Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Main / BountyHunter

Go To

1%%
2%%
3%%
4%% This list of examples has been alphabetized. Please add your example in the proper place. Thanks!
5%%
6%%
7%%
8%% Image selected per Image Pickin' thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1621151762090073600
9%% Please do not replace or remove without starting a new thread.
10%%
11[[quoteright:350:[[VideoGame/RedDeadRedemption2 https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bounty_hunter_83.png]]]]
12[-[[caption-width-right:350:[[Music/MiracleOfSound There ain't no more cowboys\
13 Only men with violent hearts]]]]-]
14%%
15%% Caption selected per above IP thread. Please do not replace or remove without discussion in the Caption Repair thread:
16%% https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1404492079030138900
17%%
18->''"Where life had no value, death, sometimes, had its price. That is why the bounty killers appeared."''
19-->-- ''Film/ForAFewDollarsMore''
20
21Born of the [[TheWestern Old West]] but found in many other genres since, the bounty hunter is a freelancer who assists law enforcement by pursuing wanted criminals for the price on their heads. His line of work often makes him a dangerous character, as he needs eyes in the back of his head. It also makes him gruff and cynical, if he lives long enough, and in the eyes of some citizens, he may be only slightly better (or worse) than the criminals he hunts.
22
23Sometimes, the bounty hunter captures criminals and brings them back to face trial (which is how real bounty hunters operate nowadays). But other times, especially in Westerns, the bounty hunter's reward is of the "Dead or Alive" variety, and many bounty hunters of the latter type kill their bounties rather than let them RunForTheBorder or risk ending in a MexicanStandoff and a bloody BlastOut. These kinds of bounty hunters are often called "bounty killers" or, more pejoratively, [[ProfessionalKiller "assassins" or "headhunters"]].
24
25This has almost never been TruthInTelevision, though that problem can be {{Hand Wave}}d if the bounty in question is exceptionally dangerous, put out by a criminal, or wanted by a corrupt, tyrannical, or failed state. Or if this occurs in a fictional setting, such as a dystopian post-apocalyptic wasteland or a futuristic totalitarian state.
26
27The bounty hunter is one of the most diverse roles and depending on their choices (and their employers) they can be have many types of character and appearance. Sometimes the Bounty Hunter is a villain, a sadist who profits off the death and suffering of others and who couldn't care less about justice. In that case, the best they can possibly be is a NominalHero who may hunt villains and do the right thing for all the wrong reasons. If that's the case then it is almost guaranteed that they will come in conflict with the heroes either because their head promises the biggest paycheck or because they want to be the one to capture the criminal and won't hesitate to kill and become a criminal over it themself.
28
29Sometimes they’re a GlorySeeker who wants to bring down the toughest targets. More often, though, they are just a working stiff who tries to do the right thing - or something close to it. Buried deep within their grizzled, world-weary exterior is still an idealist with a heart of gold. Because there is nothing that prevents a Bounty Hunter from taking both legal and shady bounties, this character is usually a LawfulNeutral, though less honorable ones tend to fall into either TrueNeutral or NeutralEvil territory.
30
31The Bounty Hunter is increasingly popular in SpeculativeFiction ever since [[Franchise/StarWars Boba Fett]] made it cool. It helps that space is thought of as '''another''' "frontier," and Western tropes [[SpaceWestern go well with science fiction]]. Since it's so cool, most often bounty hunters in fiction are depicted as extremely skilled individuals and will prove a challenge for the main characters unless they are either there just to show us how overpowered our hero is or if the bounty hunters are themselves the main character(s). Science fiction bounty hunters may be members of a ProudHunterRace, using their skills at stalking exotic prey to establish a (mostly) aboveboard career of HuntingTheMostDangerousGame.
32
33Many {{MMORPG}}s have a large proportion of their {{Side Quest}}s involve collecting bounties on named monsters or [=NPCs=].
34
35While the typical situation is for law enforcement to hire a bounty hunter, TheSyndicate or the BigBad may also hire one if a henchman absconds with a priceless {{MacGuffin}} or steals the proceeds of a heist.
36
37In RealLife, when in the company of actual bounty hunters, you will speak of them as [[InsistentTerminology "bail enforcement officers"]]. Except for [[ComicBook/DeathsHeadMarvelComics that one robot]] who prefers the term "freelance peace-keeping agent, [[VerbalTic yes?]]" There's overlap in RealLife with the job of skip tracer, a person who tracks down people on the lam from creditors.
38
39See also: InspectorJavert, PriceOnTheirHead and WantedPoster.
40----
41!!Examples:
42[[foldercontrol]]
43
44[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
45* ''Manga/BattleAngelAlita'''s leading characters Ido and Alita are both bounty hunters, along with half the cast in the early books.
46* Train, Sven, and Eve from ''Manga/BlackCat'' are "sweepers," which are essentially the same thing as bounty hunters.
47* Hazuki is one in ''Anime/BladeAndSoul'', and is drawn to the prospect of Alka's 7000 gold bounty Palam put out on her. There are others, but they're killed within moments of seeing Alka.
48* Nadie of ''Anime/ElCazadorDeLaBruja'' is nominally a bounty hunter, but her actual job seems to blur the lines between bodyguard, hired gun, and assassin.
49* Ryo Saeba of ''Manga/CityHunter'' is stated to have worked as this near the end of his stay in the US.
50* The Warriors of the Organization in ''Manga/{{Claymore}}'' function a lot like the example of ''Literature/VampireHunterD'' below. When a yoma preys on a settlement, the citizens round up money and make a request to the Organization. They dispatch a Warrior who slays the yoma and one of the handlers appears later to pick up the money. Reasonably, if the Warrior is slain, the Organization does not collect the fee until another Warrior successfully completes the mission. Blurring the lines of the trope, however, is the fact that while the Warriors do seem to have money (Clare once dumped a huge sum on Raki's lap when she was assigned to fight an Awakened One and Theresa could afford rather fancy clothes for a certain TagalongKid), they do not actually seem to want or even need the money. Their job is to kill yoma; it's what they do. Various motivations have been shown, but a pure mercenary motive has yet to be evident in any of the Warriors.
51* Bounty hunting is the occupation of Jet Black, Spike Spiegel, Faye Valentine, and about 300,000 folks in the ''Anime/CowboyBebop'' universe. In fact, so many people make a living chasing criminals in the future that a cheesy Western-themed TV series (a cross between ''{{Series/Bonanza}}'' and an interplanetary ''Series/AmericasMostWanted'') exists to provide them with intel on known bounty heads. All bounties must be taken alive and bounty hunters are liable for any damage they cause to bystanders or property, which is why [[DestructiveSavior the cast]] [[PerpetualPoverty misses almost every big bounty]], as well as in one particularly unlucky case, ''crashed into a police station'', and once when they weren't given a bounty for stopping an AI in a satellite as it technically doesn't count as "alive".
52* The ''Manga/GunsmithCats'', Rally Vincent and Minnie-May Hopkins (and friends), spend most of their time as bounty hunters when they're not running their titular gun store. Rally and Minnie-May hold the distinction of being one of the most accurate portrayals of real-life bounty hunters that can be found in anime, or at least getting a lot closer to the real thing than most shows do (one key inaccuracy is that bounty hunting is illegal in their home state of Illinois). Unlike most other hunters, they maintain very close ties with their local police forces and are ''not'' regarded as being above or outside the law by any means; on one memorable occasion, a crook managed to kidnap Minnie-May because his and Rally's high-speed chase caught police attention and ended with Rally being arrested for breaking traffic laws.
53* Some hunters from ''Manga/HunterXHunter'' are bounty hunters. In-universe, this type are called blacklist hunters. Not only that hunters in general are strong, hunters are also rich, thanks to their hunter licences.
54* In ''Manga/HyperPolice'', all law enforcement in their post-magical-apocalypse world is handled by private companies of bounty hunters. The main characters make their money by claiming bounties. Licensing procedures are exacting and complex. And ''anyone'' can stick a bounty on the internet and expect the person to be delivered.
55* Machika in ''Manga/ImmortalRain''. She's following in her grandfather Zol's footsteps, although the bounty hunting part doesn't come up all that much.
56* ''Manga/LiesOfTheSheriffEvansDeadOrLove'' has plenty of them, but the most re-occuring ones are the titular sheriff's rival/love-interest Phoebe Oakley (they've got a big WillTheyOrWontThey thing going on) and Ed Williams (famed for preferring to turn his bounty targets in dead, [[NonLethalWarfare not that events ever visibly let him]]).
57* In ''Anime/LupinIIIDeadOrAlive'', when Crisis puts out the "Dead or Alive" bounty on Lupin, at least three bounty hunters enter Zufu to attempt to capture/kill him. Lupin is so busy trying to escape from them that Inspector Zenigata manages to arrest him.
58* ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamWing'': Duo Maxwell is this in the ''Frozen Teardrops'' novel.
59* Almost all ninjas in ''Anime/{{Naruto}}'', good or evil, are this in one way or another. Successful ninja almost invariably have somebody who will put a bounty on their head, be it the legitimate government of a rival nation or a criminal organization. And capturing criminals is one of the many missions that a ninja could be hired for.
60* In ''Manga/NegimaMagisterNegiMagi'', after the case gets [[ClearMyName wrongly accused of blowing up a Gateport]], they have occasional encounters with bounty hunters who want to bring them in. The one group that appears on screen, the Canis Niger hunters, nearly capture Nodoka before being [[CurbStompBattle utterly annihilated by Negi]].
61* There's a large presence of bounty hunters (for relatively small bounties; large bounties are almost always for OneManArmy[=/=]PersonOfMassDestruction types that few people outside high-ranking Marines and fellow pirates could possibly take down) in the ''Manga/OnePiece'' world, given that one of the ways the government keeps crime in check is by offering rewards for captured or killed criminals. They, however, pay 30% less if the criminal is killed, as only a live criminal can be given a public execution. It is possible for a bounty to be for live capture only, though to date there is only one known example of this [[spoiler:involving a criminal who is also royalty]]. While given the nature of the story, most bounty targets are pirates, land-based criminals and the anti-government Revolutionary Army also qualify.
62** Roronoa Zoro, one of the protagonists, chased bounties for a living before joining with Luffy, and his past helped the Marines give him the epithet "Pirate Hunter". His former partners Johnny and Yosaku remain bounty hunters, though seeing as they operate out of the East Blue they mostly chase small-time criminals.
63** The pirate and former Warlord of the Sea, Sir Crocodile led the Baroque Works, a fearsome organization of bounty hunters. Infiltrating the Baroque Works, Vivi and Igaram went undercover as bounty hunters as well, one of the reasons why Vivi met the Straw Hats in the first place. The top 5 of them were very strong bounty hunters, particularly Daz Bonez (Mister 1) and Bon Clay (Mister 2).
64*** After the breakout from Impel Down, [[spoiler:it's suggested that Daz Bonez is now a pirate like Mister Crocodile because he joined him. Galdino (Mister 3) is pretty much confirmed as a pirate since he joined Buggy who is now one of the new Seven Warlords of the Sea. Bon Clay is still in Impel Down, but he's now the "queen" of Newkama, the 5.5th level]].
65** While their primary job is scrapping retired ships, the Franky Family of Water 7 also did bounty hunting work on the side. This came to an end after the Enies Lobby Arc, when their leader Franky was issued a bounty of his own and joined the Straw Hat Pirates. The rest of the group move into other, less dangerous jobs.
66* ''Manga/OutlawStar'' deconstructs several aspects of the trope. Gene Starwind and his kid partner Jim are technically odd-job men rather than bounty hunters, not least because bounties occur far too infrequently for them to make a living on hunting alone. And in the rare case where a bounty is put out, the reward they get is usually far less than the trouble they spent on it. In the end, most of their time is spent on unrelated activities like treasure-hunting and squaring off against the pirate clans.
67* Yuya of ''Manga/SamuraiDeeperKyo'', hunting down "the man with the scar on his back" who killed her brother. She periodically threatens to turn in Benitora or Kyo for their bounties.
68* ''Anime/SpaceDandy's'' job is a variation of this, hunting down undiscovered alien species and cashing them in to the Alien Registration Center for sizable bounties. He's generally fairly inept at this and often fails due to incompetence, bad luck or (in some cases) letting the bounty go for their own good. What exactly happens to the aliens after they're brought in for registration never specified and seems a bit inconsistent. While deliberately letting aliens he's befriended go might imply that it's something unpleasant, it could just as easily imply that Dandy is too stupid to know since Alien Registration Center are certainly not portrayed as villains.
69* Nagi from the ''Anime/TenchiUniverse'' TV series is a bounty hunter who acts as Ryoko's InspectorJavert- and her [[TheMinnesotaFats Minnesota Fats]].
70* Inverted in ''Manga/{{Trigun}}'', where the main character Vash is the one that has a bounty on his head. A sixty billion double dollar one at that. However, there are many unimportant side characters that are bounty hunters in there, and most of the destruction that follows Vash around is caused by people interested in the price on his head. The secondary protagonists, Meryl and Millie, seem like bounty hunters at first but are in fact insurance agents sent to minimize the massive collateral damage that bounty hunters after Vash always cause. In one early arc, though, Vash defeats a massive and destructive outlaw with a high bounty on his head, then hands him over to the poverty-crippled town that had actually hired the outlaw to try and claim him instead before getting out of control, making him a hero to the citizens.
