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8* ''Literature/AcidRow'': Wesley Barber is easily the most deranged and aggressive of the youth mob, not helped by the fact he's often on hard drugs; he's high on acid, crystal meth and who knows what else the day of the riot. He's willing to burn down the entirety of Humbert Street to get rid of the paedophiles - even though it will endanger everyone else - eventually punches the pregnant Melanie Patterson in the stomach when she tries to stop him, and brutally murders and mutilates [[spoiler:an old man he mistakenly believes is a pervert]], telling himself he's ComicBook/{{Blade}} killing vampires.
9%%* Quinton from Zane's ''Addicted''. Add Dempse as well.
10* FBI Agent Pynebox in ''Literature/TheAdventuresOfFoxTayle'' does this after he breaks off from the rest of his team. He uses a gun, a knife, his fists, and a switchblade.
11* The Axe-Man in the ''Literature/AhrimanTrilogy'' takes this trope rather... literally.
12* Patrick Bateman, title character of ''Literature/AmericanPsycho''. And Rachel Newman, of the female-centric sequel to TheFilmOfTheBook.
13* In Creator/AgathaChristie's ''Literature/AndThenThereWereNone'', the murderer is obviously Ax Crazy material as they are more than willing to kill nine people for the sake of making sure they don't [[KarmaHoudini escape justice]] considering they killed people and all. Interestingly enough, one other character qualifies who is ''not'' the murderer: [[spoiler: Vera Claythorne]], after being [[BreakTheCutie forced to endure four straight days of pure psychological torture]] including looking back on [[spoiler:[[{{Yandere}} her murder of a little boy so her lover could inherit his estate]], [[BewareTheNiceOnes completely snaps and kills Philip Lombard]]]] minutes before committing suicide.
14* Visser Three, the BigBad of ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}''. Even in an alien empire where killing your subordinates seems to be routine, he's TheCaligula. At one point Visser One remarks that he's executed subordinates 'by the poolful', which means that his body counts runs in the high thousands. ''At least''.
15%%** Taylor. And probably Rachel. No, Ax is not Ax crazy. (He may ''act'' crazy around certain foods, though.)
16%%** David in ''The Solution''.
17* Erroy Gere in ''Gifts'', the first book in ''Literature/AnnalsOfTheWesternShore''. His power is "twisting", which [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin twists the victim's body in awful and painful ways]], and he exercises it on cruel whim. Canoc warns him off by a conspicuous display of his own power.
18* Creator/CliveBarker is quite fond of them.
19** ''Literature/{{Dread}}'' -- [[spoiler:Steve]] becomes ax crazy at the end of the short story. After [[BreakTheCutie enduring psychological torture that causes his mind to snap]], he takes a fire axe from the homeless shelter where he was dropped off, tracks down [[spoiler:Quaid]], and proceeds to [[KarmicDeath slowly hack him to death]] [[BewareTheNiceOnes over the course of the night]].
20** Played straight, subverted, averted, and everything in between in ''Literature/{{Galilee}}''. Although the Barbarossa get the most of it, the Gearys being more of the drunk-with-power type.
21*** Luman is considered this at first, not helped by the narrator who doesn't trust him. The fact that he lives with lots of weapons, in his own piss and that his childhood is about getting to discover every nuthouse in the country, there's some reason to. It gets slowly subverted though, as Luman shows more and more remorse and interest in his brothers, sisters and bastards. Late in the story he shows some intellectual acumen and helps Maddox accepting his past faults.
22*** Cesaria gets the worst of it. Sure, she can show some genuine compassion and love... but no one who even remotely knows her forgets that she could kill anyone at any moment should she get angry. And she gets angry fast.
23*** Late in the book, [[spoiler:Mitchell]] slips firmly into it and it's hinted that [[spoiler:Garrisson]] could end up the same way.
