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10[[quoteright:350:[[WesternAnimation/BeautyAndTheBeast https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/egomaniac_hunter_1.png]]]]
11[[caption-width-right:350:"I use antlers in all of my decorating!"]]
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16->''"Hunting was his love. He made it a practice never to let a day go by without killing something. It didn't much matter what."''
17-->-- ''Literature/ThePrincessBride''
18
19This guy just loves to hunt. He doesn't do it for food, or because [[HunterOfMonsters his prey is a danger to mankind]], not even because ItsPersonal. He will hunt anything that tickles his fancy and he does it for [[BloodKnight the thrill and the glory]] [[ItsAllAboutMe and self-gratification]]. He is an adventurer and egomaniac.
20
21He doesn't shoot ducks over a pond; his prey has to live far, far away in a most dangerous and uncomfortable location and be hard to find, impressive looking, and immensely powerful. Great cats, large sea creatures, elephants, and crocodiles as well as birds of prey come to mind. If the author is more fantastically inclined, he can let the Egomaniac Hunter go after dragons, dinosaurs [[note]]Non-avian ones, that is[[/note]], phoenixes, unicorns, you name it.
22
23Sometimes, the Egomaniac Hunter even goes after [[SlidingScaleOfAnthropomorphism anthropomorphic animals]], despite or even [[HuntingTheMostDangerousGame as a direct result of]] knowing that they are sapient. This is typically played off as BlackComedy, but may also be PlayedForDrama as a ''very'' uncomfortable yet chillingly logical conclusion to WhatMeasureIsANonHuman.
24
25[[VillainByDefault This character isn't very likable in modern renditions.]] His (and it's almost always a man) usual traits include some of these: [[ItsAllAboutMe selfishness]], [[LeeroyJenkins recklessness]], [[TriggerHappy trigger-happiness]], [[PoliticallyIncorrectVillain racism]] and [[{{Pride}} arrogance]]. Older works show him in a [[GreatWhiteHunter more favorable light]], but often, he's seen as decadent by them, too. Extra points for striking the CaptainMorganPose over his fallen victim, having a [[TrophyRoom gallery of rare trophies]], [[GloryHound endangering others in his hunts]], gleefully shooting something that everyone knows is the [[LastOfHisKind last of its kind]] just so he can have it mounted and stuffed, or [[HuntingTheMostDangerousGame chasing sapient game.]]
26
27He is usually European or American (perhaps with an occasional AwesomeAussie or AmoralAfrikaner thrown in for flavour), but he can have any real or fictional ethnicity.
28
29He provides contrast to reasonable or {{anvilicious}}ly eco-sensitive heroes; he can bring danger to the group, die a funny death, or just be the hero's employer whom he brings along for the ride. This character type also commonly appears in Horror or Adventure films where the antagonist is some kind of huge, dangerous animal or monster.
30
31Because [[DesignatedVillain Hunters Are Evil]], he will sooner or later break the law to be able to continue with the killing and become an EvilPoacher, provided, of course, he isn't already one.
32
33Subtrope of ClassicalHunter and InHarmsWay.
34
35For the heroic counterpart, see GreatWhiteHunter. For an appropriate fantasy or sci-fi analogue, see ProudHunterRace. If they are so successful as to wipe out an entire species, they may cross over into TheGreatExterminator.
36
37Despite the name and his personality, not to be confused with [[Wrestling/TripleH pro wrestler Triple H]], who was previously known as Hunter Hearst Helmsley.
38----
39!!Examples:
40
41[[foldercontrol]]
42
43[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
44* In ''Manga/WolfGuyWolfenCrest'', Haguro becomes this after Inugami beats him up for the first time. His prey? [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent Inugami]].
45* Garza in ''Manga/ZatchBell'' is a first notch hunter from Africa, and nearly uses his skills along with Baransha's spells to defeat Zatch and Kiyo, which would have been the main duo's first defeat.
46[[/folder]]
47
48[[folder:Comic Books]]
49* ''ComicBook/GreenArrow'': Green Arrow's foe Big Game.
50* One of a series of comics based on the [[Ride/DisneyThemeParks Disneyland]] attraction ''Ride/TheHauntedMansion'' had an adventurer named Lord Dunswallop who enjoyed hunting and killing various monsters with his bare hands. Along with his biographer, he heads to the eponymous mansion to catch one of the barrel fisted "Gracy Ghasts" for his trophy collection. When asked by the biographer how he intends to strangle ghosts since they are incorporeal, Lord Dunswallop reveals that he has taken some poison and intends to return to his body later. In an AndThenJohnWasAZombie moment, after leaving his body and entering the grand hall, he is greeted by the ghosts with glee for they now have ghost #992, leaving the biographer unemployed and forced to drag Dunswallop's now dead body with him.
51* The Colonel who appears in ''ComicBook/LadyMechanika'' #0. His employer is not impressed when he kills the target rather than capturing it alive.
52* The version of Priscilla Rich in ''ComicBook/TheLegendOfWonderWoman2016'' is a hunter who loves killing and has her home covered in furs and taxidermy from her hunts. She's also fond of killing humans and gleefully allied herself with the Nazis.
53* ''ComicBook/LegionOfSuperHeroes'': Otto Orion, a.k.a. the Hunter, captured the Legion and subjected them to a HuntingTheMostDangerousGame scenario in ''ComicBook/AdventureComics'' #358. His son Adam later adopted his father's alias and M.O. and attempted to avenge his father, eventually becoming a member of [[LegionOfDoom the Legion of Supervillains]].
54* ''Franchise/MarvelUniverse'': Cosmic Villain The Obliterator. An Elder of the Universe, he obtained immortality by being monomaniacally obsessed with one thing -- in his case, killing. He is the last member of his own species, as he hunted them all down and killed them one by one (by his own admission, twenty billion of them). He has exterminated huge numbers of worlds in the five billion years of his existence -- one living creature at a time.
55* ''ComicBook/Robin1993'': Jaeger.
56* ''ComicBook/SpiderMan'': This is basically the driving motif of Kraven the Hunter. He's a legendary hunter of dangerous animals who decided to come to New York and hunt Spidey down to challenge himself. Able to hunt down and kill everything and anything up until he gets to Spider-Man; this ''sole'' failure is what ends up having him obsessively spend lifetimes hunting after Spidey as a result.
