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1[[quoteright:300:[[ComicBook/StarWarsMarvel1977 https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/leave_no_survivors.jpg]]]]
2
3->''"Wipe this pathetic planet from the face of the galaxy!"''
4-->-- '''[[BigBad Darth Malak]]''', ''Franchise/StarWars: VideoGame/KnightsOfTheOldRepublic''
5
6StockPhrase of a villain that signifies a KickTheDog, especially if the victims are (comparatively) helpless. If the villain isn't the one directly causing mass murder or ordering his {{mooks}} to do it, then he's shown giving this instruction to a PsychoForHire or HitmanWithAHeart. The naval expression for this is "No Quarter". In RealLife, it's a [[UsefulNotes/TheLawsAndCustomsOfWar war crime]].
7
8Of course, if a DoomedHometown suffers this fate, then it's more likely than not that the hero [[GenocideBackfire escapes such a culling]] and goes on a RoaringRampageOfRevenge.
9
10SinkTheLifeBoats is the subtrope dealing with killing enemies who were alive after surviving the destruction of a vehicle.
11
12Compare, contrast with ShootEverythingThatMoves and RocksFallEveryoneDies. Going one step further from "kill everyone" to organized torture, looting, ''and'' massacre of the population is RapePillageAndBurn. If you have to kill everyone because they saw too much, that's LeaveNoWitnesses. When this fails, it often falls into the category of GenocideBackfire. See also TraumaticCSection and EveryoneDiesEnding.
13
14[[VideoGame/TakeNoPrisoners Unrelated to the 1997 game]].
15
16----
17!!Examples:
18[[foldercontrol]]
19
20[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
21* Essentially uttered by the E.O. captain in ''Manga/BlackLagoon''. "There's nothing I hate more than survivors". [[TemptingFate Revy agrees]] and proceeds to kill everyone.
22* In ''Manga/{{Claymore}}'', we have one: the BigBad ordering TheDragon to "annihilate Pieta. Basically, a place where no lifeforms exist whatsoever. That is what I want Pieta to become."
23* The first episode of ''Anime/CodeGeass R2'' demonstrates the cruelly brutal efficiency of Britannian special forces by having them burn the bodies of the people they slaughtered (both Japanese and fellow Britannians)... even as some of the "bodies" are screaming, as they are not quite dead.
24* [[spoiler:Colbert]] receives orders to do this to Agnes's DoomedHometown in ''Literature/TheFamiliarOfZero'' qualifies as this. She initially thought her town was destroyed for heresy; whereas Colbert was instructed to burn the town to the ground because of plague. RoaringRampageOfRevenge ensues for Agnes, [[spoiler:MyGreatestFailure for Colbert]].
25* Rare anti-heroic example: ''Literature/GoblinSlayer'' does not believe in leaving any survivors from his goblin killings, as [[JustifiedTrope survivors will adapt and grow and become even bigger threats]]. [[WouldHurtAChild Especially not children, as brutally pointed out in the very first episode]]. The [[KingMook Goblin Lord]] in the first season was spared as a child, and several people paid dearly for it.
26* ''Literature/ImTheEvilLordOfAnIntergalacticEmpire'': (Unintentionally) heroic example. Liam, with a somewhat {{Chuunibyou}} image of himself being an EvilOverlord, orders this when his troops face SpacePirates. Why this makes him heroic, is because in a FeudalFuture filled with AristocratsAreEvil types, they usually cut deals with the pirates to form an InsideJob, ProtectionRacket, or the like, to milk their subjects dry.
27* ''Manga/JujutsuKaisen'': [[spoiler:Following Mai's death, Maki vows to fulfill her last will: [[TheDogBitesBack the eradication of the Zen'in clan]]. [[RoaringRampageOfRevenge Maki then goes on a bloody rampage throughout the compound]], making sure to spare no one ([[SelfMadeOrphan not even her own mother]], who [[SoProudOfYou secretly supports Maki's rampage]] and [[TakingYouWithMe is happy to die if the rest of the clan dies with her]]). The narration goes on to reveal that a few members of the clan were not in the compound during Maki's rampage; she went and hunted them down, too.]]