24* ''Literature/BazilBroketail'': Ajoth Gol Dib is a bloodthirsty psychopath who is literally ''addicted'' to killing people, preferably in brutal, excruciating way. If General Kreegsbrok doesn't provide him with slaves to murder, he becomes unpredictable and may kill anyone in sight without warning. Worse, the more he kills, the greater his urge to kill gets. This frustrates Kreegsbrok to no end, as he finds it more and more difficult to keep Ajoth Gol Dib's murderous nature secret from common people and is quickly running out of a work force as slaves he sends to the Prophet are being slaughtered by the dozens.
25* ''Literature/TheBelgariad'': Taur Urgas, King of Cthol Murgos. This is a man who beats his wives, {{Bad Boss}}es his underlings, tortures his enemies slowly, encourages his children to murder one another in order to become his heir, froths at the mouth in battle, chews the furniture during fits of madness, and dies screaming for his opponent to "[[BloodKnight come back and fight]]!" ''The Mallorean'' plays this for sad sympathy, as Eriond notes that Taur Urgas was so insane that [[TheMentallyDisturbed he couldn't actually be blamed for most of what he did]], giving the rest of the heroes a moment of stunned realization.
26* Dwayne Hoover in Creator/KurtVonnegut's ''Literature/BreakfastOfChampions'' winds up going on an insane rampage, which the author/narrator attributes to the influence of "bad chemicals".
27* ComicBook/{{Carnage}} is his usual self in ''Literature/CarnageInNewYork'' and ''Goblin's Revenge''.
28* Margaret White from ''Literature/{{Carrie}}'' could be diagnosed with at least six psychological disorders, and the religious craziness does '''not''' help.
29** Carrie herself devolves to one, when she finally goes over the edge and starts killing people after one cruel prank too many. There's a ''reason'' that one should BewareTheNiceOnes, dammit!
30%%* Lydia of ''Caught In The Act'' by Peter Moore.
31* In ''Literature/ChroniclesOfChaos'', [[Myth/ClassicalMythology The Maenads]] are so utterly crazy that they follow the flight-enabled heroine [[NoEscapeButDown off a cliff]] and applaud when some of them [[{{Gorn}} "splash"]] on the rocks.
32* When Jack, the main character of ''Literature/TheChroniclesOfProfessorJackBaling'', gets his hands on a DisintegratorRay capable of converting tables [[spoiler:or people]] into a pile of dust, it doesn’t work out well.
33* ''Literature/CodexAlera'':
34** Odiana, a recurring antagonist, is a powerful watercrafter driven mad by [[RapeAsDrama being raped]] just as TheEmpath part of her watercrafting was coming in. She is quite nonplussed about physical violence, at the very least.
35--->'''Odiana:''' If you go and kill the ugly little girl right now, won't the steadholder object? And then you'd have to kill him as well. And anyone else upstairs. And all these people here... Why shouldn't we do this again?
36** Phrygiar Navaris, an antagonist in the fifth book ''Captain's Fury'', is obsessed with becoming known as the greatest blade in Alera and has an official kill record in the three-digit range (potentially ''four'' if you include "self-defence" and suspected killings).
37%%* ''Literature/ColtRegan'' -- Johnny Nobody's reaction to Colt stealing a job from him is this.
38* Rodya Raskolnikov from ''Literature/CrimeAndPunishment'', is a study of how someone can become ax crazy only once (even if this once is to say Annie Wilkes levels). That was because he flipped out in the middle of a murder he'd already premeditated and his plan fell apart thanks to an unexpected witness which led him to panic and violently stab again and again, as it was now a matter of instinctive survival.
39%%* ''Literature/DeathComesAsTheEnd'' counts as well, with the killer proceeding in short order to murder more than half of the named characters.
40* The ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' series by Creator/TerryPratchett often has these as villains.
41** Jonathan Teatime the assassin in ''Literature/{{Hogfather}}''
42** Carcer, a sadistic sociopath in ''Literature/NightWatchDiscworld''
43** Mr. Tulip and Mr. Pin, aka The New Firm, in ''Literature/TheTruth''
44** Wolfgang from ''Literature/TheFifthElephant'' is the prototype for the later character of Carcer.
45** ''Literature/ThiefOfTime'' has multiple ax-crazy moments, such as Jeremy Clockson's behavior when he hasn't had his medicine, and Mr. White's mental breakdown while holding an actual ax.