71* ''Literature/VampireHunterD'' is a sort of the old west-style bounty hunter - [[VampireHunter albeit of a very specific type of quarry]]. Though as the books and {{The Movie}}s went on, he evolved from bounty hunter to a mercenary, or even an odd-job man. There's other bounty hunters in the canon, but they're usually of the sadistic type.
72[[/folder]]
73
74[[folder:Comic Books]]
75* In the ''ComicBook/AstroCity'' legal system, some superheroes make a living by registering as bounty hunters with the local authorities. They are sanctioned to capture criminals (super-powered and otherwise), and are paid by picking up checks made out to their real identities (which are kept secret from the public).
76* The main antagonist of ''ComicBook/KidColt2009'' is Sherman Wilks, an ex-Confederate officer turned ‘bounty killer’, who's working for Sheriff [=McGreeley=]. [=McGreeley=], the DirtyCop who [[FrameUp framed]] Kid Colt in the first place, sets Wilks on the outlaw's trail.
77* In the 2005 ''ComicBook/DaughtersOfTheDragon'' miniseries, Colleen Wing and Misty Knight ran their own bail bonds firm.
78* ComicBook/{{Deadpool}} was employed to hunt down unregistered superheroes, for about an hour, during ''ComicBook/{{Civil War|2006}}''. Then he was sacked, mainly thanks to Cable. It didn't help that the first heroes he went after were the ComicBook/GreatLakesAvengers, who were '''registered'''.
79* ComicBook/DeathsHeadMarvelComics, though [[BerserkButton he insists]] on being called a "[[InsistentTerminology Freelance Peacekeeping Agent]]". People don't make the mistake twice.
80* The title character of the graphic novel ''ComicBook/{{Jinx}}''.
81* ComicBook/JonahHex, discussed in the WesternAnimation examples below, first appeared as a [[TheWestern Western]] character in Franchise/TheDCU.
82* In ''ComicBook/JonSableFreelance'', Jon would supplement his mercenary work by undertaking bounty hunting jobs.
83* Bounty hunters are fairly commonplace in the Cursed Earth in ''ComicBook/JudgeDredd'', due to the legal structure of the region being a '''lot''' looser than in Mega City One. A couple of them are even ex Judges, one of whom is on his Long Walk having [[DrinkingOnDuty taken to the bottle on the job]] and being forced to resign and another who was exiled for a minor mutation that led to her having a third kidney.
84* Creator/DCComics' ComicBook/{{Lobo}} catches interstellar fugitives, whether they're running from the law or just rich crime lords. It's a job that basically allows him to be a complete ass to everyone around him and still get paid.
85* The ComicBook/LuckyLuke book ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chasseur_de_primes The Bounty Hunter]]'' (in French ''Chasseur de primes'') is a hilarious parody of the trope. Following a short introductory treatise on the general status of bounty hunters in the [[TheWestern Old West]], we get introduced to the titular character, Elliot Belt, a notorious and unscrupulous representative of his trade. Belt's appearance is [[NoCelebritiesWereHarmed an obvious nod]] to Western actor Creator/LeeVanCleef, particularly his acting roles as merciless bounty hunters.
86* DC also had a comic called ''ComicBook/{{Manhunter}}'' about a superpowered bounty hunter that retrieves supervillains who jumped their bond, strictly for the money.
87* In the second ''ComicBook/MissileMouse'' book "Rescue on [=Tankium3=], a bounty hunter called Blazing Bat is hired to take out Missile Mouse.
88* The 21st century version of Nighthawk in Franchise/TheDCU is a bounty hunter.
89* In the ''ComicBook/{{Preacher}}'' series, the Saint of Killers spent a while working as a Headhunter in the old west, long before transmuting into the ImplacableMan he is today...
90* An alternate universe had ComicBook/ThePunisher as a licensed bounty hunter in a WildWest version of the Marvel Universe.
91* ''ComicBook/Robin1993'': Jaeger hunts monsters and humans with bounties on them when he's not hunting dangerous looking people for snuff films, he can get away with it a bit due to his wide array of identities and the authorities not knowing the civilian name of the villain Jaeger and the fact that his employers generally don't care about hiring a known villain.
92* The ComicBook/SavageDragon was briefly a bounty hunter shortly after being kicked off the police force.
93* Exeter from ''ComicBook/{{Scion}}''. A "Lesser Race" being who hunts fugitive Lesser Races out of a sense of self-loathing.
94* In Fleetway's ''ComicBook/SonicTheComic'', Tails had a small-time adversary in Fleabyte the Bounty Hunter, an anthropomorphic cat with a robotic arm. He appeared to work freelance, but, while he had a good head for tracking, he was otherwise not especially intelligent.
95* Johnny Alpha, the protagonist in the ''ComicBook/StrontiumDog'' stories from the British AnthologyComic ''ComicBook/TwoThousandAD''.
96* As the series is a Western, bounty hunters often show up in ''ComicBook/TexWiller'', with more than a few forcing confessions out of their quarries (in case they're just suspects) and, in at least one occasion, using the body of some random man to try and claim a bounty on another criminal.
97* Creator/MarvelComics has plenty of western characters who make their living collecting bounties, such as ComicBook/TwoGunKid and Gunhawk.
98* ComicBook/SheHulk worked as one for a time after her disbarment in her late-2000s series, employed by a bail bonds company owned by her former law firm alongside the undying Skrull Jazinda.
99* ''ComicBook/{{Wildstar}}'' is pursued by a team of bounty hunters in the "Sky Zero" four-parter, consisting of Deadstar, Trans, Freezone, [=JumpStart=], and more.
100[[/folder]]
101
102[[folder:Fan Works]]
103* ''Fanfic/AdventuresOfTheMorningStar'': The series follows Jinx, Yasuo and Malphite, a trio of bounty hunters who go on crazy adventures while traveling across the stars.
104* In the ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'' and ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles'' crossover fic ''Fanfic/CrossCases'', Harry doesn't buy Sam's claim of being a librarian for even a second. He decides Sam is most likely a merc who does dirty jobs for the highest bidder, from the way he moves, his weapons, the fact that he's built like a brick wall, and his careful, practiced lack of reaction to anything, supernatural and not. After he and Murphy go through his wallet while he's unconscious, they find his multitude of credit cards and fake [=IDs=], only cementing the assessment in their minds. This isn't really too far off from Sam's (sort-of) actual profession as a [[HunterOfMonsters hunter]], minus the getting hired and paid part.
105* ''Fanfic/DungeonKeeperAmi'': The Silver Hawks, who were introduced when they started hunting Ami.
106** Though they have decided to stop hunting Ami and Co until a legal ruling can be made on whether or not it is acceptable to take contracts on an Empress, Keeper or not, who holds her throne by a literal divine mandate.
107** And are now back in action hunting [[spoiler:Mukrezar, who has managed to acquire [[PriceOnTheirHead a two ''million'' gold piece bounty]] on his head before he's been BackFromTheDead for a single day]].
108* ''Fanfic/TheNightUnfurls'': The beginning of the story reveals that one of Kyril's means of income is clearing out packs of greenskins, bandits and infamous orc warlords with ostentatious names. The remastered version adds a moment where he turns in a bounty at the bounty board, [[DecapitationPresentation presents the head as proof]], and gets his gold.
109* ''Fanfic/OffTheLine'': Countless of them are constantly chasing after Cloud/Rainstorm for his massive bounty which they need to kill and loot him to get. They are noted to be an opportunistic and unpleasant bunch who often hunt after lower level players instead of the more stronger players. Rainstorm would kill them in order to defend himself or for sport.
110[[/folder]]
111
112[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
113* ''Franchise/{{Shrek}}'':
114** Pied Piper is described as one of the best bounty hunters in ''WesternAnimation/ShrekForeverAfter''. He is hired by [[BigBad Rumpelstiltskin]] to capture Shrek. Piper uses a [[MagicMusic magical flute]] with a dial that can be set to any creature, among which are rats, witches, and ogres. When set to a creature and played, all of these within earshot start dancing uncontrollably and follow Pied Piper.
115** Puss in Boots can also be described as this, although his job in ''WesternAnimation/Shrek2'' is to kill Shrek, not capture him. This would make him more of an assassin.
116** The Wolf, from ''WesternAnimation/PussInBootsTheLastWish'', is a bounty hunter after Puss himself. He shows up with Puss' "Dead or Alive" wanted poster, his weapons of choice are a pair of sickles, and the reward he's after [[spoiler:is Puss' soul. Since he's not ''actually'' a bounty hunter -- he's the Grim Reaper -- he doesn't need anything as earthly as money.]]
117* ''WesternAnimation/TheSpongeBobSquarePantsMovie'' introduced Dennis the bounty hunter, who was out to kill [=SpongeBob=] on Plankton's orders. Although his method of murder was stomping people with a cartoony spiked boot, Dennis was a surprisingly menacing villain. He states he has other ways he could do it, but his employer specifically told him to kill them in that fashion. Makes sense considering the employer was Plankton, who gets stepped on... a lot.
118[[/folder]]
119
120[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
121* In ''Film/BetYourLife'', Carmen is a bounty hunter who works bringing in defaulters for a loan shark.
122* In ''Film/BladeRunner'', Rick Deckard and other "Blade Runners" who hunt down and kill replicants on Earth are essentially bounty hunters. In [[Literature/DoAndroidsDreamOfElectricSheep the original novel]], they are, in fact, called bounty hunters.
123* Gerard Butler plays one in ''Film/TheBountyHunter''.
124* In the Creator/JohnWayne VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory Western ''Film/{{Chisum}}'', Dan Nodeen (Christopher George) is a bounty killer. He is introduced collecting the bounty on a nasty {{Mook}} who broke out of jail, having killed the man offscreen. However, he quickly ends up taking sinister jobs from that mook's employer.
125-->'''Deputy''': Deader than a can of corned beef.
126-->'''Sheriff Brady''': You just had to kill him, huh?
127-->'''Nodeen''': A whole lot less trouble that way.
128* Many bounty hunters show up in ''Franchise/TheChroniclesOfRiddick'', all in pursuit of the title character. Johns and Toombs are among them. ''WesternAnimation/DarkFury'' is almost entirely set on a ship full of them, which is where Toombs came from. The ship in ''VideoGame/AssaultOnDarkAthena'' is half this, half private military force/slave ship.
129* Bounty hunters are sent to eliminate the titular creatures in ''Film/{{Critters}}'' and are featured to some extent in all of the sequels.
130* Dr. King Schultz (Creator/ChristophWaltz) in ''Film/DjangoUnchained'' is a bounty hunter who kills his bounties and brings their bodies back to get paid. Django himself becomes one when he starts to assist him.
131* Creator/SergioLeone's {{Spaghetti Western}}s, especially the latter two movies of the ''Film/DollarsTrilogy'', have bounty hunters as protagonists.
132** In ''Film/ForAFewDollarsMore'', the [[NoNameGiven Man With No Name]] and his rival and partner Mortimer were bounty killers.
133** In ''Film/TheGoodTheBadAndTheUgly'', the Man With No Name engaged in a con involving turning in his partner for the bounty on his head, freeing him from the noose by shooting off the rope, and then splitting the take between them. The villain Angel Eyes is a much darker version. His very first scene involves his target trying to pay him to kill his employer by offering ''more'' than what he was paid. Angel Eyes takes the money but simply tells him "When they pay me, I always see the job through" and shoots him. In the very next scene, he collects his money from his employer and says the exact same line before brutally murdering him. They don't call him "The Bad" for nothing!
134* ''Film/{{Domino|2005}}'' staring Creator/KeiraKnightley, based (very loosely) on real-life bounty hunter Domino Harvey. Unfortunately, it basically deletes or downplays all of the things that make Domino's story unique, and turns the character into a typical Hollywood cliche.
135* The Accountant from ''Film/DriveAngry'' is essentially one for Hell. His job is to track down those who have EscapedFromHell and bring them back.
136* ''Film/Emperor2020'': Luke [=McCabe=] hunts down anyone with a price on their head, whether they're white outlaws or escaped slaves. His first scene shows him lassoing an unnamed man who's running through a field, then shooting him while he's down and getting into a gunfight with the man's brothers when they try to take his body back. He's next seen negotiating a fee to kill Shields and crush the LivingLegend surrounding him.
137* In ''Film/GangOfRoses'', Zhang Li became a bounty hunter after the gang split up. She agrees to join with Rachel to collect the bounties on Left Eye and his gang.
138* ''Film/Ghosted2023'': Three are sent after Cole and Sadie, with each being killed in succession by another in comical ways. Sadie then pretends she's one who's giving Cole to Leveque in return for the reward later.
139* In ''Film/TheGrandDuel'', Vermeer is being pursued by a swarm of bounty killers, who want his $3,000 reward, posted by Saxon's three sons David, Eli and Adam.
140* In ''Film/GrimPrairieTales'', Morrison is a bounty hunter who does not seem to know where he is going, but who is carrying the body of his latest kill with him. At the end of the film, Deeds points out that the body does not match the description on the wanted poster. Morrison killed the wrong man.
141* In ''Film/TheGreatSilence'', another Spaghetti Western, the majority of the villains are bounty hunters, and they operate exactly like assassins. The protagonist is a bounty hunter paid by the families of their victims to bring them to justice. The film is often seen as an intentional counterpoint to the Leone Westerns.
142* In ''Film/{{Gunless}}'', a gang of bounty hunters led by Ben Cutter is chasing The Montana Kid for the $4,000 price on his head. They even follow him into Canada were they have no authority.