28* After the halfway point of ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEED'', both sides have essentially made this into military doctrine. The use of the Cyclops at JOSH-A prompts ZAFT soldiers to massacre every OMNI soldier they can find at Panama (after they were already rendered helpless by the Gungnir), and OMNI does the same to ZAFT at the Third Battle of Victoria. Once the war reaches its last phase, this moves into FinalSolution territory.
29* ''Anime/NeonGenesisEvangelion'': In ''End Of Evangelion'', the [[UsefulNotes/KaijuDefenseForce JSDF]] raid adopts this policy as they attempt a violent takeover of NERV.
30* ''Literature/{{Overlord|2012}}'': After [[spoiler:Zanac]] is killed by treacherous nobles, mere minutes after [[WorthyOpponent earning Ainz's respect]], the Sorcerer King decides that [[spoiler:[[EvenEvilHasStandards the Re-Estize Kingdom is no longer worthy]] of [[ThisIsUnforgivable his leniency]], and orders his forces to wipe out every citizen that he hasn't spared yet]].
31* ''Manga/SpyXFamily'': An AntiHero version. The primary reason that no one has realized that Yor is the infamous assassin [[ProfessionalKiller Thorn Princess]] is because she kills ''everyone'' on her missions. We know of exactly one exception, and Anya managed to terrify him into leaving the country via psychological warfare.
32* ''Anime/VoltesV'': While Prince Heinel's willing to keep the human race alive so that he can enslave them, he offers no such mercy to the Voltes Team and the titular SuperRobot. He frequently utters variations of this trope to his {{Mooks}}, stating that they must do everything in their power to annihilate them so he can take over the Earth.
33[[/folder]]
34
35[[folder:Comic Books]]
36* In the ''ComicBook/GIJoe'' one-shot "Special Missions: The Enemy", a squad of Cobra goons kill every living person in a hospital while looking for [[spoiler:the Baroness' baby]]. The squad leaders even [[spoiler:[[BadBoss kill two of their own]] when it looks like they have reservations.]]
37* Ildomir the EvilSorcerer from ''ComicStrip/{{Nodwick}}'' makes a note to himself to have this phrase tattooed on the back on his hand after being foiled by our heroes shortly after leaving them alive in a bad situation.
38* In the flashback section of ''Recap/TintinTheSecretOfTheUnicorn'', after being hit by a broadside, the pirate ship hoists the red flag, signaling that they would not take prisoners. They do capture captain Sir Francis Haddock when a golden opportunity presents itself, but plan to execute him slowly the next morning.
39* Joel Kent in ''ComicBook/SupermanAndBatmanGenerations'' orders his troops to do this when they lay waste to a village that has been suspected of harboring Viet Cong troops, only to find nobody there but innocent peasants. The troops turn against Joel and shot him, taking his dog tags and leaving him for dead until Mei-Lai finds him and nurses him back to health.
40* ''ComicBook/JudgeDredd'': During "Origins", AntiHero Judge Dredd and his team are attacked by a gang of outlaws in the Cursed Earth. When they return, Dredd orders his people "No Quarter" so they kill every one of them. Dredd even shoots a survivor begging for mercy.
41* In one of the ''Magazine/DoctorWhoMagazine'' side stories, a Sontaran patrol attacked a peaceful village, and nobody rose to the challenge. The commander was so annoyed at this that he ordered his force to kill everyone. Fortunately, Junior Cyberleader Kroton, freshly torn off from the Cyberman HiveMind, is in place to give them the fight they crave...
42* ''ComicBook/CodeNameGravedigger'': In ''Men of War'' #5, Gravedigger discovers the Nazis planning to massacre an entire French village: a village that Gravedigger's intelligence had told him was already empty. Even though it is outside his mission parameters, Gravedigger decides that he has to try and save the civilians; especially as he has just planted timed explosives that will bury the village under thousands of tonnes of rock.
43* ''Franchise/WonderWoman'' [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 Vol 1]]: Capt. Storm became notorious as a pirate for granting the ships he targeted no quarter and killing everyone on board.