46** Discworld's greatest example of a ''hero'' who has the potential to go Ax Crazy is Samuel Vimes, Commander of the Ankh-Morpork City Watch. All who know him are very afraid to make him too angry for fear that he'll snap and (to use the British term) "go spare". His most notable instance of rage, as seen in ''Literature/{{Thud}}'', made a group of dwarves, normally trained to fight to the death, flee in terror. To his credit, Vimes remains able to escape his rages before going beyond the point of forgiveness.
47** Andy Shank, football hooligan and general sociopath, from ''Literature/UnseenAcademicals''.
48* [[BigBad The Composer]] of the web-novel ''Literature/{{Domina}}'' considers it an act of admirable willpower when he doesn't murder a prisoner just because he can. His larger motives remain unclear, but its looking like he doesn't care for anything besides ForTheEvulz.
49* ''Literature/DungeonCrawlerCarl'': Lucia Mar appears to have only a partial grip on reality, talking to herself and imagining that people have insulted her. She's also been granted some very powerful skills like damage reflection, and kills people casually. The audience loves her.
50--> '''Lucia Mar''': There is nothing wrong with my head. Why would you say that? Speak no more, or there will be something wrong with your girlfriend's head.
51* ''Literature/DyingOfTheLight'' gives us the memorable Bretan Braith Lantry. TwoFaced, and rather touchy, he'd killed several people in duels before coming to Worlorn. Once there, he [[spoiler: challenged an offworlder to a duel for touching his car, ranted in a "[[AndYourLittleDogToo Little Dog Too]]" manner after getting into a second duel, killing everyone involved in the death of his teyn, and burning down an empty city. Then it turns out that he may be the least villainous antagonist.]]
52* ''Literature/TheElenium'': [[TheBrute Adus]], an ape-faced, [[DumbMuscle frighteningly stupid]] thug and PsychoForHire, who commits rape and murder for kicks, slides into UnstoppableRage in battle, and ''cuts through his own men'' to get to TheHero and TheLancer, all while "bellowing like an enraged bull". Jeez.
53* No man, woman or child is safe from Talus (if ''Literature/TheFaerieQueene'' hasn't defamed him). He kills everyone who looks at him the wrong way, and at one point ''cuts the hands off and drowns'' a woman who they've taken prisoner. The only thing that keeps him nominally on the side of good is that he works for Artegall, who has to curb some of his more bloodthirsty rampages.
54* Terra from Patricia [=McKillip=]'s ''Fool's Run'' killed [[OneManArmy over a THOUSAND people]] with a laser rifle in a single rampage... though she's surprisingly calm whenever encountered later.
55* In ''Literature/GatheringTheEnchanted'' Bannor ends up going Axe Crazy... Or more, fire crazy, when his friends are shot.
56%%* Luca Brasi in ''Literature/TheGodfather.'' Just ask Al Capone.
57* In ''Literature/TheGodsAreBastards'', the spirits that grant [[spoiler:headhunters]] their power are utterly insane with rage and hatred, and need to be pacified with regular victims (ideally either [[WorthyOpponent challenging]], [[AssholeVictim deserving]], or both).
58* ''Literature/{{Gone}}'':
59** Drake Merwin is a [[CardCarryingVillain self described]] sadist that lives for no reason other than to kill and torture people for [[ForTheEvulz fun]].
60** [[EldritchAbomination The Gaiaphage]] once it takes human forms reveals itself to love to murder people in the most painful way possible because it finds it amusing.
61* In ''Literature/{{Harahpin}}'', Eyrco and Euron become this briefly when they first arrive on Untoria. If it wasn't for Euron's silver glow, Eyrco would have ripped out his throat.
62* Bellatrix Lestrange from ''Literature/HarryPotter'', whose love of ColdBloodedTorture exceeds even Voldemort's. In fact, there are numerous occasions where Voldemort decides he has to stop Bellatrix from killing anyone (admittedly because killing them would ruin some plan of his, rather than out of any actual mercy, but even so...)