143* In ''Film/TheHatefulEight'', two main characters are bounty hunters with differing methods: Major Marquis Warren, a black former Union soldier who prefers to shoot first and turn in the bodies, and John "The Hangman" Ruth, who is famous for his insistence on delivering his prisoners alive so he can watch them stand trial and hang. When they meet each other at the start of the film in a snow-covered wilderness, Major Warren is sitting in the middle of the road on top of the frozen bodies of three dead criminals, while Ruth is riding in a stagecoach with his fugitive Daisy Domergue handcuffed to him to prevent her escape.
144* Rose Hilridge in ''Film/HighPlainsInvaders'', who constantly tries to claim the bounty on Sam's head despite having had nothing to do with his capture.
145* Creator/SteveMcQueen plays a bounty hunter in the 1980 film ''Film/TheHunter1980'' where he gives Levar Burton, a fugitive who can't believe the guy can just up and grab him off the street, a copy of the quote from the U.S. Supreme Court decision in ''Taylor v. Taintor'' (please see the [[Quotes/BountyHunter quotes page]]), which Burton incredulously reads out loud. The movie is about a real-life bounty hunter, Ralph "Papa" Thorson (who can be seen in a cameo serving Steve [=McQueen=] a beer).
146* ''Film/TheHurtLocker'': The PrivateMilitaryContractor group captured two heavily wanted terrorists prior to the film's beginning and are about to collect the bounty. They took the fugtivies alive, but have no hesitation over shooting them when they try to escape, as the bounty is dead or alive.
147* One drops in partway through ''Film/HunterPrey''.
148* Creighton Duke in ''Film/JasonGoesToHellTheFinalFriday'' is a bounty hunter who specializes in capturing serial killers.
149* ''Film/JonahHex2010'': The U.S. military makes a scarred bounty hunter with warrants on his own head an offer he cannot refuse: in exchange for his freedom, he must stop a terrorist who is ready to unleash Hell on Earth.
150* In ''Film/KaamelottPremierVolet'', there's a bounty on [[Myth/KingArthur Arthur Pendragon]]'s head, and one clever bounty hunter named Alzagar (Creator/GuillaumeGallienne) manages to capture him. A slave merchant named Quarto (Creator/ClovisCornillac) improvises himself one to get arthur, to disastrous results.
151* Kaulder, TheWitchHunter of ''Film/TheLastWitchHunter''. Unlike most examples of the Witch Hunter, he only goes after witches that harm humans, and doesn't kill them unless forced to: instead, he hands them over to the [[TheMagocracy Witch Council]] to be fairly tried.
152* ''Film/LastOfTheDogmen:'' Grizzled cowboy Lewis Gates is an experienced tracker who hunts down criminals through the wilderness. However, he has mainly been a hunting guide since the death of his wife. At the beginning, he has to be blackmailed over his chronic leash law violations before he'll take a job chasing escaped prisoners.
153* In ''Film/LeftForDead'', a gang of bounty hunters pursue Blake into the deserted town of Amnesty, where they are slaughtered by the vengeful ghost of Mobious Lockhart.
154* Bernardo O'Reilly (Creator/CharlesBronson) from ''[[Film/TheMagnificentSeven1960 The Magnificent Seven]]'' used to be well-paid bounty hunter but by the time he's recruited to the seven he's so broke that the measly pay for what is likely a SuicideMission is a fortune to him.
155* In ''Film/MidnightRun'', Robert De Niro plays a former cop turned bounty hunter who catches a former mob bookie and must make a moral choice of whether to collect the bounty or turn the bookie back over to the crooked cops who got him kicked out of the force. A competing bounty hunter constantly tries to steal the bookie away from him.
156* ''{{Film/Mythica}}'': Marek is pursued by two elven female bounty hunters in ''The Darkspore'', as she's an escaped slave.
157* [[Creator/JimmyStewart James Stewart]] plays one in ''Film/TheNakedSpur''; he's trying to catch a fugitive to get a $5000 reward so he can buy back the ranch that was stolen from him.
158* In Creator/ClintEastwood's ''Film/TheOutlawJoseyWales'', the title character encounters a number of bounty hunters looking to collect on his $5,000 head. It ends the same way for all of them save for two who [[KnowWhenToFoldEm retreat]]:
159--> '''Josey Wales:''' Dyin' ain't much of a livin', boy.
160* ''Film/TheNightOfTheGrizzly'': Cass Dowdy will hunt for any man or beast (like a killer grizzly bear) if the price is high enough. He worked alongside Big Jim Cole and Sam Potts back when they were lawmen, but Cole claims that he'd sometimes gun down unarmed fugitives, and when one of those fugitives turned out to be innocent, Cass spent two years in prison. He resumed bounty hunting after being released from prison and wants revenge against Jim, although he is less interested in picking a fight with Big Jim than he is in claiming the bounty that Big Jim needs to save his property from foreclosure.
161* ''Film/{{Papillon}}'': Two prisoners who finished their sentences years ago still live in the colony and recapture or kill escaped prisoners from the HellholePrison. Maybe
162* Jake Sharp (Creator/WoodyStrode) in ''Film/TheProfessionals'': a traditional Apache scout, skilled with a bow and arrow.
163* John Hurt's character, Jellon Lamb, in ''Film/TheProposition'' is a drunken bounty hunter who believes in neither God nor evolution, but ''is'' a big racist. He has a lot of fun with the [[OneSceneWonder role]].
164* Over-the-top BadassBiker Leonard Smalls in ''Film/RaisingArizona''.
165* The repo men in ''Film/RepoMan'' seem to like exoticizing their jobs by thinking of themselves as bounty hunters of cars.
166* Beck, the main character of ''Film/TheRundown'', is a "retrieval expert" hired mainly to collect debts or other stuff that his boss wants from people, or in the case of the main plot of the movie, track down people who have cut and run and bring them back to him. He's described in many summaries as a "bounty hunter."
167* In ''Film/SevenWaysFromSundown'', a pair of bounty hunters attempt to steal Flood out of Seven's custody in order to claim the bounty for themselves.
168* In ''Film/Shotgun1955'', Reb Carleton is a ruthless bounty hunter after the price on Ben Thompson's head who teams up with Deputy Marshal Clay Hardin. Carleton prefers dead to alive, and likes to shoot his targets InTheBack whenever possible.
169* The BattleCouple antagonists of ''[[Film/Slipstream1989 Slipstream]]'' (1989), though they are actually the remnants of a law enforcement system that's become irrelevant in a world devastated by ecological change. The woman gets angry at her partner when he [[ByTheBookCop insists on filling out a form]] on some smugglers they've just killed, when no-one cares about such things except him. The plot takes off when the protagonist steals an android they've captured, hoping to claim the bounty for himself, and a SternChase ensues.
170* ''Film/{{Snatch}}'': Bullet-Tooth Tony is described as one, being hired to help Cousin Avi track down Frankie or his kidnappers through a mixture of brute force and investigative powers. However, he seems to be involved in plenty of other mercenary and criminal work.
171* ''Film/{{Solarbabies}}:'' Malice and Dogger hang around the E-police headquarters in the middle of the wasteland, begging for work and saying they'll kill or capture whoever Strictor wants if he'll give them water.
172* ''Franchise/StarWars'' features a number of bounty hunters. It may be the definitive example of the name being misapplied; "mercenary" or "hired gun" may be a more accurate term, as they are commonly hired for purposes like guarding, theft and assassination.
173** Greedo shows up first, trying to capture Han Solo and cash in on the bounty Jabba the Hutt has placed on him.
174** The Empire eventually hires the services of a number of bounty hunters, most notably [[EnsembleDarkhorse Boba Fett]].
175** ''Film/AttackOfTheClones'' features Boba's father, Jango. Like Boba, he's supposedly the best bounty hunter in the galaxy. Also like Boba he operates more as an assassin and mercenary than an actual bounty hunter. Or at the very least, he's not choosy about whether the bounty he's pursuing is a legal one, so long as the credits are good.[[note]]Technically, the bounty/assassination contract he's working ''is'' legal in the eyes of the Neimoidian government, but very much illegal in the eyes of the Galactic Republic government.[[/note]]
176** The ExpandedUniverse dives more into how this works, explaining that bounty hunters (at least in the Empire era) had a guild and licenses known as Imperial Peace-Keeping Certificates that laid out very specific rules[[note]](1) Unless the bounty was posted as "Dead or Alive", it was to be captured alive. (2) The quarry must be given the chance to surrender. However, "flight, refusal to comply with the directives of a registered hunter, prior activities indicating a predisposition to resistance to capture, resistance, or assault" is considered refusal to surrender. (3) Injury, incapacitation or death of the quarry may only occur if the quarry has refused to surrender peacefully, however, the same exceptions that apply to the second rule also apply to this one. (4) Only a reasonable amount of force is to be used. (5) The holder of the IPKC must promise not to accept any "illegal" bounties[[/note]] that governed how they operated. Most Bounty Hunters just moonlighted as mercenaries or assassins in addition to chasing legal bounties laid out by the Empire, and in many cases the Empire would turn a blind eye to such illegal activity.
177* ''Film/{{Surrounded}}'': Clay introduces himself as a kindly farmer passing by, but Tommy insists that Clay has been chasing him for the reward for years and is willing to kill anyone who stands between it and him. [[spoiler:Tommy is telling the truth.]]
178* Creator/RutgerHauer plays one in ''Film/WantedDeadOrAlive''. Nick Randall, the descendant of the character Josh Randall, played by Creator/SteveMcQueen in the 1958 [[Series/WantedDeadOrAlive television series of the same title]].
179* Sekulik in ''Film/WildWind'' is paid by the Germans to hunt down partisans.
180[[/folder]]
181
182[[folder:Literature]]
183* Ethan Kaille in ''Literature/TheThieftakerChronicles'' is a thief taker, a kind of bounty hunter paid to retrieve stolen property in times before modern policing.
184* In ''[[Literature/ArtemisFowl Artemis Fowl and the Lost Colony]]'', Holly and Mulch are forced to become bounty hunters in order to pay the rent for the offices to their PI business. Unusually for this trope, the bounty hunting is portrayed accurately, in that they're searching for a criminal who has skipped bail and are forbidden to carry weapons.
185* OlderThanFeudalism: Likely the UrExample is Saul from the [[Literature/TheBible Book of Acts]], who was first shown accepting payment for arresting the followers of Christ. This is before Christ struck him blind and he had a HeelFaithTurn, changing his name to Paul.
186* ''Literature/TheCityOfDreamingBooks'' by Walter Moers has ''Book Hunters'', who could have been taken straight from ''Franchise/StarWars'', except that they make underground raids for old books. They got the patchwork armor and rusty swords and like to prey on each other for the greatest prizes.
187* ''Literature/DoAndroidsDreamOfElectricSheep'' features bounty hunters who track down and kill [[ArtificialHuman androids]] who have escaped into mainstream society and are posing as humans, much like [[Film/BladeRunner the film it was later adapted into]]. Many characters express distaste for bounty hunters and their role in society. Unlike in the movie, they are known simply as "bounty hunters", rather than "blade runners".
188* In ''Literature/TheDreadEclipse'', [[{{MagicalSociety}} Ordo Arcanus]] is occasionally required to enlist the services of ''ratcatchers'' to capture rogue mages who escape to neutral territory in exchange for a hefty bounty. One of the protagonists, Caren, is a ratcatcher who's so dedicated to her job that she even turns in her con artist uncle for a measly six-hundred bucks.
189* Harlan Nayl from the ''Literature/{{Eisenhorn}}'' and ''Literature/{{Ravenor}}'' books was originally a bounty hunter before becoming an agent of the Inquisition. His fellow agent Zeph Mathuin is also a former bounty hunter, and one of Nayl’s old bounty hunting partners, Lucius Worna, is a major villain in the ''Ravenor'' trilogy.
190* ''Literature/TheEmpiriumTrilogy'': Eliana's adoptive mom, Rozen, used to be a bounty hunter for the Undying Empire until an injury forced her to retire. Eliana continued Rozen's work in order to support her family and keep them safe. Harkan, Eliana's lover, became one because he didn't want Eliana to work on her own.
191* In ''Literature/FormAndVoid'', [[{{MagicalSociety}} Ordo Arcanus]] is occasionally required to enlist the services of ''ratcatchers'' to capture rogue mages who escape to neutral territory in exchange for a hefty bounty. One of the protagonists, Caren, is a ratcatcher who's so dedicated to her job that she even turns in her con artist uncle for a measly six-hundred bucks.
192* In the short story [[http://www.ac-mag.com/story.php?issue_id=5&story_id=25 "A Good Boy"]] by Creator/DesmondWarzel, Stitsky is a Bounty Hunter of the contemporary sort who makes his living retrieving bail-jumpers; as the story commences, however, he's overstepped his jurisdiction, having accepted a couple's commission to locate and retrieve their runaway son.
193* ''Literature/TheHardyBoys:'' ''Nowhere to Run'' features a private detective called "Dead or Alive" Sims who specializes in fugitive recovery and brings about a quarter of his targets back in body bags. Sims provides a little aid against other antagonists of the book but spends most of his page time relentlessly pursuing Joe's WrongfullyAccused friend.
194* In A. Kat's ''[[Literature/InfernoSeries Inferno series]]'', Moose is introduced as an elite bounty hunter, claiming to be the best. More generally, there seem to be lots of bounty hunters running around the world of Inferno. This makes sense in that the Order pays handsomely for getting the people marked for death in the Ritual, enough for Moose to become rich despite his youth. However, bounty hunters also appear to do more general mercenary work for anyone who can afford to pay them. A rare fantasy example.