44[[/folder]]
45
46[[folder:Fan Works]]
47* ''Fanfic/AbsoluteTrust'':
48** In Chapter 37, when Hakoda's group and the Gaang hijack a Fire Nation ship, they initially planned to take the crew prisoner. But when they hear them laughing about [[RapeIsASpecialKindOfEvil raping]] and killing a group of colonials, Hakoda changes the plan.
49** In Chapter 44, when Alec leads a small group to attack [[spoiler:Water's Wail, the prison for the Southern Waterbenders]], they deliberately kill every guard present for the cruelty they've exercised for so long.
50* ''Fanfic/BloodRustyAU'': This mindset is a part of what sets [=BloodClan=] apart from other cats. When they fight, they fight to kill and do their best to avoid letting stragglers live.
51%%* ''Fanfic/GunnersGenocide'': Gunner wanted to make sure everyone will Pay (which means killing the fighters)
52* ''Fanfic/{{HERZ}}'': In chapter 5 Misato orders an assault against a SEELE installation, and she reiterates -regretfully- that her troops mustn't give quarter or take prisoners:
53-->''"You have the coordinates," said Misato, hands folded in front of her face. "Get what we need. Everything else must burn."''\
54''"What do we do with any civilians we encounter?"''\
55''"Everything else must burn."''
56* A heroic example in ''Fanfic/MyHeroAcademiaUnchainedPredator''. The Slayer declares war upon the Steel Sabers upon seeing their atrocities via VEGA. By the end of Chapter 16, the Slayer has successfully killed off the entire Steel Sabers organization, making sure that a threat to heroes is permanently removed.
57* In the first chapter of ''Fanfic/RWBYScars'', Adam attempts to slaughter an entire train cart full of humans just because [[FantasticRacism he hates humans]]. This is one step too far for Blake. She was okay with killing the guards because they were armed and dangerous, but killing defenseless civilians is too much for her. She stops Adam and runs away from him for good.
58* In ''[[http://www.fimfiction.net/story/90939/shell-shock Shell Shock]]'', the captain orders his troops to do this to a large group of freshly captured POW's. It's as much for revenge as it is a sign for just how fucked up things are.
59* When the war against the Reach Interstellar Empire begins in ''Fanfic/WithThisRing'', Paul doesn't ''forbid'' his Lanterns to accept surrender, if the one surrendering is unarmed and the Lantern isn't needed elsewhere. But it's not a mission objective; if a Reach ship is crippled, that's an invitation for a kill shot, not an ultimatum.
60[[/folder]]
61
62[[folder:Films — Animation]]
63* ''WesternAnimation/ThePrinceOfEgypt'': In the climax, Rameses and his army pursue the Hebrew refugees, during which he orders his men to kill all the unarmed Hebrews. Utterly ironic as well; all his life Rameses [[WellDoneSonGuy tried to be a greater Pharaoh than his imposing father Seti I ever was]]. Without realizing it, he tried to outshine his father's legacy even in something as extreme as mass murder.
64[[/folder]]
65
66[[folder:Films — Live-Action]]
67* ''Film/GangsOfNewYork:'' True to RealLife, an exhausted Union Army which had just fought in a bloody battle are summoned to New York to deal with the out-of-control Draft Riots.
68-->'''Leiutenant:''' Sir, the major general wants to know what to do with the prisoners captured.\
69'''Corporal:''' ''Prisoners''? Don't take any. The ''mob'' isn't taking any prisoners! Put the mob ''down''! Don't take a prisoner till you've put the mob down!
70* ''Film/IronMan1'': Stane, just after paralyzing Raza and his goons with some experimental technology outlawed by the government, orders his personal bodyguards to clean up the mess.
71* ''Film/LawrenceOfArabia'': has the titular protagonist quite pissed off at enemies who just slaughtered a village: '''NO PRISONERS! ... NO PRISONERS!!'''
72** In real life, he usually had his men take prisoners, but on one occasion, when ''really'' pissed off, told them, "The best of you brings me the most Turkish dead!"
73* ''Film/TheGreatEscape'': 50 escaped [=POWs=] who had already been recaptured were summarily executed by the Germans. [[note]]Somewhat TruthInTelevision, although in real life, it was a series of small murders rather than the single mass execution portrayed in the film.[[/note]]
74* ''Film/TheLionTheWitchAndTheWardrobe'': Jadis, the White Witch, gives this order for her troops to attack Aslan's army:
75-->'''The White Witch:''' I have no interest in prisoners. Kill them all.