63** [[BigBad Voldemort]] himself qualifies, especially in the last book. Admittedly, [[VillainousBreakdown he was under a lot of stress at the time]], but when he found out [[spoiler: that Harry knew about his [[SoulJar souljars]], he began indiscriminately killing his own followers]]. Even for someone [[DirtyCoward so afraid of death]], the revelation drove him [[SanityHasAdvantages beyond reason]].
64* According to the narrator of ''Literature/HellsChildren'', by Andrew Boland, Acheri is one of these. In that moment, when survival is the only thing worth thinking about, only a fool would tax there mind with grievances of the past and Acheri was no fool, axe crazy, yes, but no fool.
65* Creator/JamesHerbert:
66** ''Literature/TheFog1975'': The titular biological weapon rouses numerous people to unhinged acts of mutilation, murder and suicide.
67** ''Literature/TheDark'': Murderous occult ritual harnesses, in the form of concentrated patches of darkness, a sentient assertion of humanity's capacity for evil. Its [[HatePlague effects]] are similar to that of [[Literature/TheFog1975 the fog]].
68** ''Literature/Moon1985'': Through involuntary psychic insights, Jonathan Childes sees... ''someone'' - eventually revealed to be [[spoiler: psychiatric hospital nurse Heckatty]] - eviscerate a prostitute; desecrate a small boy's corpse, and saw off the top of an elderly man's head - all in service of [[GodOfTheDead Goddess of the Dead]] Hecate. To further torment Childes, [[spoiler: Heckatty]] invades his vicinity on an indiscriminately murderous rampage.
69** ''Literature/{{Sepulchre}}'': Theodore Monk, domineered by his mother, molested by his uncle and relentlessly bullied, becomes an indiscriminate murderer.
70** ''Literature/Ash2012'': Trainee assassin Eddie Nelson takes feckless delight in his work. His current station of Comraich Castle's extensive cultivation of spectral malice tends to rouse its occupants to anger and violence - crazed war criminal Zdravko Lukovic near-fatally throttles psychic investigator David Ash.
71* A number of villains in books by Creator/TomHolt display this. For instance, there's the evil genie in ''Literature/DjinnRummy'', or Jupiter in ''Literature/YeGods'', who plans to wipe out the Earth and replace it with a nearly identical one. Neither one is very rational.
72* Holloway Roberts becomes Axe Crazy in ''Literature/HouseOfLeaves'' as a result of ever more dire circumstances while trying to explore the house's [[BiggerOnTheInside labyrinthine halls.]]
73* Some of the Careers in ''Literature/TheHungerGames''. Clove would've given Katniss a GlasgowGrin if Thresh hadn't stepped in. And Cato explodes so violently when Katniss takes out his supplies that he snaps a nearby boy's neck. Enobaria ripped someone else's throat out in her Games. ''With her teeth.'' Titus tried to eat the hearts of the contestants he killed.
74* ''Literature/InDeath'': A number of the murderers Eve pursues certainly qualify as this. However, other murderers prove to be perfectly sane.
75* [[CreepyChild Patrick Hockstetter]] and [[JerkJock Henry Bowers]] from the Creator/StephenKing novel ''Literature/{{IT}}''. Also played sickeningly straight with Claude Heroux.
76* Sallie Declan, the VillainProtagonist of A. N. Wilson's ''A Jealous Ghost'', has longstanding... issues. While babysitting a six-year-old boy, she [[spoiler: loses her temper and hits him on the side of the head, hard, sending him smashing into a faucet.]] Later on, in college, she [[spoiler: loses her temper again and nails a fellow student with an iron.]] And, making the third time the charm, when Sallie is [[spoiler: dismissed from her job as a nanny]], she [[spoiler: murders a young girl by smashing her skull in and slashing her face to bits.]]
77* ''Literature/JeevesAndWooster'': Brinkley, the replacement Bertie hires when [[TheJeeves Jeeves]] quits in ''Literature/ThankYouJeeves'', is a BattleButler GoneHorriblyWrong. Ordinarily he's merely unpleasant and creepy, but when he gets drunk, he chases ''everyone'' relentlessly with carving knives, choppers and [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking potatoes]]. And, since Bertie never actually gets near enough to fire him, there's some FridgeHorror inherent in the fact that ''he's still on the loose'', and may at any moment decide to [[{{Pun}} take a stab at]] being Bertie's valet again.