57* ''ComicBook/SwampThing'': UpperClassTwit and uber-jackass Maximillian Ramhoff from Will Pfeiffer's brief run was one of these; he makes a habit of hunting the rarest creatures possible and making elaborate trophies just because. For instance, he not only kills the last California Condor, he ''eats'' it. He also killed the Yeti, has a stuffed thunder lizard, made a coat out of the skunk ape, and sets his sights on Swamp Thing as the plot moves forward.
58* ''ComicBook/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtlesMirage'': Minor antagonist Jack Marlin, from the original Mirage comic books, initially plays the trope completely straight. His animated counterpart, on the other hand, is simultaneously more nutters and more affable than most examples of the trope.
59[[/folder]]
60
61[[folder:Comic Strips]]
62* ''ComicStrip/ModestyBlaise'': In "The Killing Game", Modesty and Willie are abducted by the BigBad Kromm, who runs an exclusive (and illegal) club for egomaniac hunters. And who has decided to step up to HuntingTheMostDangerousGame, and believes that Modesty and Willie would provide the perfect challenge.
63[[/folder]]
64
65[[folder:Fan Works]]
66* The Interceptor from ''Fanfic/TheLionKingAdventures'' most certainly qualifies. His game, of course, is [[HuntingTheMostDangerousGame other lions, particularly cubs]]. Not that he doesn't enjoy a tasty mouse every now and then as well...
67* The Hunter, naturally, in ''Fanfic/WithStringsAttached''. He walks in an aura of arrogant self-love and superiority. The four utterly detest him... [[spoiler:at least until he has a HeelFaceTurn and undergoes CharacterDevelopment.]]
68[[/folder]]
69
70[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
71* Gaston from ''WesternAnimation/BeautyAndTheBeast'', as seen in the page image, plays this character type completely straight. "''I use antlers in all of my decorating!''"
72** Apparently, one of the deer heads on his wall was meant to be a cameo of ''WesternAnimation/{{Bambi}}''[='=]s mom, which led Creator/{{Disney}} fans to suggest that [[{{Fanon}} he was the hunter who shot her]].
73* ''WesternAnimation/ChillOutScoobyDoo:'' Alphonse [=LaFleur=] is a boastful professional hunter obsessed with bagging the Abominable Snowman but suffers scores of AmusingInjuries in the process. He tricks Shaggy and Scooby into accompanying him to serve as "the bait no monster can refuse." That being said, most to all of his traps are non-lethal ones (indicating he plans to take the monster alive), and he abandons his hunt after believing that the Snowman may have saved his life.
74* Victor Quatermaine from ''WesternAnimation/TheCurseOfTheWereRabbit''. The fact that he is single-mindedly obsessed with shooting fluffy bunnies probably doesn't say much about his big game hunting skills.
75* Grimmel the Grisly from ''WesternAnimation/HowToTrainYourDragonTheHiddenWorld'' is an arrogant, cunning, tenacious, ruthlessly pragmatic, [[FantasticRacism dragon-hating]] hunter who eliminated all the Night Fury dragons... except for one called Toothless. Described as a single-minded predator who loves getting under the skin of his prey and [[TheChessmaster pulling their strings]], Grimmel will do anything to [[FinalSolution finish the job]], even if it means murdering fellow humans.
76* Captain [=DuBois=] in ''WesternAnimation/Madagascar3EuropesMostWanted'' is supposed to be an Animal Control officer but in-practice is an insane animal-killing huntress whose goal is to kill Alex and mount his head on her wall, which includes an insane amount of animal heads (including housecats and dogs).
77* Shaw from ''WesternAnimation/OpenSeason'' is this to ''twistedly insane levels''. He's a paranoid, violent sociopath who shows no regard for any life other than his own and is thus a selfish, vain, evil, egotistical, pompous, and greedy man. This is proved by the sadistic and heartless way in which he's mounted many animals in the forest on his cabin wall and how he drove his truck recklessly to try and kill Elliot, nearly hitting several people along the way. He also shows no regard for the law: hunting in a national park (before the hunting season actually begins), and even going as far as attempting to ''fire his gun in a crowd''. Shaw also has a bizarre love for his hunting gun called "[[ICallItVera Lorraine]]" and even seems to believe it to be sentient, talking to it and even offering it a blanket so it wouldn't be cold. To top his ego off, Shaw seems to develop the paranoid belief that animals are becoming as smart as humans and are plotting a rebellion to overthrow mankind and TakeOverTheWorld.
78* [[EvilPoacher Percival McLeach]] from ''WesternAnimation/TheRescuersDownUnder'' is probably one of the most sadistic versions of this character type. Besides hunting down an endangered eagle just because he can, he regularly skins animals for fun.
79* Clayton, the villain from ''Disney's WesternAnimation/{{Tarzan}}'' is an arrogant, rude and selfish hunter who acts like a guide to Professor Porter and his daughter Jane. His secret goal is to capture wild gorillas and sell them to zoos and circuses for profit, but he's also very eager to shoot Kerchak. Creator/BrianBlessed [[EvilIsHammy puts on a very hammy performance]] for the role.
80* Charles Muntz from ''WesternAnimation/{{Up}}'' used to be a BoldExplorer, but his failure to capture the giant bird of Paradise Falls drove him mad. As a FallenHero, he stayed at Paradise Falls and pursued the giant bird for, apparently, ''six decades''.
81[[/folder]]
82
83[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
84* Colonel Brock in the horror film ''Film/{{Alligator}}''.
85* In ''Film/TheBeastMustDie'', a rich hunter invites several people to his mansion for a weekend so he can determine which one of them is a werewolf and shoot it.
86* Virginia in ''Film/ConfessionsOfAPsychoCat'' who, on being denied permission to leave the country to go on big game safari in Africa, instead decides to start HuntingTheMostDangerousGame. From the little we see and hear, her brother Anderson seems nearly as bad, but at least restricts his hunting to actual animals.