195* The various western series of William Johnstone (continued by his niece J.A. after his death) generally, but not entirely, feature bounty hunters in a negative light.
196** Several "The Last Mountain Man" novels ("Code of the Mountain Man", "Trek of the Mountain Man", "Honor of the Mountain Man", and "Triumph of the Mountain Man", "Assault of the Mountain Man") feature bounty hunters pursuing the Smoke Jensen under the belief that he's a a wanted fugitive. Almost to a man, their portrayed as being amoral ambushers without the courage to face him in person, or (in later books after the charges are dropped and the wanted posters recalled) the integrity to check up on whether the man their trying to kill is actually wanted (given how most in most of those books their going after him because of outdated wanted posters or phony ones forged by his enemies). Some flat-out don't care when they find out he isn't wanted by the law anymore, due to the promise of money form somewhere else and/or a simple desire to earn some VillainCred by killing such a famous gunman.
197** Emmett Clark in "Shootout of the Mountain Man" becomes a bounty hunter by accident when he kills a fleeing robber in self-defense. He initially strives towards standards of integrity trying to take prisoners alive or only going after CompleteMonster types but after being forced to kill an innocent man while undercover with one gang [[FaceHeelTurn decides to join the outlaw gang he infiltrated for real.]]
198** In ''The Drifter'', Frank Morgan runs into two old friends, Jimmy and Hal, who've taken up bounty hunting and just brought in some wanted murderers alive but wounded. They are hired as bodyguards for Frank's ex-wife, getting them involved in the remainder of the book's action.
199** The titular character of the "Luke Jensen, Bounty Hunter" series is a positive version, fighting outlaws in fair fights (and often with the odd against him), being willing to take some in alive, and caring about the guilt or innocence of the peoples he goes after.
200** Haggarty from "The Loner: Seven Days to Die" is an AntiHero at best who unknowingly arrests an innocent man (albeit one who was an IdenticalStranger for the man he was after) and is a general {{Jerkass}} but he is a brave man in a fight and willing to make an effort to take in his prisoners alive.
201** Most of the bounty hunters in "The Loner: The Bounty Killers" are ruthless people willing to go after an innocent man just as easily as a guilty one if the price is right, although there is one decent one (Lace [=McCall=] who goes after fugitives with her BigFriendlyDog Max, and who reappears in a later book).
202** In "The Last Gunfighter: Ambush Valley" a gang of seven bounty hunters led by Abner Hoyt are OnlyInItForTheMoney and are willing to dish out some ColdBloodedTorture on the leader of an outlaw gang who hid the stolen money, but they are impressively competent, four of the group (Hoyt included) have a TrueCompanions vibe and are AboveTheInfluence when it comes to stealing the recovered money (which is much greater than the reward their being given) themselves. [[FaceHeelTurn The other three on the other hand are less scrupulous]] and pay the ultimate price for it.
203** In "Eyes of Eagles" Jamie Ian Macallister is pursed by various bounty hunters after him for killing a rapist, none of whom are portrayed as deserving of much sympathy when they pick a fight and Jamie guns them down.
204** Ernest Thistledown [[RedBaron "The Buggy Town Bounty Hunter"]] from "The Brothers O'Brien: Shadow of the Hangman" is a highly formidable AgentPeacock with an affable demeanor but a menacing gaze. Thistledown is known for only pursuing fugitives worth $5,000 of more and generally brings them back dead, but he is willing to offer mercy before a fight (which he tends to win), shows genuine distaste for the {{Hollywood Satanis|m}}t SerialKiller he's hunting, and is an ally of the O'Brien family throughout the book.
205* ''Literature/LandInTheStars'': The Privateers Guild is an organized corporation that allows clients to hire mercenaries, pirate hunters and bounty hunters. Some of the most well-known soldiers in the Triad are Captains of these respected Free Companies.
206* ''Creator/LouisLAmour'': "Kid Rodelo" follows escapees from Yuma prison who are pursued by local Natives who pursue them across the desert and kill them (and aren't above shooting the dead corpses of ones who died of heatstroke and thirst in order to collect those bounties as well)
207* In Creator/MichaelCrichton's ''Literature/{{Next|2006}}'', a bounty hunter is trying to grab a relative of a man from whom they had obtained the right to own his gene sequence, but when it was lost, they are of the impression they can obtain a DNA sample from one of his relatives by suing her, then filing for a writ to have her brought into the court where they were located.
208* The sci-fi anthology ''Literature/RieselTalesTwoHunters'' centers around the adventures of the two titular bounty hunters on the {{city|Planet}}-covered [[WretchedHive criminal world]] of Riesel.
209* Just about everyone in Mike Resnick's SpaceWestern ''Literature/SantiagoAMythOfTheFarFuture'' are bounty hunters. The largest bounty in the universe, the one they all secretly (or openly) hunt after, is Santiago himself. [[spoiler:Some have actually succeeded, but they don't live long enough to boast of it, because Santiago is a LegacyCharacter and has a ''lot'' of allies.]]
210* Velith Il-nok of ''Literature/TheSiranthaJaxSeries'' is definitely a stand-up individual who is in the profession for the good it does rather than just getting paid. It's interesting in that, even while being alien, he is more "human" than some actual human characters.
211* ''Literature/TheSpiritThief'': in the Council Kingdoms, bounties and, by extension, bounty hunters are how most criminals are pursued and imprisoned. Most notable bounty hunter in the series is Josef, who actually left the job a year prior to the beginning of the story, when Eli convinced him that going with him would let Josef find better opponents.
212* Franchise/StarWarsLegends:
213** ''Literature/TheHanSoloTrilogy'': A number of them are sent after Han over stealing from the Besilijic clan, including Boba Fett, who becomes his nemesis. Bria is also hunted for freeing many Besadii slaves.
214** ''[[Literature/StarWarsHonorAmongThieves Honor Among Thieves]]'': Baasen Ray is a former smuggler and colleague of Han's, who has turned to bounty hunting after smuggling work dried up. Specifically, he is after the price placed on Han's head by Jabba the Hutt, and in fact convinced Jabba to pay a portion in advance by claiming he'd already captured Han and needed funds to get him back to Tatooine. He's desperate to get his hands on Han, lest Jabba come after ''him'' next. For all that, Han is able to convince him to join forces by promising greater rewards from the device everyone is after.
215** ''Literature/ShadowsOfTheEmpire'': Luke is captured by a group of bounty hunters. Then it turns out they have competing bounties from Black Sun vs the Empire, the former wanting Luke dead, the latter alive. He escapes as they're waiting out the bidding war which it sparks for him.
216* ''Literature/StephaniePlum'':
217** The eponymous character in Janet Evanovich's series is a bounty hunter, albeit a spectacularly bad one. She's in terrible shape, dresses more Jersey Girl than SWAT, frequently has her cars blown up (and a funeral home, once), and keeps her gun unloaded in the cookie jar (not that she's licensed to carry it anyway).
218** Pretty much everyone who works for Vincent Plum Bail Bonds falls into the same description. Luckily for them, their clients are just as woefully inept at jumping bail as they are at recovering them.
219** In marked contrast to Stephanie, Ranger, an ex-Special Forces "primo bounty hunter" and security consultant, and his employees are uncannily competent and professional. Fortunately for Stephanie, Ranger and his "Merry Men" tend to clean up after her. Ranger jokes that his company's budget has a line-item for Stephanie's misadventures, listed under "Entertainment".
220* ''Literature/{{Stinger}}'': Two alien life forms arrive. One possesses the body of a young girl to hide from the second alien, who collects bounties for a genocidal empire who wants to capture the other for very sinister purposes and also has ill designs for Earth in general.
221* Lots of Richard K. Morgan's characters, including but not limited to Takeshi Kovacs from the ''Literature/TakeshiKovacs'' series and Carl Marsalis from ''[[Literature/BlackMan Thirteen]],'' fall into some flavor of this trope. Kovacs is an ex-UN Special Forces operator who works as a private investigator, mercenary, and general hired gun, while Marsalis is ex-British Special Forces who specializes in hunting down genetically modified people on behalf of the government. Neither is a particularly nice guy, but then again, they don't inhabit very nice worlds either.
222* ''Literature/WagonsWest'': In ''Literature/{{Nebraska}}'', a slave catcher follows the wagon train all the way to their winter quarters at the army fort just to capture the runaway slave Hosea.
223* ''Literature/WaxAndWayne'': Wax was one of these when he went out to the Roughs. He called himself a "lawman for hire," and in his early years he was known for grabbing the most dangerous bounties off the board and coming back a few days later with the target tied up on his saddle. The truth is that in those early years, he was short on money, so he just grabbed the biggest bounties he could find. Either way, he did such a good job that when the sheriff of Weathering eventually retired, he gave Wax his badge.
224* ''Literature/TheWitcher'' novels introduced the character of Leo Bonhart, who is really good at his job and so utterly vile at the same time that he makes [[Series/{{Firefly}} Jubal Early]] look like a puppy. The eponymous Witchers also qualify to a degree, taking out monsters with bounties on their heads.
225* ''Literature/TheWitchlands'': The Carawen are an order of {{Warrior Monk}}s who used to serve as wandering protectors, but these days, take on various jobs, like tracking down missing persons, criminals or stolen property, for money. They even have their own wall of [[WantedPoster "Wanted" Posters]].
226* In R.S Belcher's ''Literature/TheBrotherhoodOfTheWheel'', the Blue Jocks are a Scottish-American Motorcycle Club. The Blue Jocks are members of the Brethren, the combat branch of descendants of the Knights Templar. To make ends meet, the Blue Jocks are also bounty hunters when they aren't fighting monsters and serial killers near the highways. They're so resource-strapped they had to trade one of their prized motorcycles to a gang of skinheads in return for a military flamethrower for monster fighting.
227* ''Literature/TheNewManagement'': ''Dead Lies Dreaming'': Wendy Deere is informed of the realities of her new thief-taking occupation using these terms, as she came from a cop background:
228--> You're a fancy version of what our trans-Atlantic cousins call a bounty hunter. You are not paid to put your neck on the line.
229[[/folder]]
230
231[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
232* ''Series/TheAdventuresOfBriscoCountyJr'': The eponymous star was a Bounty Hunter hired to capture the outlaw gang who murdered his father. His rival, Lord Bowler, was also looking to collect the bounty on those outlaws.
233* ''Series/{{Alphas}}'': Griffin takes money to capture fugitives regardless of the lawfulness of the situation.
234* ''Series/BlakesSeven''. Given that the crew had a PriceOnTheirHead, plus Creator/ChrisBoucher's fondness for Western themes, these made an obligatory appearance.
235** In "[[Recap/BlakesSevenS1E11Bounty Bounty]]", the Liberator is seized by the Amagons, SpacePirates who engage in a variety of criminal activities including bounty hunting.
236** In "[[Recap/BlakesSevenS3E2Powerplay Powerplay]]", Zee and Barr are the nicest and prettiest bounty hunters you could meet. [[spoiler:Pity their job is capturing people so they can be dissected for their HumanResources.]]
237** In "[[Recap/BlakesSevenS4E13Blake Blake]]", the planet Gauda Prime is a CrapsackWorld where all laws have been suspended by the Federation High Council, in order to kill or drive off the colonists who legally owned the land. This naturally attracted a large number of criminals and psychopaths [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness who now have to be disposed of]] before law and order can be reintroduced, so they're being used as bounty hunters to catch or kill their fellow lawbreakers. Our rebel anti-heroes are not pleased to hear that Blake, ostensibly their leader but who's been [[PutOnABus missing for the past couple of seasons]], is now [[TookALevelInJerkass working as one of these bounty hunters]]. [[spoiler:It turns out he's secretly recruiting another rebel force from among the criminals he's capturing.]]
238* ''Series/BurnNotice'': In one episode, Fiona is working as a bounty hunter and ropes Michael into helping her, only to have the man they capture hire them to prove his innocence. Bounty hunting seems to be Fiona's primary legitimate source of income when she is not working as an illegal arms dealer.
239* ''Series/CarnivalRow'': "Skip jacks" who hunt down indentured servants who'd broken a contract through leaving service are mentioned, and Agreus was once one.
240* ''Series/{{Castle|2009}}'': [[LoveInterest Beckett's]] former mentor and flame returns as a bounty hunter. He tries to get her to work for him to catch crooks, get better pay, and avoid the red tape. Beckett refuses. [[spoiler:He is later killed, causing Beckett to go on a RoaringRampageOfRevenge]].
241* ''Series/{{ChaseNBC}}'': Ben Crowley.
242* ''Series/ChicagoJustice'': The Spanish government sends one to arrest a young woman based on Amanda Know and return her so she can be tried again on murder charges. Realistically, this is quite unlikely, since it would damage relations with the US. The US and Spain have an extradition treaty already (which they are shown invoking later) so going outside official channels like this makes no sense given that too.
243* ''Series/{{Colony}}'': Will's former partner works as one in the Santa Monica bloc to make ends meet.
244* ''Series/DeadMansGun'':
245** In "Bounty Hunter", a shopkeeper plagued with ennui decides to take up bounty hunting, shortly before the gun finds its way to him.
246** In "Death Warrant", a ruthless bounty hunter, who took the gun from a target, gets a taste of his own medicine when the mother of a boy he accidentally killed puts a bounty on his head.
247* ''Series/DoctorWho'': One reports the whereabouts of the fugitive Chimeron princess to the Bannermen in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS24E3DeltaAndTheBannermen Delta and the Bannermen]]".