78* For Creator/StephenKing:
79** ''Literature/TheShining'': Jack Torrence, the alcoholic writer[=/=]caretaker who goes on a murderous rampage after CabinFever and the supernatural influence of the hotel breaks his mind.
80** ''Literature/PetSematary'': Every person buried in the Micmac burying ground beyond the titular Pet Sematary comes back from the dead as a sadistic and violent RevenantZombie possessed by a [[DemonicPossession Demon]] or MonsterFromBeyondTheVeil.
81** ''Literature/{{Misery}}'': Novelist Paul Sheldon is injured in a car crash and rescued by Annie Wilkes, a nurse who lives in an isolated country house. Wilkes is genuinely crazy for Misery Chastain, the Victorian protagonist of Paul's bestselling series, and doesn't take it too well when she finds out that Paul plans to kill the character off.
82* ''Literature/KnavesOnWaves'' features Carnage and his crew, who love nothing more than a bloody slaughter. Oddly, they're aware of this, and recruit others to serve as their representatives in matters requiring diplomacy.
83* Stygg from ''Literature/TheLastDragonChronicles''. He kills lots of families, just to replenish [[spoiler:Grella's]] sewing supplies. [[spoiler:He gets worse after ingesting dilute Ix.]]
84* Roger and Jack of ''Literature/LordOfTheFlies'' eventually become this during their stay on the island. Early on Roger was tormenting the "littluns" for fun, throwing rocks at them. In the end, Roger pushed Piggy to his death by rolling a massive boulder on him. Jack used him as a torturer, and he even made a stick sharp at both ends in order to impale Ralph and roast him over a fire.
85* ''Literature/MalazanBookOfTheFallen'':
86** ''Literature/TheBonehunters'' gives us sapper Crump, who is a firm believer in [[MoreDakka more is more]] when it comes to explosives, as Y'Ghatan's [[spoiler: ex-city wall]] can attest. Unfortunately, the other Malazan soldiers rather adhere to the 'don't endanger your own troops unnecessarily' philosophy, wich means that Crump is not one of the popular guys.
87** In ''Literature/TollTheHounds'' Amby and Jula Bole are just as creative in their use of weaponry and disregard for the safety of everyone involved as their brother Crump is.
88* In ''Literature/TheMazeRunner'', due to the Flare being a HatePlague of sorts, those who are infected with it begin to show symptoms of paranoia, hallucination, and extreme, unwarranted violence: as they descend into madness and eventually pass [[DespairEventHorizon the Gone]], they become insane shells of their former selves, gruesomely attacking anything that moves and even resorting to cannibalism.
89* [[PsychoForHire Zane]] of ''Literature/{{Mistborn}}'' is a self-admitted lunatic who hears a voice in his head every time he sees someone [[spoiler: except for the heroine]] telling him to kill them. Normally he does his best to ignore it, but every so often he ''will'' kill or maim someone (or just cut himself) to keep the voice under control. He's also psychotic in other, more subtle ways, [[spoiler:which are all eventually revealed to be a result of the [[OmnicidalManiac god of destruction]] whispering in his ear]]. The [[TheDragon Inquisitors]] from the same series are also decidedly unstable, [[spoiler: because they draw their power from the same god]].
90* In ''Literature/{{Mogworld}}'' Mr. Wonderful was already like this, and the way for the past few years everyone who dies respawns at a church seems to have made him a lot worse. At one point in conversation he cleanly severs his own hand, keeps talking until he dies of blood loss, respawns at a nearby church, and walks back in to continue the conversation while casually gnawing on his own corpse.
91* ''Literature/TheMortalInstruments'' shows us Maureen. As a human, she is hardly different from other girls, but as a vampire she always massacred, and is glad about it. She is so obsessed with killing that she later becomes relatively easy to lure her into the trap.
92* Mr. Croup and Mr. Vandemar, in the novel (and BBC miniseries) ''Literature/{{Neverwhere}}'' by Creator/NeilGaiman.