87* The BigBad Morgan from ''Film/CryWilderness'', who is very proud of his achievements in big game hunting and later relishes in the fame he'll get for taking down Bigfoot.
88* Crazed hunter extraordinaire Danton Vachs in ''Film/DeathRing''. Every year he holds a contest where people can purchase the right to [[HuntingTheMostDangerousGame hunt down and kill a human being]].
89* ''Film/{{The Ghost and the Darkness}}'', subverted. Both Val Kilmer and Michael Douglas play "{{Great White Hunter}}s" that fit several of the stereotypes listed. Arrogant, glory-seeking adventurers that don't hunt for food. One's even world-famous for hunting. However, both are very sympathetic characters. Val Kilmer's character is surprisingly personable and warm, a family man who reaches out to all around him, high and low, and Michael Douglas' character, who is world-famous for his exploits, actually doesn't like hunting but does it as an escape from memories of the family he lost.
90* In ''Film/IntoTheGrizzlyMaze'', Douglass believes he is the best hunter in the woods, and the only one capable of hunting down and killing the rogue grizzly. He is especially contemptuous towards to anyone connected to conservation and environmentalism, like Beckett and Michelle.
91* TriggerHappy [[PunnyName Van Pelt]] from ''Film/{{Jumanji}}'', [[HuntingTheMostDangerousGame who is hunting down Alan]], has the obsession and personality of an Egomaniac Hunter.
92* ''Franchise/JurassicPark'':
93** Roland Tembo from ''Film/TheLostWorldJurassicPark'' [[DesignatedVillain is portrayed as being this]], but most of his actions really show he's more of a GreatWhiteHunter. ''"Somewhere on this island is the greatest predator this world has ever known. The second greatest must hunt it down."'' Once the dinos escaped, he focuses on trying to keep people alive, [[DesignatedHero even the idiots]] [[ProtagonistCenteredMorality responsible for releasing the dinos and endangering everyone in the first place]].
94** Ken Wheatley from ''Film/JurassicWorldFallenKingdom'', is a straighter example, and acts as a {{Foil}} to Tembo. While Tembo is working for [=InGen=] in exchange for the opportunity to hunt the fearsome game to ever live, Wheatley is clearly only in it for the money and constantly reminds his employers about his bonus. And while Tembo makes sure his men are holding up and is extremely distraught when his long-time hunting partner is killed, [[BadBoss Wheatley is shown to care more about his paycheck than his men]]. He also proves to be far more incompetent than Tembo and [[spoiler:ends up brutally killed after entering the cage of a seemingly tranqed ''Indoraptor'' to pull out one of its teeth for his collection [[TooDumbToLive without actually checking to see if it was really tranqed]]]].
95* In ''Film/TheLostWorld1998'', John Roxton is [[AdaptationalVillainy far more smug and trigger happy than he was in the source material]], as well as exceptionally greedy.
96* The villain from the John Leguizamo film ''Film/ThePest''.
97* The [[VillainBasedFranchise titular stars]] of the ''Franchise/{{Predator}}'' series are [[PlanetOfHats a culture based around this trope]]. The movies imply, and the ExpandedUniverse states, that their whole society revolves around each individual member striving to earn greater status by gathering trophies. It's a civilisation built on the prospect of going out into the universe in search of the most impressive and dangerous alien lifeforms that can be found, killing them, and coming back with their skins, bones, horns, tusks, fangs, claws, pelts, and anything else that can make an appropriate trophy, and their (centuries-long, it's implied) life is devoted to accumulating ever-greater bragging rights via this method. While they do have something of a code of honor, that code is devoted solely to ensuring that the sport is "fair" -- never kill pregnant quarry (lest there be no new targets to hunt) -- and they are less braggadocious than is usually associated with this trope, they otherwise match it perfectly. They even deliberately spread one of the most dangerous alien lifeforms in their universe, the [[Franchise/{{Alien}} Xenomorph]], to other worlds, simply because it's one of their favorite hunting trophies.
98** ''Film/ThePredator'' reveals another motive besides pride. [[spoiler:The Yautja harvest the genetic material of their quarry from the trophies they collect. They then use advanced genetic engineering technology to upgrade themselves with said genetic material. The humans discover this when analyzing the blood of a captive Yautja reveals '''human''' genetic material in it. The culmination of this genetic enhancement is the Ultimate Predator, a Yautja who dwarfs his classic counterpart. The Ultimate Predator is so tough and strong that he doesn't need armor or advanced weapons to tear apart the other armed and armored Yautja in less than a minute. At the end of the movie the Ultimate Predator takes Rory because his ability to figure out how to use Yautja technology and decipher their language (remember he's a ''child'') means his genetic material is worth harvesting.]]
99* In ''Film/SandsOfTheKalahari'', Brian O'Brien is a big game hunter and the best survivalist of the group. Thinking his own chances will be improved by the absence of competition, he ruthlessly seeks to eliminate his fellow survivors, one by one, intending to leave only Grace Monckton alive, an "Eve" for his "Adam."
100* In ''Film/SlaveGirlsFromBeyondInfinity'', Zed has dedicated himself to hunting, believing it to greatest accomplishment a man can achieve. Having hunted the most dangerous beasts the galaxy has to offer, he has now turned to HuntingTheMostDangerousGame.
101* In ''Film/TheSuckers'', Steve Vandemeer is a big-game hunter who has grown tired of stalking and killing animals, and so decides to start HuntingTheMostDangerousGame: humans.
102* In ''Film/{{Walkabout}}'' two white hunters on a jeep shoot a buffalo and leave it to rot, much to the grief of the Aborigine boy who watches it happen.
103* The film director played by Clint Eastwood in ''Film/WhiteHunterBlackHeart'', who goes to Africa ostensibly to shoot a movie but is actually monomaniacally obsessed with shooting an elephant.
104* In ''Film/TheWolfman2010'' Sir John Talbot knows how to use his hunting weapons and is shown wearing various animal coats and showing off plenty stuffed animals in his manor, proving to be this trope. [[spoiler:This passion of his eventually lead to his doom when during a hunting trip in India, he got bitten by a feral boy with lycanthropy]].
