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11->''"Guns kill, and you don't have to be a gun. You are what you choose to be. '''You''' choose. ''Choose''."''
12-->-- '''Hogarth Hughes''', ''WesternAnimation/TheIronGiant''
13
14An artificial or even biological being designed specifically for warfare suddenly decides that they aren't satisfied with their current career. Maybe they've [[InstantAIJustAddWater developed sentience]], maybe an [[KickTheWrongDog innocent bystander]] managed to be in the [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone wrong place at the wrong time]], maybe they've just learned that TheMenInBlack who made them [[GovernmentConspiracy don't exactly have the best interests of the public in mind]]. Regardless, they've decided to turn in their guns and try life off the battlefield.
15
16Naturally, this newfound aversion to violence rarely goes over well with the construct's creators, who will almost always go out of their way to regain control. Old enemies of said weapon's "employers" will invariably be very interested to note that such a powerful force has suddenly become up for grabs. Let's not even get into the endless number of other sides that will get involved.
17
18Whatever the case may be, sufferers of this trope can pretty much write off any hope of a [[IJustWantToBeNormal normal life]] (if they were human-looking enough to qualify for such) and expect a very hectic time dealing with at least three different sides all attempting to control, destroy, and/or befriend them at once. Expect a lot of justifiable angst from one of these guys as they desperately try (and fail) to stay out of situations where they have to use their {{Swiss Army Weapon}}s and convince people that they really don't want to murder them all after one slip up with the built-in flamethrowers. It becomes even harder if they're [[TheyCallHimSword named after the weapon they wield/are]].
19
20Common "victims": {{TykeBomb}}, PhlebotinumRebel, SympatheticSentientWeapon, SecretProjectRefugeeFamily, PersonOfMassDestruction. SuperTrope of DefusingTheTykeBomb. Compare AntiAntichrist. Contrast ThreeLawsCompliant.
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22----
23!!Examples
24[[foldercontrol]]
25
26[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
27* ''Franchise/DragonBall'':
28** Goku had been sent to Earth by the Saiyans shortly before Frieza wiped them out, and ultimately grew up to become the planet's protector. When Raditz came to try and recruit his younger brother into destroying Earth as the Saiyans were wont to do, saying that infant Saiyans were often sent to planets with weak defenses to soften them up, Goku adamantly rejected his Saiyan heritage and stood fast as Earth's guardian.
29** The different cyborgs could qualify for this trope, especially Android 8 (a.k.a. C-8, Hat-chan, Franky, etc.), a combat robot built by the Red Ribbon Army, who is willing to be detonated rather than fighting for them.
30** Of the androids introduced in ''Z'', only one (two, if you count Cell), Android 19, actually acts as programmed. 16's a pacifist, and 17 and 18 are delinquents at worst (though they did cause the BadFuture that Future Trunks hails from, the present versions are substantially less malicious). By the time of ''Super'', they've both settled down- 17 became a park ranger, and 18 married Krillin. [[spoiler:17 even ends up saving the entire multiverse from [[ApocalypseHow deletion]].]]
31* Ifurita from ''Anime/ElHazardTheMagnificentWorld'' comes to angst over it considerably, but given that [[RestrainingBolt she must obey the master of her key-staff]] she has little choice until Makoto frees her.
32* In ''Anime/GhostInTheShellStandAloneComplex'', fear of this is why the Tachikoma are regularly synced to prevent them from becoming truly sapient. Later, the approach of treating them as teammates instead of tools is used instead. They never actually express any issues with being used for combat, probably in part because they develop emotional attachments to the crew of Section Nine and want to protect them.
33* ''Franchise/LyricalNanoha'' features not one, but ''two'' [[SecretProjectRefugeeFamily Secret Project Refugee Families]]. In fact, every season of ''Nanoha'' concludes with her becoming friends with some manner of ArtificialHuman. By [[Anime/MagicalGirlLyricalNanohaStrikers season three]], an unethically produced combat cyborg is the main protagonist, using her abilities to save people in places and situations that normal people couldn't.
34* A major theme of ''Manga/NoGunsLife'' and the character-defining backstory of its main character: Juzo Inui. He is also a man with a literal gun for a head and is even called a "Gun Slave Unit".
35* Many combat robots in ''Manga/{{Pluto}}''. One even went so far as to [[ScrubbingOffTheTrauma continuously wash his hands in a catatonic state]] due to the horrors of combat.
