:use ''infants'' as the pact-makers instead.]]
* A bit of WildMassGuessing by [[TheGhost The Sign Painter]] in ''VideoGame/WorldOfGoo'' posits that the cute little sentient goo are the power source for the entire world.
* ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'':
** Scourge qualifies for horrible often enough, but the creation known as Thaddius fits this trope specifically, being made up of the souls and bodies of women and children slaughtered in conquering Lordaeron.
** The Lich King's sword "Frostmourne" can absorb the souls of those it slays to power up, or to turn the slain into Scourge, controlled by the Lich King.
** The player-obtainable axe "Shadowmourne" must absorb the souls of 1000 entities from Icecrown Citadel as part of its manufacturing process before it gains its full power. The visual effect of the buff it grants the wielder is a vortex of the absorbed souls swirling around the player.
** [[Literature/RiseOfTheHorde The little draenei boy sacrificed by the Shadow Council to open the Dark Portal]].
** In ''Warlords of Draenor'' the Iron Horde uses the souls of slain Draenei and non-allied Orcs to power their Dark Portal, with Gul'dan and his minions acting as conduits for the energy.
** One of the older and more notorious ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' examples was the "Chained Essence of Eranikus" item which created a poison cloud around the player, the downside? The item is powered by the tortured soul of a dragon who [[AndIMustScream begs for mercy]] (and occasionally threatens) everytime the object is used.
** Ulthalesh, the Deadwind Harvester got much of its power (along with its title) when its first wielder used it to drain all the life from Deadwind Pass. Furthermore, it feeds on the souls of its victims and, if they cannot control it, its wielder.
** Unsurprisingly, the Burning Legion fortress the Fel Hammer is powered by souls. Despite they themselves being empowered by consuming the souls of demons, the Illidari are quite emphatic that YouDontWantToKnow what it does to said souls.
*** Soul engines appear throughout the ''Legion'' expansion, as they power ''every'' Legion ship and are at the heart of major bases. The Legion's victims are tortured to death, then their ''souls'' are further tortured, before they are used as fuel.
*** The destruction of one Legion ship released its fuel source: The desecrated remains of enough sentient beings to ''fill an entire valley''.
** [[spoiler:Argus]] has been used as a power source for the Legion, allowing their soldiers to resurrect whenever they are slain. He has spent ''eons'' being used for this purpose while simultaneously being tortured into insanity, unable to resist because he [[spoiler:hasn't been ''born'' yet]].
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[[folder:X]]
* In ''VideoGame/{{Xenoblade}}'', the Mechon are draining the ether (basically the life-blood) from the slumbering god/titan Bionis and converting it into a universal poison for all life-forms that were born from the Bionis. [[spoiler:It turns out they were doing this to stop the Bionis from absorbing said life-forms and using them to refill its life energy, making an even straighter example.]]
* ''VideoGame/{{Xenogears}}'' has a variation on this; the murderous pseudo-undead monsters known as Wels are revealed to be the byproducts of Solaris' human experimentation projects. At first, this causes the [=PCs=] to wonder if it's actually right to kill them... but then, it's further revealed that the reason they're murderous is that the experiments leave them in constant, maddening agony which they lash out with violence to try to relieve, and death is the only true escape left to them.
** Also in ''Xenogears'', the meat made in [[ShoutOut Soylent]] in Solaris is made of Wels.
*** In fact, the entire Soylent System -- a mechanism used to reabsorb mankind and Wels for their raw materials -- is a reference to the actual ''Soylent Green'' movie.
* In ''VideoGame/{{Xenosaga}}'', the nerve cells of [[WhatMeasureIsANonHuman Realians]] (who are basically "Bio-Androids" or human beings specifically made for certain tasks) are eaten as a drug.
%%** Cecily and Cathe.
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