105[[/folder]]
106
107[[folder:Literature]]
108* Another heroic (albeit mildly buffoonish) example is Ned Land from ''Literature/TwentyThousandLeaguesUnderTheSea''. He is portrayed as greedy and destructive, though, in contrast to the more scientific-minded Arronax. That might be because he's Canadian, though.
109* Julian from ''Literature/TheChroniclesOfAmber'' combines this with being an EvilPrince.
110* The ''Literature/ClassicSingaporeHorrorStories'' short, "The White Tiger of Kilimanjaro", has its two leads, a pair of retired policemen-turned-hunters, travelling to the Indonesian jungles to hunt a mystical white tiger (who supposedly has sacred powers) for sport, even gunning down several of the local wildlife for no reason other than for fun (at one point, shooting a pregnant baboon and blasting the baby on her shoulders -- and congratulating each other for being a good shot). [[spoiler:It bites them back ''hard'' when they encounter the sacred white tiger near the end]].
111* [[TheWildHunt Herne the Hunter]] in ''Literature/TheDarkIsRising'' is an odd case because he is, arguably, a ''good guy''.
112* ''Literature/{{Darksaber}}'': Drom Guldi is a mine owner who goes on a very dangerous wampa hunt and even as the creatures gain the advantage over them and are prepared to kill the hunting party, he still displays some preoccupation with having failed to get the pelts of the ones he killed. That being said he does show some concern for the others while calmly acknowledging the near-certainty of his own demise at the hands of the creatures he came to hunt.
113* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'': Mustrum Ridcully is quite heroic, but a fiend for hunting and fishing. According to ''Literature/LordsAndLadies'', "Mustrum Ridcully did a lot for rare species. For one thing, he kept them rare."
114* Lord Cockswain, the SteamPunk adventurer who massacres the rare game of Venus in ''Doctor Grordbort's Contrapulatronic Dingus Directory''. At the end of his illustrated journal, we see Cockswain's living room full of the mounted heads of his game, [[FantasticRacism including his alien guide]].
115* The members of the ironically named "Endangered Dangerous Species Society" in the ''Series/DoctorWho'' novel ''The Doctor Trap'' (including Lord Percy, a parody of the GreatWhiteHunter). And Sebastiene, who invites them to Planet 1 to [[HuntingTheMostDangerousGame hunt the Doctor]].
116* A very common personality trait among ''Literature/TheDraka''. A short story set in the Drakaverse by Creator/HarryTurtledove has the Domination's [[BadassArmy army]] restricted from using nuclear weapons on an American holdout because its leader wants to keep the area as a nature reserve after the war.
117* Dieter in ''[[Literature/KateShugak Hunter's Moon]]''. He is the CEO of a German company who forces his executive team to accompany him on a hunting expedition in the Alaskan wilderness. His stated goal is to bag a record antler rack, and Kate is disgusted when he only takes the head of the moose he kills, refusing to pack the meat out with him.
118* Creator/IanFleming's ''Literature/JamesBond'' short story "[[Literature/ForYourEyesOnly The Hildebrand Rarity]]" features one Milton Krest, a loathsome filthy rich 'Ugly American' who rounds up rare animals for scientific groups as a tax write-off on his massive yacht. He tends to collect his quarry by bribing local officials, throwing too much money to resist at owners, and in the case of the title fish, poisoning a section of lagoon, killing everything in the area.
119* ''Literature/{{Illuminatus}}'' sidequest: [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast Smiling Jim Trepomena]] is out to get famous for killing the last American Eagle. He succeeds...partly. [[FameThroughInfamy He doesn't get the credit.]])
120* ''Literature/IntoTheDrowningDeep'': [[UnholyMatrimony Jacques and Michi]] are some of the most infamous big-game hunters in the world, not least for having shot critically endangered species simply because they wanted to. They're literally [[InLoveWithYourCarnage aroused by killing things]] and are treated like [[PsychoForHire Psychos For Hire]] by the rest of the characters, [[spoiler:rightly so, as Jacques admits they've both murdered people who got in the way of their hunts.]]
121* ''Literature/LifesLittleInstructionBook'' looks down on men who think that this is how to show their manhood:
122-->'''289.''' Find some other way of proving your manhood than by shooting defenseless animals and birds.
123* He's not seen actually hunting, but Juan Puneta in ''Literature/{{Mass}}'' otherwise fits this trope; TheNarrator Pepe visits him in his fancy house with tiger-skins on his floor and an elephant rifle.
124* General Zaroff from the short story (and later movie) "Literature/TheMostDangerousGame". Interestingly, the hero he tries to kill is a GreatWhiteHunter.
125* A [[GenderInvertedTrope gender-inverted example]] is Hunter from ''Literature/{{Neverwhere}}''. However, other than her obsession with hunting rare and powerful monsters ([[spoiler:and for this reason, she betrays the party in exchange for a spear with which to kill the Beast of London]]), she's an extremely professional and reticent fighter and bodyguard and doesn't showcase any of the other personality foibles that tend to go along with this trope.
126* Prince Humperdink from ''Literature/ThePrincessBride''.
127* Suruk The Slayer from ''Literature/SpaceCaptainSmith'' and its sequels.
128* ''Literature/SherlockHolmes'': Sebastian Moran, Moriarty's right-hand man, apparently does a lot of this on the side. His biography in Holmes's index includes 'Author of "Heavy Game of the Western Himalayas".'
129* ''Literature/TheSilmarillion'' gives a surprisingly early example of this trope being portrayed in a negative light -- and not because the author disapproves of hunting either. Celegorm, son of Fëanor, fits this trope quite well. For starters, his name literally means "quick riser": a reference to his quick temper. He was the favorite of the [[ClassicalHunter Vala Oromë]] back in Valinor. While in his younger days he appeared to be a half-way decent character, by the time he appears in the story proper he's a selfish and power-hungry {{Jerkass}}. He is one of only two elves ever shown contemplating a forced marriage, and only doesn't go through with it because the girl escapes. While he isn't on the side of the Dark Lord, he manages to do almost as much damage to TheHeroes as he: the Second Kinslaying, involving the invasion and sacking of Doriath, was his idea. Oh, yes, and despite being an excellent hunter he conspicuously doesn't bother trying to find and rescue his own brother from the BigBad. Celegorm even has the gall to object when Maedhros abdicates in favor of the father of the guy who DID rescue him. He'll "hunt" almost anything: the Silmarils, Lúthien, his cousin's throne, his own dog even. Except that when there's an actual monster to hunt, Carcharoth the werewolf, Celegorm is nowhere to be seen. Tolkien started to write the start where Celegorm first appears in the 1920s, although he originally wrote it in verse and titled it "The Lay of Leithian". But Celegorm is one of the few characters who is completely unchanged between the first drafts and the final version: a notable fact given Tolkien's habit of rewriting his work.