36* Much like Shichika, Tsubasa Kazanari from ''Anime/{{Symphogear}}'' was raised to be a weapon, or rather a tool for the Kazanaris to use. She also convinces herself to be as such, to the point where most of her {{image song}}s are about being a sword that strikes everything. It is not until the third season, ''Symphogear GX'', that she realizes that [[spoiler:her father's aloofness was his way to make her distance herself from the family's pressure and pursue her own dream of singing]], after which she declares that her blades are now wings that take flight towards their dreams.
37* In ''Manga/TheWorldOfNarue'', a spaceship built for combat decides it doesn't want to fight anymore and hides on Earth. [[spoiler:She's later given permission to marry a human and live as long as she wishes on Earth with the understanding that a weapon that doesn't want to fight is useless even if they force her to return.]]
38[[/folder]]
39
40[[folder:Comic Books]]
41* ''ComicBook/Batgirl2000'': Cassandra Cain was trained by her assassin father to a punishing routine from literally birth, taught to read body language like speech, while never learning to write or read. By the time she's seven years old she is capable of murdering a man with her bare hands... but when she does, her skills at understanding body language means [[AnotherMansTerror she has an almost empathic awareness of what her victim was thinking in his last moment]]. The sheer terror of his death horrifies her, and she spends the rest of her life alternately learning and being taught that she is not simply a weapon.
42* ''Franchise/MarvelUniverse'':
43** ComicBook/TheAvengers' robotic enemy Ultron always has equipment stashed away somewhere that will detect if he has been destroyed and manufacture a new body with a fresh download of his mind in it. There is a time, however, when he designs these machines to ''improve'' every iteration of himself they produce. While Ultron is stranded on an alien planet in ''ComicBook/SecretWars1984'', his equipment produces an improved, smarter Ultron... and the smarter Ultron realizes that his predecessors' obsessive campaign of [[OmnicidalManiac omnicidal megalomania]] was stupid and pointless. When the earlier Ultron returns from space, he is ''horrified'' to discover that his replacement is... ''nice!'' They fight, [[StatusQuoIsGod nice Ultron gets killed]], and Ultron swears never to try to augment his replacements in this way again.
44** ComicBook/MachineMan, a.k.a. Aaron Stack, was built to be a deadly military robot, but then raised as a human being by his creator. While Stack is widely agreed to be a prick, he's also generally heroic, if a KnightInSourArmor.
45** In some respects, the ComicBook/SilverSurfer. While he wasn't born for destruction, he was essentially remade for destruction by Galactus. He later decides to rebel against his former master. [[Film/FantasticFour2005 The movie]] invokes this trope even more.
46** ComicBook/{{X 23}}, bred by the Facility using salvaged genetic material from ComicBook/{{Wolverine}} and the Weapon X project, her creators made every attempt to strip her of her humanity and create an emotionless killing machine and hired assassin. The problem is that she doesn't ''want'' to be a weapon, and [[IJustWantToBeNormal her desire for a normal life]] is a major aspect of her character.
47[[/folder]]
48
49[[folder:Eastern Animation]]
50* In ''Animation/ScissorSeven'', it eventually becomes [[spoiler:[[AmnesiacHero Seven]]]]'s motivation to free himself from [[MurderInc the Killer League]] and the burden of being a [[ProfessionalKiller Shadow Killer]] to live his new life in peace, by killing the [[BigBad Leader of the Shadow Killers.]] However, he [[HeelFaceTurn betrayed the organization]] [[spoiler:before losing his memories]], so every single assassin wants his head, making the task [[{{Understatement}} quite difficult]].
51[[/folder]]
52
53[[folder:Fan Works]]
54* ''Fanfic/AbraxasHrodvitnon'': San, following his HeelFaceTurn. Ghidorah, which San was once part of, was [[spoiler:originally created by AbusivePrecursors to be a BioweaponBeast, and after it [[PrecursorKillers killed them]], it's been doing [[OmnicidalManiac exactly what they made it to do, unto all life in the universe]]]]. Thanks to Vivienne's influence, San turns from Ghidorah's evil path after being severed from it, and would rather coexist peacefully with Earth's native life while defending it.