76* In the film version of ''Film/TheLordOfTheRings'', this happens twice. Saruman orders his Uruk-hai in ''[[Film/TheLordOfTheRingsTheTwoTowers The Two Towers]]'' to '''"leave ''none'' alive!"''' in the battle of Helm's Deep, and the Witch-king in ''[[Film/TheLordOfTheRingsTheReturnOfTheKing The Return of the King]]'' orders his minions to slay everyone in Minas Tirith.
77** "Release the prisoners"
78** Also at Helm's Deep, Aragorn himself tells the defenders to show no mercy to their besiegers, "because the enemy will show none."
79* Also done by Durza in ''Film/{{Eragon}}'' in a very similar scene.
80* From the ''Franchise/PiratesOfTheCaribbean'' films:
81** In ''Film/PiratesOfTheCaribbeanTheCurseOfTheBlackPearl'', of course, the cursed crew of the ''Black Pearl'' is famous for leaving no survivors.
82--->'''Jack:''' [[LampshadeHanging No survivors]], eh? [[UndeadAuthor Then where do the stories come from]], I wonder?
83** Davy Jones from the sequels is likewise infamous for this: every man who isn't EatenAlive by his pet kraken in the inital assault is either press-ganged into his undead crew, or else executed if they refuse to join; though sometimes he'll just execute everyone without even making the offer if he's in a bad mood. This becomes a problem in the third film, when Jones is forced to work for the East India Company; no survivors means no prisoners to interrogate for information. At least until the FinalBattle.
84* ''Film/ThePrincessBride'': The Dread Pirate Roberts is known for "never taking prisoners," but the wording allows for some LoopholeAbuse: for instance, it doesn't say anything about taking captured sailors on as ''crew'', which is how Westley survived.
85** In the book it's made clear this only applies if they fight; if they just hand over the valuables they can go. This was [[PragmaticVillainy the whole point of building the reputation in the first place]]; a technique used sometimes by Real Life pirates.
86** Not to mention the threat the heroes use to clear out the men guarding the castle gate on their way to rescue Buttercup. Again, it's technically true; since most of the guards [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere fled without fighting]], the heroes didn't take anyone prisoner for longer than a few minutes.
87* ''Film/{{Spartacus}}''. The phrase is not uttered, but all of the surrendered slaves are crucified (except for the Hero and his [[TheLancer second in command]], who are ordered to fight to the death to see which one of them ''doesn't'' face the grislier execution).
88* ''Franchise/StarWars'':
89** In ''Episode I: Film/ThePhantomMenace'', upon being told that the Gungans were massing for battle, Darth Sidious orders the Trade Federation to "Wipe them out. ''All'' of them."
90** ''Episode III: Film/RevengeOfTheSith'' has the same guy ordering the newly christened Darth Vader to wipe out Viceroy Gunray and the other Separatist leaders. As well as, a few scenes earlier, the Jedi at the Temple.
91---> '''Sidious:''' Every single Jedi, including your friend Obi-Wan, is now an enemy of the Republic. Do what must be done. Do not hesitate. Show no mercy.
92** ''Episode VII: Film/TheForceAwakens'' has Kylo Ren order the massacre of a village on Jakku after Poe is taken captive by the First Order, the purpose of which is likely to LeaveNoWitnesses who could have told the Resistance what happened to Poe.
93---> '''Captain Phasma''': Sir, the villagers?
94---> '''Kylo Ren''': Kill them all.
95** In ''Episode VIII: Film/TheLastJedi'' Kylo Ren orders no quarter when the First Order attacks the Resistance on Crait.
96* In ''Film/TomorrowNeverDies'', the number of survivors from the sinking of the British frigate reaching the villain's ship very neatly matches the number of dead he reports as washing up on the beach.
97* In ''Film/StarTrekIITheWrathOfKhan'', after Saavik goes through the Kobayashi Maru test, Kirk tells her that the Klingons don't take prisoners. Since they ''do'' take prisoners in several ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'' episodes as well as several TOS era movies, this is probably based on a faulty memory of the "Romulans don't take captives" quote from TOS.