248* ''Series/DogTheBountyHunter'' is a RealityShow following Hawaiian-based bounty hunter Duane "Dog" Chapman. His brushes with the law and use of [[NWordPrivileges racial slurs]] have made him something of a controversial figure.
249* ''Series/TheDukesOfHazzard'': Jeffrey Steele, the VillainOfTheWeek in the 1981 episode "The $10 Million Sheriff," who pursues the innocent Bo and Luke as though they were No. 1 on the [=FBI=]'s 10 Most Wanted List.
250* ''Series/TheFallGuy'': This show is about a team of stuntmen who moonlight as bounty hunters of bail jumpers, for a bail bondsperson.
251* ''Series/{{Firefly}}'': Jubal Early from the episode "[[Recap/FireflyE14ObjectsInSpace Objects in Space]]" was a bounty hunter sent to collect on the bounty for Simon and River. He quickly proves himself to be a PsychoForHire who is in it for the sadism, and is not above threatening to rape Kaylee-or threatening Simon with raping her if he won't reveal where River is hiding-in order to get what he wants.
252* ''Series/{{Flash Gordon|2007}}'': Baylin is a female bounty hunter from Mongo.
253* In the 2000 remake of ''Series/TheFugitive'', Kimble not only has to evade Gerard, he has to evade one of these, hired by his father-in-law, who believes him to be guilty. Ironically, in one episode, Gerard ''protects'' him from the guy--he doesn't want Kimble dead, just to return him to prison.
254* ''Series/GameOfThrones'': Cersei offers a lordship for whoever brings her Tyrion's head, leading to the death of at least one innocent dwarf.
255* ''Series/GarrowsLaw'': Thief takers. At the time, Britain had very few public police, so most crimes were investigated and "solved" by thief takers for reward money. The series shows the problems with this, since successful thief takers often became so through falsely accusing and framing people to get such rewards. In reality, some were even crime bosses themselves who returned people's property that their own minions stole to get paid for it. The one in the series frames a man on a theft charge and is indicated to regularly do this, but thankfully he's exposed for perjury with the innocent defendant acquitted.
256* ''Series/KamenRiderKiva'': Likewise, Keisuke Nago was a bounty hunter shortly before becoming Kamen Rider IXA.
257* ''Series/KamenRiderOOO'': In some ways, Kamen Rider Birth could be seen as a Bounty Hunter. He was hired to retrieve a huge amount of Cell Medals, and in order to get them, has to destroy Yummy or Greeed. This had shades of real world bounty hunters, who are, by law, technically hired to retrieve the bail, which is physically represented by the criminal they're capturing.
258* ''Series/{{Killjoys}}'' revolves around a crew of interplanetary bounty hunters in a distant star system. They work for an organization of bounty hunters called the '''R'''eclamation '''A'''pprehension '''C'''oalition, commonly known as The Rack. The Rack is highly organized with their members only allowed to take bounties that fit their certification. A Level One warrant is a property retrieval bounty and only allows violence in self defense. A Level Four warrant is issued against the most dangerous criminals and is dead-or-alive. A Level Five warrant is a straight up assassination mission. The Rack acts pretty much as a secondary law enforcement agency for the star system.
259* ''Series/LawAndOrder'': Devoted an episode to bounty hunters; the hunters in question were violent thugs though.
260* ''Series/LegendOfTheSeeker'': A bunch of them go after Richard in "Bounty" after a reward is offered to kill him by Darken Rahl. One in particular manages to get ahold of his pendant and use it to have a {{magic map}} created that shows Richard's location.
261* ''Series/{{Lost}}'': Ilana is (or claims to be) a bounty hunter hired to bring Sayid to Guam.
262* ''Series/{{Lucifer}}'': After leaving her job at Lux nightclub, and multiple failed attempts to find a new job suitable for a demon from Hell trapped on Earth, Mazikeen becomes a bounty hunter.
263* ''Series/MacGyver1985'': Frequently crossed paths with the Coltons, an entire ''family'' of bounty hunters. They only all appeared together in the PoorlyDisguisedPilot for an aborted SpinOff.
264* ''Series/TheMagnificentSeven'' [[TheSeries series]]: Vin Tanner used to operate as a bounty hunter; dramatic irony kicked in when he was framed for murder and had to go on the run himself.
265* ''Series/TheMandalorian'' is the story of a Mandalorian Bounty Hunter in the post-Empire chaos on the Outer Rim worlds in the Star Wars universe.
266* ''Series/{{Merlin|2008}}'': Halig.
267* ''Series/MyNameIsEarl'': Jesse in the episode "[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin The Bounty Hunter]]".
268* ''Series/OnceUponATime'': Emma's job before Storybrooke was as a bail collector. Those who skipped out on their bail, she would hunt down to arrest herself.
269* ''Series/{{Person of Interest}}'': In episode 4.18, Frankie Wells is this, using the title as a pretense to hunt down her brother's killer.
270* ''Franchise/PowerRangers'':
271** ''Series/PowerRangersNinjaStorm'' features Vexacus, one of the later villains to join Lothor's crew. It's mainly used as shorthand for "this season's [[TheStarscream backstabber type]]" - the one being we see Vexacus hunt is an alien whose power he wants to take for himself, not an employer.
272** ''Series/PowerRangersDinoCharge'' features the BigBad, Sledge, who is after the Ener-Gems for his own ambitions for domination. The monsters he sends to destroy the rangers are other criminals he's captured and promised freedom to the one who brings him an Ener-Gem.
273* ''Series/{{Psych}}'' has an episode called "Bounty Hunters!" where Shawn and Gus try their hands at the job. Though the incompetent [[spoiler:and crooked]] "Dog" parody who kept spooking the fugitive before Shawn and Gus could get him didn't help.
274* ''Series/QuantumLeap'': Sam leapt into a Bounty Hunter in one episode.
275* ''Series/{{Reaper}}'': Sam works as a bounty hunter for the Devil: instead of escaped criminals, he catches escaped souls.
276* ''Series/{{Renegade}}'': This show is about a cop-turned-bounty hunter, a bounty hunter, and the latter's sister, who helps them hunt bounties.
277* ''Series/{{Revolution}}'': Jacob from "[[Recap/RevolutionS1E2ChainedHeat Chained Heat]]", [[spoiler:Mia Clayton]] from "[[Recap/RevolutionS1E8TiesThatBind Ties That Bind]]", and Steve from "[[Recap/RevolutionS1E15Home Home]]". Jacob was spared by Miles at Charlie's urging, Jacob repays that by revealing their location to the militia, and Miles kills him off later on. [[spoiler:Mia Clayton]], despite being Nora Clayton's sister, proved to be extremely selfish, sold out her sister's friends to the militia, and Nora decided to just abandon her and let her walk back to Texas on her own. Steve tried to bring in [[spoiler:Priscilla Pittman]], whose only crime was killing a militia sergeant who tried to molest her 11-year-old-daughter in self-defense, but between Aaron and her, he got killed off. This show portrays bounty hunters in an extremely unsympathetic light.
278* ''Series/RockyMountainBountyHunters'' follows two teams of real life fugitive recovery agents, Clint and Dayson from Colorado, and Rob and "Animal" in Minnesota as they bring in bail bond jumpers who have ceased contact with authorities or the bail bond companies, and are hiding out in the Rocky Mountains region of the United States.
279* ''Series/TheRousters'' is about a family is a group of bounty hunters descended from legendary lawman Wyatt Earp.
280* ''Series/{{Sinbad}}'': Tiger.
281* ''Series/StargateSG1'' has had a few. Aris Boch in season 3 and then several more in the season 10 episode "Bounty".
282* ''Franchise/StarTrek'':
283** ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'': The Hazari are an alien species from the Delta Quadrant whose [[PlanetOfHats hat]] is bounty hunting.
284** ''Series/StarTrekEnterprise'': In "[[Recap/StarTrekEnterpriseS02E025Bounty Bounty]]", Captain Archer is captured by a Tellarite bounty hunter who wants to hand him over to the Klingons in exchange for enough money to buy back his spaceship. [[spoiler:Archer eventually convinces the Tellarite to give him the means of escaping the Klingon cell once he's been handed over.]]
285* ''Series/StrangeEmpire'': Two come after Kat over a $1,000 bounty on her head for murder.
286* ''Series/SWAT2017'': "Wild Ones" has S.W.A.T. in a manhunt for a murderous OutlawCouple, but a team of bounty hunters are also pursuing them and they get in the way.
287* ''Series/TeenageBountyHunters2020'' has sisters Blair and Sterling Wesley as a pair of protege bounty hunters for former cop turned bounty hunter, Bowser Wilkins. The girls are unusually talented at it despite their occasional screw-ups and they're from a prominent wealthy family in Georgia so they can navigate the Georgian upper crust where Bowser can't.
288* ''Series/TheTwilightZone1959'': In "[[TheTwilightZoneS3E72TheGrave The Grave]]", the people of Pinto Sykes's hometown hire Conny Miller to track down and kill the outlaw so that he'll stop treating the town "like it was his personal property." After four months, Miller still hasn't found Sykes (some people suggest that he's too afraid to look very hard) and his clients form a VigilanteMilitia to defeat Sykes themselves.
289* ''{{Series/Underground}}'': The slave catchers, who hunt down and retrieve runaways for the reward money. August is a recurring character, while in the second season a whole gang led by Patty Cannon are the main antagonists.
290* ''Series/VagrantQueen'': A couple of them appear in "Sunshine Express Yourself", hunting a scientist who has knowledge Lazaro wants, tangling with Isaac, Amae and Elida over this.
291* ''Series/WantedDeadOrAlive'': Josh Randall.
292* ''Series/TheWesterner'': In "Going Home", Dave sees two women pushing a cart with a badly wounded man inside. Dave helps protect the trio from the bounty hunters after the $2000 reward out for the man's capture.
293[[/folder]]
294
295[[folder:Pro Wrestling]]
296* The Crippler Rip Oliver was this in territories outside of Portland Oregon, most memorable when he was hired by Wrestling/JimCornette to break the hand of Mike Wrestling/{{Von Erich|Family}}.
297* David Shultz became a bounty hunter after his wrestling career ended in the mid-80's.
298* Former Wrestling/{{ECW}} wrestler Wrestling/NewJack claimed to have been a bounty hunter in RealLife and that he committed four justifiable homicides. However [[TakeOurWordForIt there is no outside evidence that proves either one of these claims to be true]].
299* Goldenrod was described as being similar to a bounty hunter in Wrestling/KaijuBigBattel. She was on a mission to stop all city destroying kaiju, [[EnemyMine which made her an ally to the heroes]].
300* The New Bounty Hunters, Ricky Murdock & Big Nasty Bill, the Wrestling/{{N|ational Wrestling Alliance}}WA Mid-South {{tag team}} champions who vacated the belts after doing their job and beating the Black Birds
301[[/folder]]
302
303[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
304* The ''TabletopGame/BattleTech'' universe has numerous Bounty Hunters; the most infamous is known simply as [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin The Bounty Hunter]], an enigmatic figure who never shows his face and rarely speaks. He's famous for his relentless nature, for never once letting a bounty escape, his unfailing loyalty to his employer, the custom, form-concealing armor that he always wears, and always piloting Battlemech with a brilliant emerald-green paint job that's covered in symbols of money, with notable mechs including a ''Warhammer'', ''Marauder'', ''Mad Cat'', ''Marauder II'', and ''Loki II''. In truth, the Bounty Hunter is a legacy of individuals who have been passing the title (and Mechs) for over a century, leading to the character frequently being described as a cross between [[Film/ThePrincessBride the Dread Pirate Roberts]] and [[Franchise/StarWars Boba Fett]]. [[spoiler:During the Word of Blake Jihad, the Bounty Hunter betrayed his employer and seems to have been replaced by an impersonator, but as of the Dark Ages things seem to have returned closer to normal]].
305* The "Bloodhound" prestige class in ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons''. The "Justicar" was similar.
306** In the ''TabletopGame/{{Eberron}}'' setting House Tharashk dominates the market in this field, thanks to their [[PowerTattoo Dragonmarks]] of Finding.
307* In ''TabletopGame/EclipsePhase'' they're known as Ego Hunters, and their job is a bit more difficult since many people change bodies like wardrobes.
308* Creator/GamesWorkshop games:
309** In ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}'' many [[TheWitchHunter Witch Hunters]], despite the name, are actually just petty thugs who only signed for the chance to exercise church-sanctioned bullying or bounty hunting.
310** ''TabletopGame/{{Necromunda}}'':
311*** The game's underhive is the most common destination for outlaws and mutants, making it a rich hunting ground for those wishing to make some credits bringing these degenerates to justice. Due to their skill and fighting powers Bounty Hunters have been a popular Hired Gun in every edition of the game, with the game's 3rd Edition in particular including detailed rules for various types of Bounty Hunter as well as a number of named character Bounty Hunters.
312*** The May 2018 issue of ''Magazine/WhiteDwarf'' included exclusive rules for using Venator Bands for 3rd Edition ''Necromunda''. Venator Bands are elite gangs of Bounty Hunters who band together for protection, to track down the most lucrative bounties or for more esoteric and near-religious reasons. The rules for these gangs also include rules for including Bounty Hunters from specific Houses.
313** Bounty Hunter appear as jobs and characters in many Games Workshop RPG-style {{Gaiden Game}}s such as ''TabletopGame/WarhammerFantasyRoleplay''[[note]]Where it's actually one of the jobs that can lead to becoming a Witch Hunter (which is an advanced career)[[/note]] and ''TabletopGame/DarkHeresy''.