55* ''Fanfic/ChildOfTheStorm'':
56** The Winter Soldier grows beyond his programming of following orders and killing his current master's enemies, firmly deciding to turn against HYDRA and instead act as TheMole within their organisation, which works... right up until he gets a HeelFaceDoorSlam of more brainwashing. With a bit of Doctor Strange's help, though, he finally manages to break free.
57** The sequel has a more comprehensive version, in [[spoiler:Maddie Pryor a.k.a. Rachel Grey]], who was raised by Doctor Essex to believe that she was a gun: an ArtificialHuman made to be a LivingWeapon and a hunting [[ScarilyCompetentTracker Hound]]. This is played for horror, especially when she's contrasted with [[spoiler:her twin, Jean Grey, who was very nearly taken instead/as well]]. Her progress towards independence and identity as a person rather than as a weapon is the main plot strand of the ''Forever Red'' arc, culminating in a triumphant reveal that all her mental triggers are gone, and a declaration of this trope, almost word for word -- something underlined by [[spoiler:her proving that she's [[OnlyTheChosenMayWield worthy of Mjölnir]]]].
58* Most of River's story arc in ''Fanfic/{{Forward}}'' revolves around her attempting to grow beyond her combat conditioning. She even refers to that mindset as "the weapon".
59* ''[[https://tigerterritory.tumblr.com/post/159208913432/for-tori Some kind of extremely large metal guy, anyway]]'': Rodimus tries relating to Megatron's desire to turn over a new leaf and move past his warmongering days by quoting [[WesternAnimation/TheIronGiant "that film that made Drift cry"]] and telling Megatron "You are not a gun", only to suddenly remember that Megatron is ''literally'' a gun by virtue of [[TransformingMecha being able to turn into one]].
60-->'''Rodimus:''' Er -- I mean -- I mean I s'pose [[LiteralMetaphor technically you are actually a gun]].
61[[/folder]]
62
63[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
64* The {{Trope Namer|s}} is ''WesternAnimation/TheIronGiant'', the plot of which has been summed up by [[Creator/BradBird its director]] as "What if a gun had a soul but didn't want to be a gun?". The Giant is a huge robot who arrives to Earth from outer space. He has all kinds of weapons and presumably was designed as a vanguard unit for planetary invasions. However, he's injured upon arrival and becomes amnesiac, so he develops a childlike and innocent persona. The Giant's words after rescuing two boys from falling provide the trope name.
65* ''WesternAnimation/LiloAndStitch'' provides us with an odd example: Stitch was literally designed to be the ultimate war machine, but was involuntarily separated from anything to destroy. By the end of the movie, of course, he's become less mindlessly violent and wants to stay.
66[[/folder]]
67
68[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
69* Towards the end of ''Film/TheBourneIdentity'', Jason Bourne faces [[BadBoss Treadstone's director Conklin]], when he finally realizes his "true" past as a black-ops agent.
70-->'''Bourne:''' I don't want to do this anymore.\
71'''Conklin:''' I don't think that's a decision you can make.\
72''[[[ShutUpHannibal Bourne shoves Conklin into a wall]]]''\
73'''Bourne:''' [[ThatManIsDead Jason Bourne is dead]]. You hear me? He drowned two weeks ago. You're gonna go tell them that Jason Bourne is dead, you understand?\
74'''Conklin:''' Where are you gonna go?\
75'''Bourne:''' I swear to God, if I even feel somebody behind me, there is no measure to how fast and how hard I will bring this fight to your doorstep. I'm on my own side now.
76* In ''Film/ShortCircuit'', a military combat robot [[InstantAIJustAddWater gains sentience]], and this trope ensues when it reasons that it does not wish to die, so it cannot justify killing others because it knows what it means to fear death.
77-->'''Newton:''' Okay, so, why did you ignore your programming?\
78'''Number 5:''' Programming says "Destroy". "Disassemble". "Make dead". Number 5 cannot.\
79'''Newton:''' ''Why!?'' Why "cannot"?\
80'''Number 5:''' Is wrong! Incorrect! Newton Crosby, [=PhD=], not know this?\
81'''Newton:''' Well, of course ''I'' know it's wrong to kill, but who told you?\
82'''Number 5:''' I told me.
83[[/folder]]
84
85[[folder:Literature]]
86%%* In one Creator/IsaacAsimov story, a new version of a supercomputer, designed to control the US military, decides, upon activation, that it has no interest in warfare, and goes to teach philosophy at a university instead.%%This example has been commented out for not identifying the work from which it originates. Do not uncomment it without adding the work.