93* Anton Chigurh from the novel ''Literature/NoCountryForOldMen''. He has almost no personality other than pure murderous evil, which is made abundantly clear throughout the book.
94* ''Literature/NowhereIslandUniversity'' is a very dark story. As such, many characters, especially the ones from The Academy of Military Science and Shadowhaven, tend to be a little violent. However, there are some who deserve special mention.
95** Salim, much as he tries to [[KnightTemplar justify it,]] seems to enjoy hurting people. Especially evident in [[https://nowhereislanduniversity.wordpress.com/2015/03/25/track-8-bring-your-friends/ Track 8.]]
96** [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast Two]] [[TheDreaded words:]] [[SoftSpokenSadist Ulfric]] [[GeniusBruiser Trollbjorn.]]
97* Erik from ''Literature/ThePhantomOfTheOpera'' certainly has more than a few Ax-Crazy moments. His unfortunate habit of garroting anyone that sees him, aside from Christine, is certainly proof of this.
98%%* William Hamleigh from ''Literature/ThePillarsOfTheEarth'' has elements of this.
99* ''Literature/PleaseDontTellMyParentsImASupervillain'': Jagged Bones, one of the villains hired by the Council of Seven and A Half to teach the Inscrutable Machine a lesson. His response to Claire's super-cuteness was to decide he wants to own her skeleton.
100%%* ''Literature/TheQuestOfTheUnaligned'': [[spoiler:Gaithim [[WithGreatPowerComesGreatInsanity as a side effect of becoming a hoshek]].]]
101* ''Literature/{{Renegades}}'' has The Detonator, a MadBomber with the ability to create explosives with her thoughts. She's also obsessed with harming Captain Chromium, to the point of endangering her teammates Deconstructed, however, the moment this comes to light, the other Anarchists boot her out before she can harm them further.
102* ''Literature/RevancheCycle'':
103** Simon seems like a poised, cultured assassin at first, but as his HumiliationConga kicks in and he repeatedly fails to complete a contract, the cracks begin to show. By the middle of book two he's willing to [[spoiler:blow up over a hundred people, and possibly himself, just to kill a single target]].
104** Mari's obsession with chivalry and knighthood is arguably the only thing that stops her from murdering anyone who looks at her sideways. When she's finally tormented to her breaking point, [[spoiler:Nessa literally presses an ax into her hands and goads her into a killing spree.]]
105* ''Literature/TheRippleSystem'': Frank, the Ax of Unbridled Knowledge, turns out to be a bloodthirsty maniac. He constantly tells Ned to kill things in the bloodiest way possible, uncaring that Ned likely wouldn't survive the attempt. The fact that Frank himself is a statless item who does literally no damage beyond Ned's (low) strength does not dissuade him in the slightest.
106* Roderick Whittle, aka UsefulNotes/JackTheRipper, from Creator/RichardLaymon's ''Literature/{{Savage}}''.
107* Richard Lopez of ''Literature/ShipBreaker'', a drug-addicted nut who tries to kill his own son.
108* ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'' has a lot of these given the series' BlackAndGrayMorality:
109** Gregor Clegane, who, when he was a teenager, burned off half the face of his kid brother for playing with one of Gregor's discarded toys, is implied to have murdered his father, younger sister, wives and multiple servants, smashed a baby's head against a wall before raping and murdering his mother, and who spent the majority of the War of Five Kings leading a band of {{Sociopathic Soldier}}s in raping, burning and murdering all across the Riverlands. You know you're insane when even [[BloodKnight The Hound]] is scared of you.
110** Interestingly enough, Arya Stark (a survivor of one of Gregor's murderous rampages through south-central Westeros) seems headed in this direction. [[SociopathicHero She's one of the good guys, though.]] It's a real pity that she never got the chance to give Gregor a taste of ''valar morghulis'' ([[spoiler: High Valyrian for "Everyone Dies"]]) before his death.