314* ''TabletopGame/{{Rifts}}'' had a few variations on this; the core rulebook featured the "Tracer" class which was generically Bounty Hunter-themed (and featured a picture of a guy in vaguely Fett-like armor), but the "New West" SourceBook actually contained a Bounty Hunter class patterned after the classic Western archetype.
315* The initial book for [[Creator/FantasyFlightGames Fantasy Flight's]] 2014 ''[[TabletopGame/StarWarsRoleplayingGame Starwars RPG]]'' has Bounty Hunter as one of the playable classes with three specializations. Gadgeteers in the vein of Boba Fett, who modify their weapons and armor to give them an advantage. Assassins adept at stealth and dealing ranged damage, and Survivalists skilled at tracking and surviving in the wild. With the Martial Artist, Operator, and Skip Tracer specializations being added in the "No Disintegrations" SourceBook. As well as rules for running bounty hunting focused missions.
316* Mongoose Games' ''Strontium Dog'' RPG, based on the ''Strontium Dog'' entry under [[AC:ComicBooks]] above.
317[[/folder]]
318
319[[folder:Video Games]]
320* In ''Franchise/BlazBlue'', the [[AllThereInTheManual Teach Me Miss Lichi]] segments explain that "Vigilantes" are (despite the name) this. Criminals the [[TheEmpire NOL]] want to capture are given bounties which anyone can turn in (although it's noted that their bounties don't always tally with the threat the individual presents and they may or may not be of the "dead or alive" variety) and the NOL allows citizens to collect them (they even offer a service where they dispatch an agent to collect the bounty and freely teach otherwise restricted [[FunctionalMagic ar magus]] which can be used to bind criminals and drag them to the nearest NOL outpost).
321* The [[PlayerCharacter Vault Hunters]] in ''VideoGame/{{Borderlands}}'' are either bounty hunters or do bounty hunting on the side when they aren't hunting for the [[LostTechnology Eridian Vaults]] or working for the [[LaResistance Crimson Raiders]]. Multiple side quests will have the general gist of going somewhere, killing someone or something then getting paid (give or take some gimmicks).
322* An upgrade in ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquerGenerals'' allows the GLA to make money whenever they kill an enemy.
323* Z'xorv from ''VideoGame/CosmicStarHeroine'' is a green-skinned HumanoidAlien who attacks the protagonist Alyssa for a bounty put on her head, gets defeated by her and joins her few minutes later seeking a bounty put on a HumongousMecha she too is seeking to stop. He later joins her as a permanent party member, again due to their overlapping goals. With him in your party you can recruit another bounty hunter who is not a part of a shore party but does provide status buffs when chosen for support.
324* In ''VideoGame/Cyberpunk2077'', V can engage in bounty hunting in some gigs that call for a specific target to be killed. There are also Cyberpsychos to contend with, though in their cases, V is instructed to try and take them alive so their Cyberpsychosis can be better studied, with dead targets resulting in a lower reward.
325* ''VideoGame/DarkestDungeon'' features the Bounty Hunter class, a unit whose primarily uses are marking enemies for {{armor piercing attack}}s and for pulling units from the back to the front among others. He also specializes in killing human-type enemies, including bandits, cultists, and [[BodyHorror other, more monstrous human-like beings.]]
326* The ''VideoGame/DarkForcesSaga'' features Kyle Katarn and Jan Ors, who are these at least in the general sense that ''Star Wars'' doesn't really distinguish between mercenaries, which the duo are actually labeled as, and bounty hunters; the main difference is that they do jobs for the Rebellion and later New Republic rather than the Empire or unaffiliated criminals like Jabba. Specifically, they're doing a job for someone else for the entirety of the original ''VideoGame/DarkForces'' (the opening level has them stealing the Death Star plans to [[Film/ANewHope deliver them to Leia]], then the rest of the game is a more involved mission to investigate a Dark Trooper project) and the first two levels of ''VideoGame/JediKnightIIJediOutcast'' (investigating transmissions coming from an Imperial outpost thought to have long since been abandoned, then the source of power crystals Kyle found samples of in that outpost).
327* B.B. Hood/Bulleta of ''VideoGame/{{Darkstalkers}}'' is a bounty hunter specializing in monsters (called a Darkhunter in the fluff). She very much falls under the "villain" category, being a greedy, sadistic, amoral AxCrazy EnfantTerrible PsychoForHire.
328* ''VideoGame/DeathlessHyperion'' have "Bounty Hunter" as the hardest setting in its IdiosyncraticDifficultyLevels. Said setting contains the highest enemy count, but also plenty of loot.
329* Gondar the Bounty Hunter in ''VideoGame/DefenseOfTheAncients'' is a rather ninja-ish hero who specializes in tracking the enemy heroes and assassinating them. Treating his targets as his bounties, his Ultimate lets him net an even bigger amount of gold in case he killed a tracked hero, which he shares with his nearby teammates if able.
330* In ''VideoGame/DivinityOriginalSinII'', potential PlayerCharacter/party member Ifan ben-Mezd is a contract killer working under the mercenary group known as the Lone Wolves. His storyline revolves around being assigned to kill the WellIntentionedExtremist leader of TheOrder Bishop Alexandar, [[spoiler: who is found out the hard way [[ResurrectiveImmortality to be immortal]].]]
331* ''VideoGame/DragonAgeII'' features several quests where [[PlayerCharacter Hawke]] acts as a bounty hunter/mercenary for the Viscount, the Templars, the Qunari, or the occasional random bystander.
332* ''VideoGame/EarthwormJim'' contains a recurring villain named Psycrow who is an intergalactic bounty hunter that pursues Jim throughout the game in order to retrieve a stolen super suit.
333* ''Franchise/TheElderScrolls'':
334** Hunting down dangerous criminals to collect the bounty on their heads is a common quest for the [[AdventureGuild Fighters Guild]], as seen repeatedly in ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIIDaggerfall Daggerfall]]'', ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIIIMorrowind Morrowind]]'', and ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIVOblivion Oblivion]]''.
335** ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim Skyrim]]'':
336*** As the Fighters Guild [[SupermanStaysOutOfGotham does not operate in Skyrim]] due to the presence of the Companions, the Companions fill this void instead.
337*** The Jarls of the various holds in Skyrim will often put out bounties on threats to their citizenry, including bandits, giants, and even Dragons.
338*** If ''you'' commit crimes, even if you aren't caught by the actual CityGuards, those you've committed crimes against may send Hired Thugs and even [[MurderInc Dark Brotherhood]] assassins after you.
339* Players in ''VideoGame/{{Elite}}'' are able to destroy pirate ships and to get bounties for this.
340* ''[[VideoGame/EscapeVelocity EV Nova]]'' has a Bounty Hunters' Guild that the player can join. Their missions mainly involve killing and capturing SpacePirates. They start out working only in [[TheEmpire Federation]] territory, but the Guild storyline allows you to expand their operations into the [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Auroran]] [[TheAlliance Empire]].
341* Abe Presley of ''VideoGame/{{Evolve}}''. Played differently than usual as he doesn't really care for bounty hunting, considering it something that you do because you don't have many other options. On the other hand, he does have a healthy respect for the money it can bring.
342* ''VideoGame/FZero'' has Captain Falcon and Samurai Goroh as rival bounty hunters when they aren't racing. The short tie-in comic for the original game is the only time we see them at it, when Goroh tries to horn in on one of Falcon's captures, claiming it was happening on Goroh's turf. Hell, the comic is literally the only time we ever see Falcon use his gun.
343* The ''VideoGame/{{Fallout}}'' series:
344** The Regulators in ''VideoGame/Fallout3'' are bounty killers who target evildoers and turn in their {{fing|ore}}ers for caps. Players with very good karma can join them, while evil players will be hunted by them. The Talon Company Mercs likewise are hired to hunt down players who do [[NoGoodDeedGoesUnpunished too many good deeds]].
345** In ''VideoGame/FalloutNewVegas'', the player can pursue bounties for [[AlwaysChaoticEvil Fiend]] leaders for the NCR, who will pay for their heads. The catch is that the player must leave the head intact and recognizable (IE no [[BoomHeadshot headshots]] or any attacks that [[LudicrousGibs gibs]][=/=]disintegrates them) or else the Major in charge of the bounties can't verify them and cannot pay you full price.
346* Queen Brahne in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIX'' hires two bounty hunters, Lani and Amarant (who later joins the party). Interestingly, the bounty is not for the safe return of her daughter, Princess Garnet, but for the royal gemstone she carries. The Princess herself is deemed disposable.
347* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXII'', one of the {{Sidequest}}s involved killing of various "marks" in order to get prizes.
348* ''VideoGame/{{Freelancer}}'' has an entire faction of these, which the Discovery GameMod expands upon. You can take up bounty hunting side missions as well; they're similar to the assassination ones except you grab the target's escape pod after the battle.
349* ''VideoGame/GranblueFantasy'' nods to this with the "Bounty" status effect, which can be stacked on an enemy to increase the chance of getting a chest with good loot from defeating them. The skills available to the player that increase the bounty level on an enemy are even outright called "Bounty Hunter".
350* ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAutoV'' has an entire questline dedicated to [[BloodKnight Tre]][[AxCrazy vor]] working as a bounty hunter. Notably, he has to work for a bail bondsman and gets more money for ''not'' killing his targets (which is asking a lot from [[PsychoForHire Trevor]]).
351* ''VideoGame/GuiltyGear'''s Bridget is a self-proclaimed bounty hunter. However, she's not exactly very competent at it. Her only real successful bounty to date happened to consist of innocent people (in Bridget's defense, the bounties were given to her under false pretenses). Ky Kiske only paid her due to feeling bad for the poor little girl.
352** Sol Badguy is a more experienced and competent example, [[spoiler:and it's a career that fits nicely with his "hunting down and killing all other Gears" thing]].
353** The Whole premise of ''Guilty Gear X'' was that a large bounty was placed on mysterious command-type Gear [[TechnicalPacifist Dizzy's]] head, so most of the characters introduced in that game and its derivatives are also Bounty Hunters, such as Bridget and Jam.
354* ''VideoGame/Hitman3'' dabbles in this slightly in Freelancer mode of the World of Assassination trilogy. With no more International Contract Agency to turn to for eliminating dangerous criminals, clients looking for justice against crime syndicates now resort to placing open contracts or bounties on the dark web for anyone to take up and either kill or apprehend the syndicate leaders. Agent 47, newly unemployed and now a freelance assassin looking for work, accepts the contracts and pursues the bounties on the heads of the leaders, and with his background as a hitman, he just goes straight to killing the criminals and collecting the money.
355* Several story events in ''VideoGame/KingOfTheCastle'' involve the King offering financial compensation for the capture, dead or alive, of criminals. For example, if a region is being overrun by bandits, the King can offer a bounty for bandit scalps, or for the head of the bandits' leader. Other countries have similar policies in place, as illustrated when the Republic of Kirth sends bounty hunters to the Kingdom in pursuit of Oreid, a fugitive who offers the Kingdom a (stolen) weapons shipment in exchange for safe harbour; the King can either surrender Oreid to them or bribe them to take back a random prisoner's head.
356* Miss Fortune in ''VideoGame/LeagueOfLegends'', by lore, is a bounty hunter, specifically she hunts pirates. It's her class/title name.
357* ''[[VideoGame/LegendOfLegaia Legaia II: Duel Saga]]'' features a Hunter's Guild which the player can access about halfway through the game. Though some of the requests are more reminiscent of {{Fetch Quest}}s, the majority present marks that the party must track down and eradicate.
358* In ''VideoGame/MaceGriffinBountyHunter'', the titular character used to a be a Ranger, charged with keeping peace in the Vagner system. Following a debacle where his unit was wiped out, Mace was sentenced to ten years in prison, and upon his release, Mace became a bounty hunter.
359* ''Franchise/MassEffect'':
360** Inverted by Wrex in ''VideoGame/MassEffect1'', who describes himself as a mercenary, but his actual role is much more similar to that of a bounty hunter. The jobs of his that you see or he describes in-game usually involve tracking down and kidnapping or killing one person (Fist, Aleena, the unnamed volus, etc) at the behest of a private employer.
361** He's also done bodyguarding and space piracy according to his stories, so he's pretty much an all-around hired gun. However, he found bodyguarding to be boring (but easy money, naturally) and prefers to work in smaller groups or alone, so he's arguably a Bounty Hunter foremost.
362** ''VideoGame/MassEffect2'' plays it a little straighter while still being flexible in the form of Zaeed Massani. The guy is described as the best bounty hunter in the business. Even when Shepard first meets him, he's cornered a Batarian bounty. (As well as shooting him in the back of the knee when he tries to run.) That said, Zaeed also co-founded the Blue Suns mercenary corporation and has fought in many battles as a soldier for hire. Ultimately, Zaeed burns this trope's candle at both ends. The only difference being if the contract in question says "capture" rather than "kill", "secure", "breach", or other more strategic terms.
363* ''Franchise/MegaMan'':
364** Bounty hunters are recurring antagonists in the ''VideoGame/MegaManX'' series, with Dynamo in ''X5'' and ''X6'', Red Alert in ''X7'', and Spider in ''VideoGame/MegaManXCommandMission''.