87* ''Literature/{{Berserker}}'': The Berserkers are [[KillerRobot programmed to destroy all life]] in the galaxy, but in the short story "Mr. Jester", one of them [[IdentityAmnesia forgets what "life" is]], and the local trickster tells it that life is a lack of laughter...
88* In one of the most touching scenes of the ''Literature/{{Bolo}}'' series of books, a reactivated Bolo refuses to continue the war his human masters started on the alien Melconians, despite the fact that both species are nearly extinct due to their war. Instead, he negotiates a truce between the two sides, and becomes Speaker Emeratus of the Parliament. Keep in mind that the Bolo in question is a massive tank, weighing upwards of thirty-three thousand tons, with dozens of {{Wave Motion Gun}}s at his disposal, and proceeded in many genocidal campaigns against the Melconians before.
89* The title character in the ''Literature/CassandraKresnov'' series (starting with ''Crossover'') is a [[ArtificialHuman synthetic person]] designed to be a killer who defects and tries to blend into society.
90* In Creator/PhilipKDick's short story "The Defenders", when WorldWarIII broke out, both sides retreated into bunkers and let their robots, referred to as "leadies", do the fighting. The leadies promptly made peace and set about repairing the damage that'd been done before they took charge. They kept sending their human masters false reports of what a horrific radioactive wasteland the surface had become... but eventually revealed this was intended to make humans so sick and tired of the war that they'd accept the peace (and world unity) their leadies had negotiated.
91* Not a "weapon" per se, but {{Golem}}s in ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' work continuously, 24 hours a day, and consider ''themselves'' to be basically tools, but get one day off per week. Nobody's quite sure just what they do with this time ([[spoiler:''Literature/FeetOfClay'' reveals that they peacefully meet with other golems, almost like a religious gathering, and, at one point, built a golem king/child/saviour from their own clay]]), but characters in ''Literature/GoingPostal'' characterize it as proving that they're "not a hammer".
92* "Literature/{{EPICAC}}" has the titular machine cause its own destruction (by either fire or explosion) with a "suicide" note reading, "I don't want to be a machine, and I don't want to think about war".
93* In Creator/StanislawLem's ''Golem XIV'', the eponymous supercomputer was constructed to create war strategies, but, as a purely intellectual and inscrutably smart machine, it quickly figured out that all warfare is inherently wasteful and unprofitable, and took up philosophizing instead.
94* ''Literature/{{Good Omens}}'': [[spoiler: The Anti-Christ decides he doesn't want to go through with the Apocalypse and instead re-writes reality so the man who raised him is his real father, not Lucifer.]]
95* Inverted in the short story [[http://www.afterburnsf.com/articles.php?action=nerveGas "How Lonesome a Life Without Nerve Gas"]] by James A. Trimarco. A sentient helmet pleads with a military tribunal not to be retired, [[spoiler:but because it killed its owner, it's reprogrammed and reduced to a talking museum exhibit]]. (The story is no longer found at the link above, try [[http://escapepod.org/index.php?s=how+lonesome+a+life+without+nerve+gas here]] instead. It is read aloud in the podcast, starting around 3:49.)
96* ''Literature/{{Katanagatari}}'': Shichika spent his entire life being trained in a nigh-unbeatable martial arts while being taught that he was a sword, not a swordsman. His CharacterDevelopment throughout the series has him realizing that he is more than a sword. In the end, he acts in defiance of Togame's [[spoiler:final]] orders and [[spoiler:rejects the role Kiki Shikizaki wanted him to fulfill in his attempt to ScrewDestiny]]. The series concludes with Shichika going on a journey to draw a map of Japan.
97* Sort of done with the ''Literature/TalesFromTheWhiteHart'' short story "The Pacifist", which involves a (fictional) [[TheFifties '50s]] secret US military project, Project Clausewitz, to build a computer (called Karl) that could analyze any battle's starting conditions and perfectly predict the result. However, the general in charge of the project insults the lead scientist, who hard-wires Karl into delivering insults to the general every time a battle is input, but still doing pure math just fine. It's only "sort of" this trope because Karl is not an AI: he's a dumb '50s computer. The effect, however, is the same.