130[[/folder]]
131
132[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
133* In Season 2 ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'', Buffy'' meets a werewolf hunter who fits this trope, except for selling the werewolf pelts. He runs away after she bends the barrel of his gun like a [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything limp noodle]].
134* Captain Cook from the ''Series/DoctorWho'' serial "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS25E4TheGreatestShowInTheGalaxy The Greatest Show in the Galaxy]]" seems to qualify. We never actually see him hunting, but he bores everyone with his 'tales of glory' and had no problem with enslaving a sentient being he captured on one of his expeditions and using her for his own ends.
135* The killer in the ''Series/FatherBrown'' episode "The Lair of the Libertines" is ultimately revealed to be this.
136* ''Series/FrontierCircus'': Duke Felix Otway in "The Race". He travels the world trophy hunting. He also regards himself as a '[[TheCollector hunter of men]]', which is what sets the plot in motion.
137* There is a General Zaroff parody ("Hans Hunter," played by Harold Gould) in the ''Series/GetSmart'' episode "Island of the Darned".
138* ''Series/TheGoodies''. "Dodonuts" has Tim and Graeme as leaders of the Endangered Species Club who hunt down endangered species, including a dodo protected by conservationist Bill Oddie. HilarityEnsues.
139** It's even funnier when you know that Bill Oddie is an enthusiastic ornithologist and conservation activist in real life.
140* Michael Sutton from ''Series/TheIncredibleHulk1977'' episode "The Snare". He brings Banner to his private island in order to hunt an intelligent man...and becomes even more interested when he learns said man sometimes turns into a monster.
141* Hank and Roy Spim from ''Series/MontyPythonsFlyingCircus'' parody this trope in that they hunt little bugs like mosquitos... with assault rifles, machine guns, and bazookas.
142* ''Series/{{Neverwhere}}''. See Literature above.
143* The ''Series/NightGallery'' episode "Clean Kills and Other Trophies" centers around an aging, arrogant trophy hunter who bullies his soft-hearted son into participating in a deer hunt. This being ''Night Gallery'', karma catches up to him by the end of the episode.
144* Sir Malcolm Murray of ''Series/PennyDreadful'' starts out as the GreatWhiteHunter but the further the audience learns of him it's apparent that he's a deconstruction of the character archetype and comes to resemble this trope more closely. He's butchered and raped his way across Africa. He's mentioned having lured predatory lions into ambushes with dead lambs in favor the more sporting action of stalking them down. And in his quest for glory [[spoiler:left behind his son Peter to die to continue the journey. When his son's dying wish was to have a mountain named after him Malcolm instead upon discovery of the territory named it after himself.]]
145* The Bill Brasky sketches from ''Series/SaturdayNightLive'' paint Brasky as one, possibly less "egomaniac" than just plain ''[[AxCrazy maniac]]''. He's hunted down and killed all of Series/TheBananaSplits with a machete and killed Creator/WolfmanJack with a trident. Interestingly the one time he's mentioned as having hunted a non-human creature, a deer, he merely captured it and then forced it to say his name by manipulating its lips with his hands.
146* ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'': The Hirogen are [[PlanetOfHats a species]] of Egomaniac Hunters. One of them threatens to remove Seven of Nine's intestines as a trophy, as "Unusual relics are prized. Yours will make me envied by men and pursued by women." Seven, who rivals the Hirogen in the big ego stakes, is unimpressed.
147[[/folder]]
148
149[[folder:Music]]
150* Music/TheBeatles satirize this character type in their song "The Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill" from Music/TheWhiteAlbum.
151* Parodied by Music/TomLehrer in ''Music/SongsByTomLehrer'' with "The Hunting Song," in which all his prizes turn out to be [[HuntingTheMostDangerousGame game wardens and hunters]] (plus a cow).
152* "Little bunny Foo-Foo, hopping through the forest, [[ForTheEvulz scooping up the field mice and bopping 'em on the head...]]"
153* The video for ''CNR'' by Music/WeirdAlYankovic features Charles Nelson Reilley charging head-long at a bull moose and killing it with a roundhouse kick to the face. The next shot is of his trophy room, which features a menagerie of animals he's killed with his bare hands.
154[[/folder]]
155
156[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
157* Bwana, a villain from one of the ''TabletopGame/{{Champions}}'' supplements.
158* ''TabletopGame/DisneyVillainsVictorious'': The Elite Global Huntsmans Club is made up of every hunter-type character in animated movies (Clayton, Gaston, Cruella de Vil, Charles Muntz...) who live on Muntz' zeppelin.
159* Malar, god of the hunt in the ''TabletopGame/ForgottenRealms'', is a bloodthirsty brute who's the patron of evil lycanthropes and serial killers.
160* The ''TabletopGame/{{Planescape}}'' D&D setting had Adamok Ebon, a rare female example (who's also an assassin who works for the thrill instead of money) and a module featuring an arrogant young nobleman with no clue of how smart (and dangerous) Beastlands creatures are.
161* Kosarro Khan, a [[SuperSoldier Space Marine]] Captain from ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'', has this kind of tendency, as well as HuntingTheMostDangerousGame, attributed to him (and his chapter) in the backstory of the newer rulebooks.
162* ''TabletopGame/TheStrange'': Nimrod The Hunter is infamous across The Strange for having hunted no less than 9 species to exinction. He will often [[HuntingTheMostDangerousGame hunt humans and other sentients]] as much for pleasure as being paid for it.