365** In ''VideoGame/MegaManZX Advent'', the Hunter's Guild are a bunch of bounty hunters officially sanctioned by the coalition government Legion who get paid to both recover LostTechnology and hunt down dangerous Mavericks. One of the protagonists, Ashe, was raised by Hunters at a young age after her [[DoomedHometown home was destroyed by Mavericks]], while the other one, Grey, was inadvertently released from his capsule by two Hunters who get killed by security bots and rescued later still from drowning by a Hunter named Billy, who makes him a Hunter so he can get in and out of Hunter's Camp and offers him a chance to come to Legion so he can possibly learn [[IdentityAmnesia who he is]]. They're contrasted by the Raiders, who are effectively pirates that pillage ancient ruins for LostTechnology for themselves and deal with other "illegal" items, though even the Hunters aren't above some shady behavior, as one of the enemy Mega Men [[CastingAShadow Siarnaq]] was a Hunter tasked as an assassin and LeftForDead by his comrades.
366* In ''VideoGame/{{Mercenaries}}'', the player characters (a trio of mercenaries) are often dispatched to capture or kill selected targets with prices on their head. In fact, in the original game, the players' primary reason for being there was the massive bounty on the BigBad's head.
367* ''Franchise/{{Metroid}}'':
368** Samus Aran is usually described as a bounty hunter, although "mercenary" or even "{{Privateer}}" would probably be a more accurate job description, as her primary employer appears to be the [[TheFederation Galactic Federation]] and the jobs they assign her usually tend toward infiltrations, search-and-destroy, and other military operations.
369** ''VideoGame/Metroid1'': To drive the point home, the FDS version places a bag of money next to completed game files.
370** Other "bounty hunters" with vastly different motivations appear in the aptly named ''VideoGame/MetroidPrimeHunters'' and ''VideoGame/MetroidPrime3Corruption''.
371** Samus' missions for the Feds typically take the form of "kill X", where X is the enemy du jour. This makes her description as a bounty hunter slightly more accurate, as a bounty is paid for the things she kills. The only exceptions to the "kill X" missions are ''Metroid Prime 3'', ''Hunters'', and ''VideoGame/MetroidFusion''. ''[[VideoGame/MetroidPrime2Echoes Prime 2]]'' can be an ''inferred'' mission: she's told to investigate the disappearance of a GF SpaceMarine squad, and she's "hired" by the Luminoth to eradicate the Ing. ''VideoGame/SuperMetroid'' is debatable, since she's doing it all of her own accord (she doesn't ''have'' to chase Ridley down and get the baby Metroid back... [[RoaringRampageOfRescue but that's what she wants to do]]).
372** The same can be said for ''VideoGame/MetroidPrime''. She didn't have to follow that distress beacon, and then chase Ridley to Tallon IV. So really, she is a technical bounty hunter (as evidenced in the opening for ''Super'', when she decides to hunt smaller bounty), but her ties with the Chozo and the Space Pirates keep getting in the way.
373*** Thanks to the AnachronicOrder, there's [[{{Fanon}} plenty of room in the timeline]] for Samus to make a healthy living catching renegades and/or killing dangerous wildlife, both of which count as "bounty hunting".
374*** There's also ''VideoGame/MetroidIIReturnOfSamus'' / ''VideoGame/MetroidSamusReturns'' for the UsefulNotes/GameBoy / UsefulNotes/Nintendo3DS, where her whole mission is to kill lots and ''lots'' of dangerous wildlife, namely the entire Metroid species, along with any creatures that get in the way. This is actually the closest example we have of Samus doing actual bounty hunting we see in the games, it just happens to be against wildlife.
375** Incidentally, Creator/RetroStudios planned on having Samus fulfill more of a bounty-hunting role in ''Prime 3'', namely by having the player pick out actual bounties to go after. The higher-ups vetoed this, in part because of the GenreShift it would entail and in part because Samus doesn't really fit the role of bounty hunter to a T. The guys at Retro jokingly referred to her as a "pro-bono hunter" instead.
376** Allegedly, the people at Nintendo got the label "bounty hunter" from ''Franchise/StarWars'' and applied it to Samus thinking it just sounded like she was a cool space adventurer, while not actually knowing what it meant until Retro Studios informed them of its actual meaning during the development of ''VideoGame/MetroidPrime'', to their shock.
377** ''VideoGame/MetroidDread'' begins with Adam commenting that the bounty she's receiving for the mission to ZDR doesn't seem worth the risk. In this case, her specific mission is to recover 7 missing ultra-advanced robots that have gone dark on the planet intact. It doesn't take long before the mission goes south big time and things get much more complicated than that [[spoiler: and she ends up destroying all 7 of the robots anyway, so it's probably safe to say there wasn't much of a monetary reward for her in the end.]]
378* The Stranger of ''VideoGame/OddworldStrangersWrath'' starts out as this, capturing/killing enemies in order to earn Moolah (currency of Oddworld) for a life-saving operation. Later on, after [[spoiler:The Stranger is [[TomatoSurprise outed as a Steef]], a [[LastOfHisKind beast hunted to near extinction]]]], the townsfolk automatically turn against him and he spends the game helping the Grubbs (the Native American FantasyCounterpartCulture) retake their land from [[CorruptCorporateExecutive Sekto]].
379* ''VideoGame/PhantasyStarII'' gives you two flavors of bounty hunter as party members. Rudolf Steiner hunts Biomonsters as a profession in revenge for the deaths of his wife and child. Anna Zirski is said to hunt ''people'', and ''[[VideoGameRemake Generation 2]]'' explains that she targets other hunters that go rogue.
380* ''[[VideoGame/{{Aleste}} Power Strike II]]'' (UsefulNotes/SegaMasterSystem ver.) is set in an AlternateHistory version of TheGreatDepression where those laid off from their jobs take to {{sky pira|te}}cy to make a living, while bounty hunters like the protagonist capture pirates to reap the reward money.
381* In ''VideoGame/PopfulMail'', Mail often goes after big-time criminals (the bigger the reward, the better), but never manages to ''catch'' any of them.
382* ''VideoGame/RedDeadRevolver'' includes the protagonist Red as a bounty hunter of the heroic type.
383** The sequel ''VideoGame/RedDeadRedemption'' John is pretty much a Government Bounty Hunter, who has to hunt down the rest of his old gang dead or alive, or he'll never see his family again.
384*** Also allows the player to accept bounty hunting side-missions by collecting the Wanted Posters he finds. The player then tracks the bounty and has the choice of capturing them (for a bigger reward) or simply killing them. Also, committing crimes will create a bounty on the player himself, and bounty hunters will come after you hoping to collect.
385** And again for the ''[[VideoGame/RedDeadRedemption2 prequel]]''.
386*** And ''again'' for its online multiplayer component, where Bounty Hunter is a full-on role with its own unique perks and missions.
387* Hachimen from ''VideoGame/{{Sacrifice}}'' works entirely for the highest bidder. Presented due to him having an array of different spells, mostly early [[CorruptCorporateExecutive Pyro]] units, and later, [[MagnificentBastard Stratos]] units.
388* Tokyo Hunters in ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiIV''. Functionally, Samurai who take quests from K are pretty much the same, though from a trained fighting force instead.
389* In ''VisualNovel/{{SNATCHER}}'', due to understaffing, JUNKER is forced to hire bounty hunters to help in taking down the eponymous [=SNATCHERs=]. However, only one (named Random/Randam Hajile) plays a major role in the story.
390* The various Hunter organizations of ''VideoGame/SolatoroboRedTheHunter'' are this in all but name. Though most of the jobs the guild offers are along the lines of {{Fetch Quest}}s or TwentyBearAsses.
391* ''VideoGame/StarWarsBountyHunter'' features playing as Jango Fett. Guess what the game revolves around.
392* ''VideoGame/StarWarsTheOldRepublic'' has an entire Bounty Hunter class, complete with its own story and companions, for the Imperial faction. You start off as a competitor in a Mandalorian Bounty Hunting competition, to hunting high-profile targets from an exclusive list and ultimately ending up as [[spoiler:the most wanted criminal of the Galactic Republic]].
393** The Bounty Contract in-game events allow other classes to engage in this as well, capturing bounties dead or alive to earn rewards from the Bounty Hunter's Guild.
394* In ''VideoGame/{{Strider}}'', once Hiryu becomes a big enough nuisance the villains hire the services of Bounty Hunter Solo, an armor-clad flying hitman with a preference for firearms and a claim to be the strongest human being on Earth. Solo is more than happy to clash against the fabled Striders in battle, and more than once after getting bested in their first bout.
395* ''VideoGame/SunsetRiders'': The protagonists are a quartet of WildWest bounty hunters taking down criminals for the prices on their heads. For the first few levels, they're just taking down whatever targets they find, but after beating the bosses of Level 4 the saloon girls they rescue tell them about an enormous bounty that's been put on a notorious criminal and all his top enforcers, so the heroes get focused on taking down the entire gang.
396* Both titular characters from ''VideoGame/TopHunterRoddyAndCathy'' are bounty hunters pursuing a group of SpacePirates across various planets, with the beginning of each stage a WantedPoster depicting the boss and the bounty reward.
397* The protagonist of ''VideoGame/ThreeTheHardWay'' works as one.
398* In [[VideoGame/TwistedMetal Twisted Metal 4]]: Quatro's ending reveals him to be this.
399--> '''Quatro''': I want nothing to do with your prize, Sweet Tooth! I came here only for the bounties on Calypso, Zombie, Grimm... and you.
400* ''VideoGame/VampireTheMasqueradeBloodlines'' has a small tree of sidequests where the player takes the role of Bounty Hunter while working for a somewhat sleazy bail bondsman in Santa Monica. Unusually, part of the quest line is finding out what happened to the bondman's regular bounty hunter, and then [[spoiler:freeing him from the basement where his quarry's murderer is torturing him]].
401* ''VideoGame/VermillionWatch: Order Zero'' sets up a rivalry between the (British) Watch and the (American) [=OZ=], a team of bounty hunters who prefer to go for "kill" rather than "capture". Conflict ensues when the player character realizes [=OZ's=] current target is linked to the [[ArcVillain Red Queen]], and keeps Dorothy from shooting her so she can be questioned.
402* ''VideoGame/VermintideII'': A possible career option for [[TheWitchHunter Victor Saltzpyre]]. Though squishier than a Witch Hunter Captain and less effective in melee combat, his talent toolkit centers around ranged attacks; he gets guaranteed critical hits and his ultimate ability has him shoot a SawedOffShotgun for colossal damage. If this class is chosen, [[spoiler:[[CharacterDevelopment it's the end result of Victor calling out his superiors in the Order of the Silver Hammer for covering up the existence of the Skaven and allowing them to run rampant instead of prioritizing them; though technically Victor remains a sanctioned Witch Hunter, he has taken matters into his own hands and begun funding a private war against the Skaven by collecting bounties and hunting down difficult targets for the coin.]]]]
403* Although ''VideoGame/WingCommanderPrivateer'' has AI pilots referred to as bounty hunters (and the PlayerCharacter occasionally takes on jobs with the label), the actual task is never to actually capture them, just shoot them down.[[note]]On the rare occasions a bounty mission target ejects, they only show up as generic pilots, and once you land, they're just regular slaves to sell.[[/note]]
404* ''VideoGame/Yakuza3'' has a sidequest that sees Kiryu called upon to aid the "Honest Living Association", an outreach program that helps former yakuza find gainful employment in their new civilian lives. The HLA is being targeted by hitmen called the "Reapers", thus do they task Kiryu with finding and capturing these hitmen in exchange for monetary rewards.
405[[/folder]]
406
407[[folder:Web Animation]]
408* ''WebAnimation/LoboWebseries'': The titular character hunts down aliens to get paid.
409* In ''WebAnimation/{{Shrapnel}}'', if there is a WantedPoster with your face on it, you can expect a so-called "Hunter Killer" to be on the lookout for you.
410* In ''WebAnimation/{{RWBY}}'', the Huntsmen and Huntresses are essentially an institutionalized version of this. After graduating from one of the four Huntsman Academies ([[MilitaryAcademy Atlas]], [[OutOfFocus Haven]], [[AcademyOfAdventure Beacon]] and [[TheSocialDarwinist Shade]]), licensed huntsmen can move freely between kingdoms and take contracts for pay. These contracts usually revolve around fighting [[AlwaysChaoticEvil Grimm]] or protecting settlements that lie outside the fortified kingdoms, but can also be minor jobs such as assisting local police or escorting schoolchildren. Atlas plays with it, since their graduates are ''strongly'' encouraged to join the military, but are technically free to act as they wish.
411[[/folder]]
412
413[[folder:Webcomics]]
414* ''Webcomic/{{Banished|2006}}'': Luger, who wants to claim the bounty on Rak's head.
415* ''Webcomic/TheCyantianChronicles'': Genoworks Exotica wants its creations back. This is their preferred method.
416** Mercial, though she doesn't work for Genoworks Exotica.
417* ''Webcomic/DreamCatcher'' Lunos' belief is that as a [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent werewolf demon]], this type of stuff is in his nature and is what he does best. Naturally, it's his job.
418* A Bounty Hunter picks up the girls' DistressCall in ''Webcomic/GirlsInSpace'' and tracks them back to Earth.
419* The Ambis Empire in the comic ''Webcomic/{{Jix}}'' has a lot of bounty hunters; however, the only two seen are Pratos (who is really named Aranis, Jix's cousin), and Maricax, both of whom hunted the main characters.
420* The title character of ''Webcomic/TheLegendOfLucy'' is a bounty hunting [[PigMan pig girl]], although multiple characters have pointed out her actions are more akin to that of a vigilante.