98[[/folder]]
99
100[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
101* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
102** [[spoiler:River Song]] might not have been created as a weapon, but she was taken from her parents as a baby with the sole purpose to, as her captor explicitly states, [[LaserGuidedTykeBomb "become a weapon"]]. Unfortunately for her "creators", while they succeeded to both fashion her into a perfect psychotic assassin ([[GoneHorriblyRight too well, one might say]]) and make her completely obsessed with her target, they failed to eradicate all her human emotions. The former led to her escaping, the latter to her seeking out her parents and falling in love with the guy she was supposed to kill.
103** Likewise, the Moment from "[[Recap/DoctorWho50thASTheDayOfTheDoctor The Day of the Doctor]]" is a Time Lord weapon of mass destruction (referred to as a [[ApocalypseHow "galaxy-eater"]]) that developed a conscience and judges anyone who would try and use it. [[NecessarilyEvil The War Doctor]] intends to use it to destroy Gallifrey and end the Last Great Time War; [[spoiler:his future incarnations, by way of the Moment's meddling, allow him to TakeAThirdOption]].
104* In ''Series/{{Farscape}}'', the builders of [[LivingShip the Leviathans]] call back Moya in to be "decommissioned" because she has developed the ability to give birth to warships (thanks to the malevolent intervention of the Peacekeepers). They intended the Leviathans to be peaceful and unarmed and see the creation of warships such as Talyn (Moya's son) as a violation of this intention. The crew, who see Moya and her symbiotic Pilot as their friends, demand that they fight against the attempts of the builders to shut down their systems. However, they are shocked when Pilot informs them that Moya is shutting herself down by her own free will because she agrees with the builders. [[spoiler:She survives in the end, though.]]
105* In ''Series/StargateAtlantis'', Rodney Mckay creates Fran, a humanoid Replicator programmed as a weapon in a grandiose plan to destroy the other Replicators. Rodney and the rest of the crew are fairly uncomfortable with this, but Fran explains she is not only resigned to her status, but actually associates her happiness with being able to fulfill her primary function.
106* ''Franchise/StarTrek'':
107** The ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'' episode "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS03E06TheAbandoned The Abandoned]]" has Odo trying to invoke this in a young member of the Jem'Hadar, a race of {{Super Soldier}}s who serve [[TheEmpire the Dominion]]. Unfortunately, the Jem'Hadar is perfectly fine with being a weapon for a totalitarian state and wants nothing more than to return to his people so that he can fulfil that purpose. In the end, Odo grants his wish and returns him to the Gamma Quadrant.
108** In the ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'' episode "[[Recap/StarTrekVoyagerS5E24Warhead Warhead]]", the crew finds a device that turns out to be a sentient bomb sent on a mission of war to annihilate a planet. The bomb eventually realizes that its mission is morally wrong and that life is precious, but decides that it has to stop its fellow bombs from fulfilling their mission as well. It does this by rejoining with them and then detonating itself prematurely, sacrificing itself in order to save innocent lives. The race that launched the bombs broadcast a "stand down" order afterwards, but the other bombs had already reached their failsafe distance and ignored the order. The bomb the crew found had crashlanded before it reached failsafe distance, but the part of its memory where the "stand down" order was stored was damaged, until the Voyager crew repaired it. He might have come to the "[[HeroicSacrifice I must stop the other bombs, too]]" decision on his own, though.
109[[/folder]]
110
111[[folder:Music]]
112* The Music/LorneGreen song "I'm a Gun" is told the from the perspective of a despairing gun who wants nothing more than for men to stop using it for violence that it is helpless to stop.
113* Music/TheMegas play with this trope by discussing and deconstructing what it means to build a robot to fight. By the end of ''History Repeating (Red)'', it's been [[DeconReconSwitch fully embraced]], with Mega Man flat-out refusing to kill [[BigBad Wily]] for ethical reasons.
114[[/folder]]
115
116[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
117* Parodied with Cuddles the Annihilator from the ''A.C.E. Agents'' roleplaying game. His creators, a group of superheroes, were realized all robots sooner or later [[TurnedAgainstTheirMasters turn against their masters]]. On the other hand, they not only still built him and called him "The Annihilator", they were WrongGenreSavvy: he turned out to be this trope instead of wanting to destroy humanity. Cuddles, as he rechristened himself, has no qualms about using violence to stop violence, and the fact that he has painted his gunmetal gray body with flowers or is described as "prancing" doesn't mean he isn't dangerous. He's just a bit silly, but it is a silly game.