163[[/folder]]
164
165[[folder:Theatre]]
166* Harold Ryan, the not-dead husband in ''Theatre/HappyBirthdayWandaJune'', is a big game hunter with hundreds of kills. Hunting [[BloodKnight fills a void]] left from the end of UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. [[WordOfGod According to]] Creator/KurtVonnegut, Ryan is based on the aspects that disturbed him about Creator/ErnestHemingway
167[[/folder]]
168
169[[folder:Video Games]]
170* Mordecai from ''VideoGame/{{Borderlands}}'' is a cross between this trope and BloodKnight; his class is actually called "The Hunter".
171** Lady Aurelia from ''VideoGame/BorderlandsThePreSequel'' is a wealthy heiress who travels the galaxy for dangerous game who came to Elpis on a hunting expedition. What separates her from her brother, GentlemanAdventurer Sir Alistair Hammerlock from ''VideoGame/Borderlands2'' is that she's a RichBitch who mainly does it to alleviate her boredom. Unsurprisingly, Sir Hammerlock and his sister do not get along.
172** We also have [=FL4K=] from ''VideoGame/Borderlands3'', who's a robotic version of this trope. They are obsessed with "The Hunt" and proving themselves as the biggest Alpha around.
173* ''VideoGame/DeadRising2: Case Zero'' has Jed Wright, a psychopath who is happy that the ZombieApocalypse happened because he can hunt zombies as much as he wants and take trophies without getting in trouble with the law. He also hunts humans who have been bitten, [[InsistentTerminology insisting that they are already zombies]], and not caring if they take Zombrex to prevent themselves from turning.
174* Duke Prosper in the ''VideoGame/DragonAgeII'' expansion "Mark of the Assassin". He hosts an annual wyvern hunt (both as a social function and to keep the population in check), has a tamed wyvern he rides into battle, and some impressive trophies. In a variation, his actual EvilPlan has little to do with the hunt and it's the [=PC=] who has to hunt and kill a wyvern to get close to him. His BossBanter does include threats to make your party into trophies.
175* In ''Franchise/TheElderScrolls'' series, Hircine is the [[OurGodsAreDifferent Daedric Prince]] of the Hunt. He lives for the glory of the hunt and has no reason to do so beyond his own vanity. He prefers HuntingTheMostDangerousGame solely for the sport, including having his own pack of [[TheyHaveTheScent hunting dogs]] (read: [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent werewolves]]). Somewhat unusually for the trope, he doesn't consider it a ''true'' hunt unless the prey has a sporting chance. Additionally, he has [[DefeatMeansRespect respect]] for those who ''do'' survive his hunts, or better yet, [[TheHunterBecomesTheHunted turn the tables on the hunter]].
176* ''VideoGame/TheForceUnleashed'': Ozzik Sturn, who appears as the commander of the Imperial forces on Kashyyyk. Sturn will hunt non-sapient game but particularly enjoys hunting intelligent beings. When he first appears, he's wearing a sash made from the fur of Wookiee slaves he hunted down and killed as though it were a badge of office. The main character also passes through his trophy room, which is filled with the skulls of various aliens from the ''Franchise/StarWars'' franchise. When you confront him, he mentions how he's grown tired of hunting Wookiees and relishes the opportunity to kill a Jedi.
177* In ''VideoGame/GemsOfWar'', the leader of the centaurs of Divinion Fields is like this. It extends to hunting Atlanta, the quest-giver for that area.
178* ''Every'' Norn in ''VideoGame/GuildWars'' and ''VideoGame/GuildWars2'' is this, as are most Charr.
179* Rudy "Lynx" Roberts in the ''VideoGame/JaggedAlliance'' series. His character bio mentions his favourite hobby is "tracking down endangered species to finish them off".
180* In ''VideoGame/TheNewOrderLastDaysOfEurope'', Reichskommissar Siegfried Müller of Nazi-controlled Zentralafrika loves to hunt for the most exotic and rarest animals of Africa so much, he often disregards his duties as a ruler of country so he can shoot another elephant.
181* Myron Van Buren in ''VideoGame/{{Poptropica}}''. We won't go into too much depth about him, but let's just say he's a "special" category of Egomatic Hunter.
182* Count Razoff from ''VideoGame/Rayman3HoodlumHavoc''.
183* ''VideoGame/SamAndMaxHitTheRoad'': Evil country music star Conroy Bumpus, who is out to capture the same Bigfoot the heroes of the game are trying to aid just so he can add it to his personal menagerie. His obsession is even lampshaded in his VillainSong "King of the Creatures":
184-->''I trapped my first tiger before I could speak\
185Killed me a bear when I was three\
186And now with this Bigfoot and giraffe-necked freak\
187I finally have a full menagerie!''
188* Jean Bison in ''VideoGame/Sly2BandOfThieves'' has some shades of this combined with him being a lumberjack. It is also subverted, as Sly notes that Jean's time as a Human Popsicle catapulted him into a time where these traits are considered bad.
189* Hemet Nesingwary from ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' fits this trope to a tee. His [[SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute son]] took over his original hunt when Hemet moved to Outland for bigger game to hunt, where he and his expedition proceeded to instruct players to slaughter an ''immense'' number of creatures in one of Outland's few pastoral wildernesses left. Then he left for Northrend, settled down in a primeval jungle (it makes sense when you get there) and cradle of life, and had the nerve to first demand assistance from a dead rhino spirit, then [[{{Jerkass}} refuse to leave as it asked, saying "no dead rhino'll stop me from hunting wherever I want!"]]\
190\
191Amusingly, just as ''players'' tend to ''hate'' Hemet for his ridiculous egomania and his ''tedious'' quests ([[MassMonsterSlaughterSidequest endless slaughter-fests]] for the most part), an organization of druids, D.E.H.T.A (Druids for the Ethical and Humane Treatment of Animals) has arisen with killing Nesingwary and his increasingly deranged followers as their sole goal. "Hemet Nesingwary" is a SignificantAnagram: Creator/ErnestHemingway.
192** On the other hand, D.E.H.T.A itself is a bunch of [[AnimalWrongsGroup overaggressive tree-huggers]] who demand ''hunter ears'' as a currency and will literally jump you no matter what your relation with them if you killed an animal, even in self-defense. This includes an aggressive one they ''saw'' attack you.