421* Ganji and Enor from ''[[Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick Order of the Stick]]''.
422* ''Webcomic/{{Plume}}'' has the bounty hunter known only as the Hunter, who, true to more realistic depictions of this trope, does more than just killing for money, working as a private investigator as well.
423* In ''Webcomic/{{Roza}}'', Esten appears to be this.
424* ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary'':
425** Doyt (and later Doyt-Haban). When the crew rescues some hostages, he explains the way to turn a profit. Ransoming them back to their families is wrong, but selling them to interested governments is fine.
426--->'''Tagon:''' That's actually a pretty fair idea, once you get used to the odd distinction.\
427'''[=DoytHaban=]:''' How is the distinction odd?\
428'''Tagon:''' It's ''not'' okay for us to sell a guy back to the people who love him, but it's ''just fine'' for us to sell him to a body politic that wants to ''incarcerate'' him or ''execute'' him?\
429'''[=DoytHaban=]:''' Bounty-hunting is like that.
430** The Toughs as a whole, given that they have a standing payment for killing attorney drones.
431* Clark and Tonya from ''[[http://www.shapequest.net Shape Quest]]'' are bounty hunters.
432* Feral in ''Webcomic/{{Strays}}''.
433* ''Webcomic/TwiceBlessed'': The comic [[http://www.twiceblessedcomic.com/?webcomic_post=2 starts]] with a room full of bounty hunters who are out for Cade's head.
434** It then follows up with close-ups of three of them: a pixie, a [[CigarChomper cigar]]-[[SmokingIsCool smoking]] kobold with a big gun, and a pair of drow twins. Any guesses on which bounty hunters from this group are going to be most relevant to the story?
435*** [[ShoutOut Bossk]]
436* ''Webcomic/WinterMoon'' takes place in an MMORPG. Florence is an extremely powerful mage that has managed to piss off almost every important high-level player in the game. So he regularly has players trying to kill him to collect the rewards on his head.
437* The crew of the Falconer in ''Webcomic/BinaryStars'' are bounty hunters InSpace. The main character ends up joining the crew after they kidnap her from her mother only to find out that she [[spoiler: used to be married to the captain and]] suffers IdentityAmnesia.
438[[/folder]]
439
440[[folder:Web Original]]
441* The web series ''WebVideo/{{Chapel}}'' has [[StealthPun Butch Sauft]], the man who originally caught Chapel. But [[PunchClockHero it wasn't personal]].
442-->'''Butch:''' Sorry I caught you.\
443'''Chapel:''' Sorry I ''ran.''
444* Elliot Bishop in ''Literature/ChronoHustle'' is a bounty hunter in the old west, in addition to working for the TRD.
445* In the web serial ''Literature/TheDreadEclipse'', [[{{MagicalSociety}} Ordo Arcanus]] is occasionally required to enlist the services of ''ratcatchers'' to capture rogue mages who escape to neutral territory in exchange for a hefty bounty. One of the protagonists, Caren, is a ratcatcher who's so dedicated to her job that she even turns in her con artist uncle for a measly six-hundred bucks.
446* ''Roleplay/TheGunganCouncil'', being in the ''Franchise/StarWars'' universe, has had tons of bounty hunters. Kane E. Smart is one of the more prolific and dedicated bounty hunters flying around, having faked his death for months in order to get a mark.
447* ''Literature/AHerosWar'': The official Order of Knights is run this way; instead of a ruler giving orders, they simply post bounties for the work they want done. Good for personal freedom, not so good for efficiency.
448* Mage-knights in ''Literature/VoidDomain'' are explicitly stated to work as bounty hunters on occasion. The mother of one of the main characters is a retired mage-knight.
449[[/folder]]
450
451[[folder:Western Animation]]
452* ''WesternAnimation/AdventuresOfTheGalaxyRangers'': Shane is accused of being this by his fellow Supertroopers, who went renegade while he stayed loyal to Earth. The truth is harsher; the only reason Earth ''didn't'' throw Shane in cryo or kill him was because of TakesOneToKillOne, and they wanted the others hunted down.
453* In an episode of ''WesternAnimation/AdventuresOfTheGummiBears'', [[BigBad Duke Igthorn]] hires the bounty hunter Flint Shrubwood, a CaptainErsatz of Creator/ClintEastwood's [[Film/DollarsTrilogy Man With No Name]]. He ended up turning on his client for welshing on his deal.
454* ''WesternAnimation/AmericanDragonJakeLong'' has an episode where Jake rants on a blog about how he'd pay a million dollars to get rid of his SadistTeacher. Countless magical bounty hunters reading the blog (trolls, cyclopses, wood nymphs, pixies etc.) think it's a legitimate bounty and go after the teacher, forcing Jake to protect him.
455* From ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'':
456** In the first season, Zuko hires a female bounty hunter named June to track down the heroes. She proved to be [[EnsembleDarkhorse unexpectedly popular]], which lead to a couple more appearances as an ally during the series finale.
457** Zuko also hires The Combustion Man in the third season. Though since he was only ordered to kill, makes him a hitman.
458** While it's technically not their job, Xin Fu and Yu, a pair of professional Earthbenders, were also hired to capture Toph and return her to her parents (serving the role but never being called bounty hunters), but they had no experience bounty hunting. Xin Fu, however is willing to sell anyone out to the Fire Nation, because they pay more. This is one reason they were so unsuccessful at capturing and returning her. The other reason is that Toph Bei Fong is just too badass to be contained. [[ItMakesSenseInContext Not even by metal]].
459* In the ''WesternAnimation/BatmanTheAnimatedSeries'' episode "Showdown", the real hero of the story is Jonah Hex, a cynical [[TheWestern Wild West]] bounty hunter with a hideously scarred face and gruff manners that hide his heroism.
460* ''WesternAnimation/Ben10'' has several, such as siblings [=SixSix=], [=SevenSeven=], and [=EightEight=], the [[WeCanRebuildHim cyborg]] crab alien Krabb, and the GoodAllAlong Tetrax.
461* ''WesternAnimation/BountyHamster''. Marion the hamster and The Horse With No Name (a double spoof, on Creator/ClintEastwood's [[NoNameGiven Man With No Name]] along with the song by the band America).
462* Baba Ghanoush -- a parody of Boba Fett -- who appears in several episodes of ''WesternAnimation/{{Dogstar}}'' (and turns out to be Gemma's uncle).
463* Skeletor hires two bounty hunters to capture He-man in ''WesternAnimation/HeManAndTheMastersOfTheUniverse2002''. If nothing else, they were a lot more competent than his usual minions.
464* ''WesternAnimation/MaoMaoHeroesOfPureHeart'' gives us [[PunnyName Tanya Keys]], a mischievous, shapeshifting Tanuki FemmeFatale with a lust for gold and a rather turbulent history with Mao Mao.
465* ''WesternAnimation/MyDadTheBountyHunter'': As the title indicates, the series is about two kids discovering their dad is an intergalactic bounty hunter. The first episode opens with him on the job, tracking down a bail jumper.
466* Dale in ''WesternAnimation/KingOfTheHill'' becomes a bounty hunter after a one day class.
467* Nick Logan, the main character of ''WesternAnimation/RoswellConspiraciesAliensMythsAndLegends'' starts out as a bounty hunter. He gets pulled into the Alliance when one of his marks turns out to be a lycanthrope.
468* ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack'' has faced many bounty hunters due to a high reward on his head set by Aku; a good part of why Jack is such a badass is because ever since arriving in the future, his already considerable skills have been tested and improved upon by constant surprise attacks by seasoned bounty hunters. In one episode, Jack faced 6 highly-skilled bounty hunters all at once, and they'd even had a fair bit of lead time to plan out and prepare a multi-pronged trap. [[CurbStompBattle They went down easily in less than a minute]]. After it was over, Jack just kept on walking as if nothing had happened. Another episode revolves around an encounter with two of these on a train; it laters turns out the pair are a former married couple, and [[SouthernBelle the female hunter]] very nearly succeeded in capturing Jack.
469* Homer Simpson and Ned Flanders once became bounty hunters on ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons''.
470* In ''WesternAnimation/SpacePOP'', Geela hires a bounty hunter named Khang to capture the girls and retrieve the Ring of Grock.
471* ''WesternAnimation/StarVsTheForcesOfEvil'' gives us [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast Rasticore Chaosus Disastorvayne]], a former monster soldier and bounty hunter hired by Miss Heinous to destroy Star and Marco. [[spoiler: He gets [[OneHitKill One Shotted]] by their Quest Buy card.]]
472* ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheCloneWars'' gives us Cad Bane. That particular season was actually prolifically advertised for the inclusion of lots of bounty hunters.
473* ''WesternAnimation/TransformersAnimated'' brings us Lockdown, who [[OrganTheft takes parts of his quarry]] [[CreepySouvenir as trophies]] before turning them over to his employer. PsychoForHire with a dash of creepiness to boot.
474-->'''Lockdown:''' Some 'bots are in it for the glory, some for the adventure, some even actually believe in the "cause." Me, I'm in it for the upgrades.
475* The ''WesternAnimation/WanderOverYonder'' episode "The Waste of Time" reveals that Sylvia was working as a bounty hunter when she first met Wander... in fact, he was her quarry at the time! We have yet to see exactly [[NoodleIncident how Sylvia went from]] [[HeelFaceTurn trying to turn Wander in for a reward to being his best friend and travel companion]].
476** In an earlier episode, “The Bounty” has Lord Hater hire three bounty hunters to capture Wander and Sylvia, with Commander Peepers trying to sabotage them so he can keep his job.
477[[/folder]]
478
479[[folder:Real Life]]
480* Bounty fishing is sometimes used as a way of encouraging fishermen to help control the population of an invasive species that threatens to overwhelm the local ecosystem. Pikeminnows (in the Pacific Northwest's Columbia River) and lionfish (in the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean) have both been subjected to this in the United States.
481* Today, civilian bounty hunting is legally practiced only in 44 states in the United States of America (Illinois, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Oregon, and Wisconsin do not have private bail systems) and its former colony, the Philippines. Though it should be noted that modern bounty hunting is a very different practice than in the old days. In the United States a bounty hunter is usually under contract with a bail bondsman and can't work without their sanction. The US and the Philippines are the only countries which allow for corporations to make bail on behalf of criminals, which means that a) many more people in America can make bail, and thus b) more people in America skip bail than the police can handle on their own; also bail in America can get ludicrously expensive, which makes bounty hunting a lucrative career. Most states also require strict licensing and training for bounty hunters, and a few states ban bounty hunting entirely. And of course, "dead or alive" bounties are completely illegal. A bounty hunter who killed their quarry would have to face a lot of questions from the police and could easily find themselves blacklisted in the bail bondsman industry for it (especially since killing the bounty would mean the bail bondsmen wouldn't be getting their money back). As it is, unlike law enforcement they don't have quasi-immunity and can be much more easily sued or prosecuted for any excessive force against fugitives.
482** Speaking of the Philippines, bounty hunting made a comeback in the middle of TheNewTens, especially after the election of President Rodrigo Duterte in 2016, and [[https://www.sunstar.com.ph/article/74740/Business/Osmea-to-give-P50000-for-every-drug-lord-killed it looked a lot more]] like the classic [[WantedPoster "dead or alive"]] style.
483* Bounty hunters do exist somewhat like they are portrayed in fiction over in the Middle East; most of the detainees in Guantanamo Bay came from [[http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15361458/page/2/ these guys.]] At least some have been alleged to be innocent, rounded up due to {{mistaken identity}} or just false accusations by enemies that they are terrorists.
484* [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domino_Harvey Domino Harvey]], whose real life story is significantly more unique than the cliche Hollywood turned her into.
485* [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dog_the_bounty_hunter Dog the Bounty Hunter]] is probably the most famous contemporary example, in no small part thanks to his [[Series/DogTheBountyHunter hit reality TV show]].
486* The Bounty Hunter monster truck is a top monster truck that is owned by Jimmy Creten out of Tonganoxie, Kansas as part of his 2Xtreme Racing team. The truck is well known for being a fiercely competitive truck with a large amount of horsepower that is difficult to defeat in racing. Despite this, Jimmy and the Bounty Hunter advanced to the final round of racing in the Monster Jam World Finals 6 times. But only won 1 out of all 6 of the times in 2019.
487* A Bug Bounty Program is a type of bounty for programmers to deal with bugs and exploits, in which the Bug Bounty Hunters search for the bugs with their programming skills and resolve them for a reward.
488* In post-UDI [[UsefulNotes/{{Zimbabwe}} Rhodesia]], faced with attack from guerrilas against cattle, the government took at giving to mercenaries a daily wage of R$7, with a bounty of R$ 750 for each caught rustler.
489* In societies were slavery was legal, slave catchers were tasked with capturing escaped slaves in order to take them back to their owners for a reward.
490* Before the creation of modern police in England, there were the thief takers, who tracked down and captured criminals for a reward. This system suffered from deep corruption though. Some thief takers such as Jonathan Wylde (who styled himself "Thief Taker General") were major underworld figures themselves, taking bribes to '''not''' apprehend certain criminals, blackmailing people whom they discovered compromising information on due to their connections, while turning in rivals. Others outright [[FrameUp framed people]] to take the reward. These scandals led to the abolition of the thief takers and the (eventual) creation of Scotland Yard, then more police forces around the country (though naturally they had [[DirtyCop corruption problems]] at times too).
491[[/folder]]

Top