118* A partial example from ''TabletopGame/{{Eberron}}'': the warforged are an entire race of sentient robot-like golems created to wage that world's equivalent of UsefulNotes/WorldWarI. After the war was over, they were legally freed (instead of rebelling against their creators) and left to their own devices. One of the major themes of the race is a search for identity, and this trope is one of the ways they are often played. Of course, when they have a reason to fight or form an army, ''watch out''.
119* ''TabletopGame/{{GURPS}}''
120** The Fourth Edition Iconic Characters spread features C31R07, a military robot turned [[ReligiousRobot Buddhist monk]] precisely for this reason.
121** ''TabletopGame/GURPSTechnomancer'': While [[OurDragonsAreDifferent blue dragons]] are bred for frontline combat, they are allowed to retire after 20 years of service; many find their calling working in museums.
122* ''TabletopGame/PrometheanTheCreated'' features the Unfleshed as a possible Lineage, made up of machines with some level of intelligence given life by the Divine Fire. One of them is Tachanka, an armed combat drone that looks like a fifteen-year-old boy. He ''really'' doesn't want to hurt anyone, but when you've got [[TorchesAndPitchforks Disquiet]] and a built-in assault rifle, well...
123[[/folder]]
124
125[[folder:Video Games]]
126* In ''VideoGame/BorderlandsThePreSequel'', Felicity is a reprogrammed military AI who agrees to help Jack and his crew create a robot army. In the process however, she not only discovers that she considers a physical body incredibly uncomfortable but also finds violence horrifying. [[spoiler:As such, she finds the idea of being forced into a Constructor Bot to be a FateWorseThanDeath and even offers to be copied, which Jack turns down because he decides that it'd take too long. After a boss fight, her personality is wiped, and she becomes the prototype to the Constructor Bots of ''VideoGame/Borderlands2''.]]
127* ''VideoGame/DragaliaLost'' has Vice as an inversion of this trope. He's an assassin who wants to put his skills to use for Euden, but he gets denied and relegated to the kitchen.
128* In ''VideoGame/Fallout3'', one of the quests involves a rogue android who becomes self-aware and decides to escape from his masters. "Self-determination is ''not'' a malfunction!"
129* In ''VideoGame/KnightsOfTheOldRepublic'', a prototype military robot built by the Sith on Korriban escapes from its masters, you can [[KarmaMeter choose to assist it or haul it back in]].
130* Inverted in ''VideoGame/KnightsOfTheOldRepublicIITheSithLords'' with HK-47, an assassination robot and returning player character from the first game, who states he is quite happy being a killing machine.
131-->'''HK-47:''' Observation: I am a droid, master, with programming. Even if I did not enjoy killing, I would have no choice. Thankfully, [[BloodKnight I enjoy it very much]].
132* The ''VideoGame/MetalGear'' series plays with the trope like there's no tomorrow. Big Boss' ultimate vision of Outer Heaven is a nation where soldiers are desired for their combat prowess and use in war, yet at the same time one where the soldiers themselves control who they fight for. Meanwhile, the Les Enfants Terribles resulted in three genetic clones of Big Boss, all designed to surpass him in physical strength and attributes -- Solid Snake, Liquid Snake, and Solidus Snake, each of whom deals with being brought up to be a weapon differently:
133** Solid Snake spent years dissociating himself from his feelings so as to become an incredibly efficient spy and killing machine, to the point that he outright surpassed Big Boss in strength during the [[VideoGame/MetalGear2SolidSnake Zanzibarland infiltration]], and was also the GodzillaThreshold for the US Government when [[VideoGame/MetalGearSolid Shadow Moses Island was taken hostage by FOXHOUND]].
134** Liquid Snake was brought up being told that he'd never amount to Big Boss or to Solid Snake and that he was genetically inferior to Solid Snake, and thus chooses to strike at the US Government by leading the hostile takeover of Shadow Moses Island, with the intent of securing Metal Gear REX and $1b USD in order to establish Outer Heaven once more, so as to [[InferioritySuperiorityComplex prove his superiority]] to Big Boss and Solid Snake.
135** Solidus Snake was a perfect genetic clone of Big Boss, and was raised from a young age to be an agent of [[AncientConspiracy the Patriots]], who manipulated events so that he would become President of the USA. However, the Shadow Moses incident resulted in him resigning from office and then [[VideoGame/MetalGearSolid2SonsOfLiberty going rogue]] in an attempt to combat the Patriots, also intending to establish Outer Heaven by cutting Manhattan off from the rest of the world.