111** Ramsay Bolton, a vicious SerialKiller whose favorite hobbies are [[FlayedAlive flaying people alive]] and HuntingTheMostDangerousGame. His father Roose also qualifies, though he is the calculating, stoic type of crazy rather than the out-and-out blade-happy like his bastard son is.
112** [[TheCaligula Mad King Aerys Targaryen]] was famous for having his people horribly maimed and/or killed, especially by fire, with little to no provocation. He was also a bit of a sore loser:
113--->"The traitors want my city ... [[TakingYouWithMe but I’ll give them naught but ashes]]. [[OmnicidalManiac Let Robert be king over charred bones and cooked meat.]]"
114** Joffrey Baratheon is an interesting example. He's a sadistic sociopath and has almost no regard for human life whatsoever, but he's also an abject coward who can't win a fight against a girl half his size, so rather than do the deed himself, he likes to have his thugs kill and beat people in front of him or shoot defenseless people with a crossbow from a safe distance.
115** Jaime Lannister considered the Smiling Knight to be the Mountain of his boyhood, "half as big but twice as mad."
116** The Faceless Men, an assassins' guild, sometimes use a paste spiced with basilisk blood in their killings. It gives meat a savory scent, but when eaten induces a violent madness in any creature with warm blood, man or beast. Reportedly, a mouse will attack a lion after a taste of the stuff.
117* In ''Literature/SpectralShadows'' Cygnusians can become infected with Red Vision, a genetic disorder that will make anyone this.
118** And then there's Lukas, who's psychotic and will kill anyone he doesn't like or who doesn't give him his way.
119* Joaquin from ''Literature/StarTrekTheEugenicsWars'' is quite fond of throwing knives at people he doesn't like. Khan shows shades of this from time to time but he can control himself.
120* ''Franchise/StarWarsLegends'': In the ''Literature/TheThrawnTrilogy'' Joruus C'baoth was a completely insane dark Jedi who was a clone of the Jedi Master Jorus C'baoth. Because of the speed at which he had been cloned he fell victim to the clone madness. Combined with the ability to use the Force this made C'baoth a very dangerous character, potentially even more dangerous the Emperor had been. [[note]] This was before further ''Legends'' works established the Emperor had transferred his own consciousness to a clone body. [[/note]]
121** Further ''Legends'' works established that the original C'baoth wasn't all that stable himself, which likely contributed to his clone's instability.
122* ''Literature/TheStrangeCaseOfDrJekyllAndMrHyde'' -- If Edward Hyde isn't Ax Crazy then who is? He does pretty horrible things throughout the book, but the most gruesome of his deeds is the murder of one of the leaders of parliament. He has completely no reason for it, no provocation, and bashing in the face of a random, old gentleman isn't really anything that sane men would do. As described in the book:
123-->Instantly the spirit of hell awoke in me and raged. With a transport of glee, I mauled the unresisting body, tasting delight from every blow; and it was not till weariness had begun to succeed, that I was suddenly, in the top fit of my delirium, struck through the heart by a cold thrill of terror. A mist dispersed; I saw my life to be forfeit; and fled from the scene of these excesses, at once glorying and trembling, my lust of evil gratified and stimulated, my love of life screwed to the topmost peg. I ran to the house in Soho, and (to make assurance doubly sure) destroyed my papers; thence I set out through the lamplit streets, in the same divided ecstasy of mind, gloating on my crime, light-headedly devising others in the future, and yet still hastening and still hearkening in my wake for the steps of the avenger. Hyde had a song upon his lips as he compounded the draught, and as he drank it, pledged the dead man.
124* Deca in ''Literature/TalesOfAnMazingGirl'' seems to be a LargeHam of a villain in a vaguely-ComicBook/IronMan suit. However, his actions tend to play a lot creepier and more psychopathic then a classic villain. He's not above killing people -- not to make a point, but to make a point that there is no point.
125* Iida Sadamu from ''Literature/TalesOfTheOtori'':
126-->''When those bright eyes met mine, I at once knew two things about him: first, that he was afraid of nothing in heaven or on earth; second, that he loved to kill merely for the sake of killing.''
127* Though not portrayed as psychotic, actions speak louder than words. Lucifer Niggerbastard in ''Literature/TheVaginaAssOfLuciferNiggerbastard'' is crazy.