193* ''VideoGame/StarWarsTheOldRepublic'' gives some detail on the Trandoshans, for whom hunting is their religion. They follow a goddess called the Scorekeeper who assigns points for impressive kills. Many of them (including Qyzen, the Consular's companion) have taken to hunting Wookiees, with obvious consequences for relations between the two races.
194[[/folder]]
195
196[[folder:Webcomics]]
197* ''Webcomic/MadameOutlaw'': Thaddeus is a bad man, which is established when he shows Estelle hunting trophies he's collected while he internally monologues about viewing other people as prey.
198* In [[https://alopex.li/mirrors/www.kiwisbybeat.com/minus/minus/www.kiwisbybeat.com/minus39.html this]] ''Webcomic/{{Minus}}'' comic, what initially appears to be a fairly normal hunter is told that the lion he recently shot "wanted to have a proper go at [him]" and is given a pair of boxing gloves. What does he do? He ''boxes the lion''!
199* Rak Wraithraiser from ''Webcomic/TowerOfGod'', a [[LargeHam giant]] [[RuleOfCool bipedal]] [[NeverSmileAtACrocodile alligator]], used to be this until Bam and Khun conned him into their team. He entered a Tower hailed as being able to grant any wish if you reach the top, not to get a wish, but to ''fight'' the other strong people trying to get to the top.
200[[/folder]]
201
202[[folder:Western Animation]]
203* Nimrod, a recurring nemesis of the ''WesternAnimation/AdventuresOfTheGalaxyRangers'', looks like an extra from ''Theatre/{{Cats}}'' and acts like a crazed game show host, but don't underestimate him. In his introductory episode ("The Power Within"), he traps the Rangers in a HuntingTheMostDangerousGame scenario--after removing their badges to prevent them from accessing their AppliedPhlebotinum powers. We are also shown that Nimrod has done this several times before with other space travelers.\
204\
205Galaxy Rangers fandom has also referred to him as "a Thundercat on drugs". In a later episode, "Murder on the Andorian Express", he actually helps Doc and Niko take down a Crown assassin, explaining that his whole purpose for getting on the luxury liner in the first place was to hunt the assassin.
206* ''WesternAnimation/AdventuresOfSonicTheHedgehog'' gave us Katella the Huntress, an utterly gorgeous and depraved woman who travels the galaxy kidnapping people and selling them as exotic species to zoos on other planets. She carries around a portable record player for her own background music and fell madly in love with Dr. Robotnik because of how evil he is. Unfortunately for him, Katella displays her affection by manhandling Robotnik every chance she gets and refuses to take no for an answer. Katella only backs off when Sonic invites [[AbusiveParents Momma Robotnik]] to their shotgun wedding, and decides it's not worth having her as a mother-in-law.
207* ''WesternAnimation/TheBatman'' had a one-shot hunter in Killgore Steed (yet another PunnyName) who specializes in hunting endangered species (and the occasional human) in his [[SupervillainLair killer island death maze]]. He got his karmic comeuppance when The Joker killed him with a pair of hyenas.
208* The Stalker from ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyond'', an African hunter who could stalk and kill a cheetah with his bare hands, is a subversion. He and Batman also get into an EnemyMine situation at one point.
209* WesternAnimation/TheBeatles are on an African holiday (episode "I'll Get You"), guided by Alan Watermain, great white hunter. At the conclusion, John and Paul scare Ringo and George with a lion costume, but Watermain mistakes it as real so he opens fire on them.
210-->'''Subjects (who had the costume):''' Excuse me, b'wana...must get back lion costume.\
211'''Ringo:''' (''holding teacup to his ear like a telephone receiver'') I'm sorry...[[{{Pun}} the lion is busy!]]
212* ''WesternAnimation/Ben10Omniverse'': Khyber the Hunter is one in a very [[Franchise/{{Predator}} Predator-like way]]. He apparently likes to hunt down various alien creatures and keeps trophies of them. He precisely goes after Ben because he considers him a "worthy prey".
213* Skulker from ''WesternAnimation/DannyPhantom''. Skulker can also be vengeful, as seen in his attitude towards Danny after Danny defeats him the first time. Even so, he acted this role with Danny and Valerie, leading to an EnemyMine.
214* Regis Stone in ''WesternAnimation/DexHamiltonAlienEntomologist''. He tricks Dex into helping him track down the universe's largest insect and boasts that this won't be the first time he's wiped out an entire species.
215* In an episode of the ''Dial M for Monkey'' shorts in ''WesternAnimation/DextersLaboratory'', the titular hero Monkey fought an alien hunter named, appropriately enough, ''Huntor'', who targeted the most dangerous game of all: heroes. Monkey defeated the heavily-armed hunter by relying on his jungle instincts rather than his superpowers, then ditches him on a planet inhabited by giant redneck aliens so [[ATasteOfHisOwnMedicine he would feel]] what it's like [[TheHunterBecomesTheHunted to be hunted]]. Huntor would later have a cameo in ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack'', still up to his old tricks.
216* Flintheart Glomgold in ''WesternAnimation/DuckTales1987''.
217* A brief cameo from such a character appears in the ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'' episode "Love and Rocket", when the soon-to-be-stuffed bears at the Romanticorp factory are chased by a safari-suit wearing, snarling elderly Englishman whose blunderbuss is carried by his malnourished Indian attendant.
218* ''WesternAnimation/HeManAndTheMastersOfTheUniverse1983'' has the episode "The Huntsman", where Prince Adam and Teela try to convince a famous hunter to leave the unicorn alone. He refuses and the heroes not only have to use force to stop him but convince the King to ban sport hunting for good measure.
219* Mitch and Tiff in Season 2 of ''WesternAnimation/JurassicWorldCampCretaceous'' claim to be eco-tourists who have come to the abandoned Isla Nublar to photograph dinosaurs, but this is revealed to be a lie they told to the campers in order to earn their trust; they're actually big-game hunters who have come for the opportunity to add dinosaurs to their trophy collection.
220* ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'':
221** One of the "Rabbit Seasons" trilogy had [[WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes Bugs and Daffy]] reading out of recipe books to set Elmer on each other. Elmer explains that he's a vegetarian; he just hunts for the sport.
222** Also Wile.E.Coyote who has been famously declared a "fanatic" as far his game is concerned. He suffers from severe narcissism and MotiveDecay and while he starts hunting because of his appetite, failure leads him to obsess over killing the elusive prey even if this makes it uneatable. It is no longer about food, it is about him winning.
223** It becomes even worse in WesternAnimation/DuckDodgers where [[spoiler:he started HuntingTheMostDangerousGame]].
224* ''WesternAnimation/TheLooneyTunesShow'': This is what Blacque Jacque Shellacque appears to be in "Ridiculous Journey". Ultimately he is revealed to have been [[spoiler:attempting to return the pets to their owners]], but this doesn't explain why he was attempting to hunt the Abominable Snowman at the start of the episode.
225* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/MightyDucksTheAnimatedSeries'' featured an Egomaniac Hunter who threw the concept of ''sportsmanship'' to the wind, by using increasingly powerful robotic weapons in the process of hunting the unarmed avian heroes through a jungle.
226* Mitch from the ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb'' episode "The Chronicles of Meap", who captures the galaxy's rarest creatures for his personal collection.
227* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons''
228** Parodied with a hunter character who says "Time for lunch" and fires blindly into the air, killing a condor, then catches it between two slices of bread and eats it. [[MundaneMadeAwesome With an intense look on his face]]. He's after a bear Homer is travelling with, and wants to stop it from reaching a wildlife sanctuary. He's ''VERY'' scornful about the very concept of one.
229** Rainier Wolfcastle is also one. He participated in a charity basketball game to help build a nature preserve where he can hunt "the most dangerous game of all", Man. He then goes off to hunt Lenny.
230* Bwana Bob from ''WesternAnimation/TheSuperGlobetrotters''.
231* ''WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2003'' has Marlin, a big game hunter who enters into the sewers to hunt Leatherhead and the Turtles, bringing with him all manners of traps and high tech weapons to hunt his prey. He's also surprisingly okay with his own demise, as long as he gets to take the Turtles and Leatherhead with him and goes down knowing he's hunted the greatest beasts alive.
232* Safari Joe from ''WesternAnimation/ThunderCats'', complete with racism. He doesn't even see the Thundercats as sentient, despite them talking to him. He even has his own 'slave' -0 the robot Mule.
233* ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers'' cartoon episode "Prime Target" featured Lord Chumley, who decided his hunting trophy collection would not be complete without the head of ''Optimus Prime''. He is nuts: in the opening of the episode, he shoots down and ''mounts'' a Soviet fighter jet as if it were a downed game bird. In order to bait Prime, he captures almost a dozen other Autobots. He even captures a couple Decepticons in the process of wearing Prime down, and later sets them free in the hopes that they'll help him once things inevitably go south. The capture of the Soviet fighter jet was causing political trouble unseen since the Cuban Missile Crisis. Many a fan probably smiles each time they see the jerk dropped off for the Soviets tied to the nosecone of the same jet he stole.
234* In ''WesternAnimation/TransformersPrime'', Airachnid hunts endangered species. And if they aren't already endangered, ''she makes them''.
235[[/folder]]
236
237[[folder:Real Life]]
238* UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, the 26th President of the United States, could be seen as an Egomaniac Hunter. In his home on Long Island, every other piece of furniture is some part of an animal. Every wall has animal heads on it. He even stepped down from the presidency so he could go on an African safari. Subverted when you think of his status as a conservationist, and then played straight ''again'' when you realize that it was mostly so he didn't run out of animals to hunt. He was overall, a complicated man who even voiced a concern on the wanton destruction of wildlife and hoped that cameras would largely supplant rifles. It is worth noting that the more ethical tranquilizer rifle would not be invented until after his lifetime and that in his time, conservation meant that killing wildlife to put them on display in museums was the best way to preserve them and he himself was a strong believer in this InsaneTrollLogic ideology.
239* British writer Lord Dunsany -- when some zebras escaped from a zoo, he hunted them in the middle of central London.
240* Ted Nugent. Hunts really large bears in Michigan with a bow and arrow. Donates much of the meat from his hunting to [[PetTheDog Feed the Homeless]].
241* While most hunters at least try not to waste too much and sell any meat/hide that they don't want or can't use, there are some content with killing something, taking its head as a trophy and maybe a few pounds of meat, and leaving the rest of it to rot while they head merrily back home. Most hunters like medium-sized game (especially deer), which average a hundred pounds.
242** [[HumansAreTheRealMonsters For this reason]] there are laws regarding hunting and legal obligations of the guide and hunter.
243* Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria (whose assassination triggered WWI), according to Website/TheOtherWiki, had a love of trophy hunting far in excess of the norm of his time. His diaries kept track of some 300,000 trophy kills (which means that, strictly on average, he killed over 18 animals ''every single day of his life''), 5,000 of which were deer.
244* Numerous poachers fall into this trope, particularly those who hunt for fun and simply leave the carcasses of whatever they shoot and the ones who target endangered or protected species like rhinos, elephants, tigers, and other animals to harvest body parts that have high monetary values on the black market.
245* Vladimir Putin, reputed as loving extreme sports like mountain climbing, outdoor survival, and martial arts, also loves hunting big game like huge bears in the cold, dark wilderness of Siberia.
246* In the old [[UsefulNotes/{{Zimbabwe}} Rhodesia]], when the British colony declared its own unilateral independence and attempted to go it alone as a white-run apartheid state, the de facto number two in the administration was Peter Kenyon Fleming Voltelyn van der Byl. Coming from an AmoralAfrikaner family that was as near to royalty as you could get in Southern Africa, the autocratic P.K. van der Byl was an obsessive big-game hunter. A sociopath who got into a position of high power, there are well-founded stories that given the opportunity offered by an undeclared civil war and neighbouring black states offering safe haven to insurgents, he took advantage of his power to go out and hunt the biggest game of all. It is entirely possible that van der Byl hunted human beings for fun and personally executed captured black guerillas.
247[[/folder]]

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