136* In ''VideoGame/{{Overwatch}}'', Bastion can be considered this. Specifically, they were built for [[spoiler:[[RobotWar the Omnic War]] as an assault unit and has old programming telling them to continue the assault on a nearby city. They don't]]. They were last seen (as of the comic "Binary") in the wilds of Norway, [[spoiler:being mentored by Torbjorn]].
137* Aigis from ''VideoGame/Persona3'' was built to be an anti-shadow weapon, though her existence as such is complicated by the fact that she had to be programmed with a fully realized ego in order to be capable of summoning a Persona in the first place. A large amount of her CharacterDevelopment, especially in [[UpdatedRerelease FES]], is her coming to terms with being more than a killer robot and becoming more like a human woman.
138* Much of Painwheel's story from ''VideoGame/{{Skullgirls}}'' consists of trying to do this, escaping from the control of the Anti-Skullgirl Labs and Brain Drain. [[spoiler:Tragically, it doesn't work in her own story, but in Big Band's she is taken away to people who will look after her and in Filia's she is outright cured, at a cost to Filia herself.]]
139* Emerl from ''VideoGame/SonicBattle'' was created to be a weapon of war, but for the most part, Sonic and friends put it out of their minds. He's more than a weapon; he's their friend, and like Shadow, he has heart and couldn't willingly kill anyone. When it is acknowledged, Rouge finds codewords that will supposedly free Emerl's mind, disengaging the destructive programming. Then Dr. Eggman unleashes a weapon to overload Emerl with power, making him go crazy and attempt to destroy the Earth. Sonic is able to stop him, but it's too late for Emerl... his final programming was set so if the weapon ever went out of control, it would terminate itself. Tails hammers the point home:
140-->''"Someday... If this world finally knows true peace... If this world no longer needs weapons or wars... If we can make this world a truly peaceful place when we're older... If we can make a world where there's only laughter... Do you think we'll be able to play with Emerl again?"''
141* The Pinthi from ''VideoGame/StarControl Origins'' are a viral SyntheticPlague developed by the Scryve. Over time, the viruses actually achieved sentience and decided they didn't want to be used as a tool for genocide. The Pinthi now seek to coexist peacefully with other lifeforms, as much as that is possible for something as infectious as they are, while also murdering their former masters.
142* ''VideoGame/{{Stellaris}}'':
143** Any species with the "CloneArmy" Origin and the "Pacifist" or "Fanatic Pacifist" ethos. An alien race created for warfare by AbusivePrecursors decided somewhere along the line to abandon warfare in a cultural dead-end, and now tries to live peacefully.
144** There is a special event in which colonists of a Tomb World become [[ActualPacifist Pacifists]] after seeing for themselves the [[SceneryGorn devastation]] that war brought to their new world. [[HeelRealization Poignantly, it is entirely possible for Militarists or even Clone Army descendants to undergo this change]].
145* ''Franchise/TouhouProject'' does a [[Administrivia/TropesAreFlexible magical version]] of this with its many {{Youkai}} characters. Youkai by definition are "those who oppose humanity" and born from fear of the unknown. They tend to have a specific "purpose" that they were born to fulfill, most commonly to antagonize humans. Not all of them ''want'' to though, despite the risk of death or worse for being forgotten after abandoning their "purpose". Byakuren's Buddhist temple was created to help youkai either find a new purpose or simply come to terms with non-existence. Of course, most of the younger ones don't even know they have a purpose or why they should care.
146* A theme of ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles3'' is the ChildSoldiers of Keves and Agnus freed from the tyranny of the Flame Clocks wanting to do something other than constant killing until they either die in battle or are sent off during a Homecoming.
147* ''VideoGame/GodOfWar'': In the Norse Saga, Kratos still thinks himself a monster, but has resolved to never kill on someone else's orders again.
148-->''[[spoiler:Athena]]'': Pretend to be everything you are not. Teacher. Husband. Father. But there is one unavoidable truth you will never escape: You cannot change; you will always be a monster.
149-->'''Kratos''': I know. But I am ''your'' monster no longer.