128* ''Literature/TimeScout'' gives us UsefulNotes/JackTheRipper. Twice.
129* ''Literature/{{TKKG}}'': Tim/Tiger shows [[AlternateCharacterInterpretation some tendencies]].
130* Francis Begbie from the book (and TheFilmOfTheBook) ''Literature/{{Trainspotting}}'', despite being one of the few members of his group to not use heroin, is the token berserker psychopath of the story, once casually injuring a random woman by throwing his beer mug off of a balcony and hitting her in the head, just so he could start a massive BarBrawl.
131* Jonathan Nemecko and Felix Gilfer from ''Literature/TheUltimateKillingGame'' take great joy in murdering people who get in their way, in whatever way is most practical or entertaining for them. Whichever is more convenient at the time. Nemecko has been in the murder business so long that he's beginning to get bored of it, which is what drives the plot.
132* The Necromancer from ''Literature/VicAndFrankNecromancers'' seems to enjoy his work as a serial killer and [[spoiler:scientist trying to revive the dead.]]
133* Literature/MalusDarkblade from the ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}: Daemons Curse'' series is a shining example of Ax Crazy. He eats the heart of a previous captor, makes his oldest brothers face into a mask, and murders his father for a knife. And that's before the deamon stole his soul.
134** This is not in any way unusual in Druchii culture, for example, that father of his tortured him for about a week for some reason. And he really, really needed the magic knife, and didn't know who had it until he barged in and started killing people about it. The others had also tried/succeeding in doing rather nasty things to him in the past.
135* Lijah Cuu from the ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}: Literature/GauntsGhosts'' series.
136-->A casebook sociopath, if ever he'd seen one.\
137People called Larkin mad, but he wasn't mad like Cuu. Cuu was a cold killer. A psycho.
138* Mapleshade and [[spoiler: Hollyleaf]] in ''Literature/WarriorCats''. Mapleshade is so messed in fact that the other villains are scared of her.
139** [[SerialKiller Scourge]] is another example: Polite, calm if a bit cold, adorably kit-like in appearance, [[BreadEggsMilkSquick and one of the highest body counts in the series.]]
140* ''Literature/WeAreLegionWeAreBob'': The Brazilian probes. They were all cloned from military men who are far more interested in destroying all competition than taking humanity to the stars. The Bobs adopt a shoot-on-sight policy with them, which proves justified more than once.
141* In ''Literature/TheWheelOfTime'', all male [[OurWitchesAreDifferent Channelers]] eventually either go Ax Crazy or die of a hideously disfiguring disease, thanks to a curse levelled on them by [[GodOfEvil the Dark One]] (and the ones who ''do'' go crazy still die eventually -- it's a toss-up what order the symptoms manifest in, how strong they are, and when). From the same series, recurring villain Padan Fain is also like this -- being an imperfect merge of the original Fain and the ancient, malevolent spirit Mordeth he's about as far from stable as you get and is prone to lashing out violently at anyone unfortunate enough to be in his vicinity, though his real target is [[TheChosenOne Rand]]. Scarily, he can still be charming (in an oily sort of way) when he wants to be, and has even shown the ability to supernaturally infect those he spends time around with his own Ax Crazy.
142** In Rand in particular this progresses to the point that Rand refuses to admit he feels anything at all, leading him to [[spoiler: balefiring Natrim's Barrow out of existence without even blinking about it. Rand thinks balefire kills someone forever, removing them from the eternal cycle of death and rebirth. His only reaction was to double check that his target had been killed. He nearly killed his own father a short time later for trying to help him.]]
143* ''Literature/WorldWarZ'': T. Sean Collins is a mercenary who lives to kill, and seems incapable of stopping himself. He was a PrivateMilitaryContractor before World War Z, and switched to zombies when the war broke out. Subverted in the fact that he is [[MadHatter deeply introspective and well-aware of his mental state,]] and under no illusion of being able to give up killing. He states an intention to go on hunting zombies for as long has he can, and then killing himself so he will never risk relapsing into killing humans.
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