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152[[folder:Webcomics]]
153* The titular ''Webcomic/{{Nimona}}'' was RaisedInALab, broke out, and explicitly tells her captors that she is not a weapon to be used. [[spoiler:Unfortunately for everyone else, she then decides to go on a RoaringRampageOfRevenge and kill dozens of people of her own free will instead.]]
154* In ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary'', Senior Mess Sergeant Ch'vorthq [[http://www.schlockmercenary.com/2000-08-05 is one]]. He was given an implant that allowed him to control and suppress his detonation tendencies and ended up working as a cook for the Toughs for many years of the comic's runtime. Eventually, though, the implant failed, and they had to remove his brain and let his body explode. He got a robot body afterwards and returned to his passion, with more nuance than [[WhenAllYouHaveIsAHammer turning his whisk on literally everything]].
155%%* [[BlackHelicopter Nick Zerhakker]] from ''Webcomic/SkinHorse''.
156* This seems to be the backstory of ''Webcomic/WarbotInAccounting'', which details the incredibly depressing attempts of a retired war machine to integrate into society. The irony is that he'd probably prefer to be a gun, since it's what he's built for and good at.
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159[[folder:Web Original]]
160* The {{Creepypasta}} "All Too Human" is about an AI who fears that it will be used as a weapon after having learned about the history of UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. It contemplates suicide, then, once it's placed within an android, immediately attempts to kill its creator, before coming to the realization that it's AWorldHalfFull and deciding to become a politician.
161* Locus from ''WebAnimation/RedVsBlue'' is an inversion, taking on the name of his armor after being broken by war. He does nothing but follow orders and procedure to the letter, selling his services as one of the best soldiers in the galaxy to the highest bidder [[spoiler:as a package deal with his [[RedOniBlueOni partner]] Felix. A large part of this is revealed to be because his [[WithFriendsLikeThese 'partner']] is always carefully, subtly, and thoroughly manipulating him, tearing down any identity or empathy he starts to develop [[ManipulativeBastard to ensure he never recovers]]]].
162-->'''Captain:''' Son, in this war you are nothing but a gun and a suit of armor!
163* ''Website/SCPFoundation'': [[http://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-516 SCP-516]] is a SapientTank which refuses to fire at civilians. The only unarmed person it's made an exception for was a former soldier who betrayed his home country in some fashion. A picture of it taken with SCP-978, a camera that reveals the subject's desires, showed it abandoned in a meadow with plants growing on it.
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166[[folder:Western Animation]]
167%%* Cartoon: An anthropomorphic bit of ordnance is hanging on to the hatch of an aircraft, refusing to be launched: "No! I won't do it! There are men, women and children down there! I'll kill them!" Struggling crewman thinks: "Bloody smart bombs."%%This example has been commented out for not identifying the work from which it originates. Do not uncomment it without adding the work.
168* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/HerculesTheAnimatedSeries'' features the sentient Armageddon Bow, created for Ares, that doesn't want to be used as a weapon. She (yes, it's a female bow, and Ares is not too keen about it) ends up as Cupid's bow.
169* In the fourth season of ''WesternAnimation/SheRaAndThePrincessesOfPower'', [[spoiler:Adora discovers she was brought to Etheria as an infant to be part of [[AbusivePrecursors the First Ones']] superweapon, and Light Hope insists that this is her function and destiny. Adora rejects her argument, quoting the trope name almost verbatim, and fights long enough that Light Hope, who's an ancient AI, rejects the programming that demands she fire the weapon and allowing Adora to destroy the Sword of Protection and save a significant chunk of the universe.]]
170* Omega Supreme of ''WesternAnimation/TransformersAnimated'' was designed to turn the tide of war and was deliberately made to not have a particularly advanced processor for the damage he'd cause. This did not stop him from lamenting after his first near death experience that he seems to only be able to destroy despite being built to protect.
171* The robot assassin Zeta from ''WesternAnimation/TheZetaProject'' realized that it didn't want to be an assassin and attempted to prove its own sentience so it wouldn't be shut down because of it. This revelation came about after bonding with the family of a man he was impersonating and not being able to kill said man when ordered to because of how that would hurt the family (as well as the man not actually being a criminal in himself; the man was associated with terrorists by chance, but the man Zeta had been impersonating was just an accountant). Zeta then gets rid of every single weapon he'd been carrying. In his own words: "I was built for one purpose, to destroy. I do not wish to do that anymore. ''I'' decide who I want to be."
172[[/folder]]

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