98** The "prisoners" line probably stems from the opening scene featuring Romulans instead of Klingons. The KM test is in Gamma Hydra near the Neutral Zone -- near the Romulan Empire in TOS. Also, the Klingon Bird of Prey in ''Film/StarTrekIIITheSearchForSpock'' was originally designed as an update to the TOS Romulan ship (Klingon didn't use Birds of Prey until that point). The decision to switch from Romulans to Klingons was apparently made by the writers at the suggestion of Leonard Nimoy, who felt they made better bad guys.
99** Or Kirk was just being dramatic.
100* ''Film/RedDawn1984''. The protagonists are seen shooting Soviet prisoners and wounded, because they're fighting a guerrilla campaign and can't take prisoners even if they were so inclined.
101* The same occurs with German soldiers in ''Film/{{Defiance}}''.
102* In ''Film/AnimalHouse'', while wrecking the parade, Bluto shouts "Take no prisoners!"
103* This was Blackout's intention in the opening scene of ''Film/{{Transformers|2007}}''. He attempted to hack into the military defense network in order to obtain any information about the whereabouts of Megatron and the All Spark, but was cut off by the base commander. When Epps manages to take a digital snapshot of him, he dispatches Scorponok to eliminate the escaping soldiers, whilst he deals with everyone else on base. The investigation conducted in the aftermath reveals that he killed every single person on site. Scorponok however, whilst succeeding in killing/wounding two soldiers, failed to eliminate the rest of the group before they could call for help.
104* ''Film/ItHappenedHere'' ends with LaResistance massacring captured members of the British SS, as part of its [[TheRevolutionWillNotBeCivilized deconstruction of heroic resistance tropes]].
105* In ''Film/JudgeDredd'', Judge Griffin says this in so many words to his people who are investigating the shuttle crash, though as a way of making it clear that he wants the official record to show a specific version of events.
106--> '''Mook''': Sir, it appears that several prisoners are missing.
107--> '''Griffin''': You are in error, Capture Team. No one survived the shuttle wreck.
108--> '''Mook''': The pilot is still alive, sir.
109--> '''Griffin''': ''No one survived the shuttle crash!''
110--> '''Mook''': Yes, sir. ''*shoots the pilot dead*''
111* Done legally in ''Film/{{Dredd}}''. Attempted murder of a Judge carries the death penalty. Judges can carry out sentencing for crimes on the spot. This confers upon Judges the right to execute almost anyone who participated in a shootout against them. Rookie Judge Cassandra Anderson carries out her first execution of a wounded perp who can barely lift his sidearm. She discovers ItGetsEasier to the point where later in the movie she coldly shoots a disabled mook InTheBack as she walks over his body.
112* ''Film/WeWereSoldiers'': The Viet Minh commander gives this order after defeating a French column during the film's prologue.
113--> '''Nguyen Huu An''': ''Kill all they send... and they will stop coming. ''
114* In ''Film/RedTails'', "Pretty Boy", the German fighter ace, typically opens the fight with some order or another. By the final battle, he has lost all pretense of gentlemanly chivalry and simply orders his men to show no mercy.
115* ''Film/AlexanderTheGreat1956''. After being abandoned by the Persians, the commander of the Greek mercenaries who fought against Alexander asks for quarter. Alexander refuses, saying they're traitors (even though they haven't sworn an oath to him) as he's ruler of all the Greeks. The mercenary commander asks again, not for himself [[TheMenFirst but for his men]]. Alexander refuses this offer also. The commander says in that case they'll fight to the death. None of them escape alive.
116* ''Film/StarTrekIntoDarkness'':
117** [[spoiler:Admiral Marcus]] has no intention of letting any of the ''Enterprise'' crew live even after Kirk pleads that [[TakeMeInstead he alone should be punished]] for his command decisions.
118** Every Klingon who witnesses Harrison ends up dead.
119* ''Film/TotalRecall1990'': When Richter and his men pursue Quaid and Melina into the mutant district, they escape and Richter shoots the first person who refuses to answer him. When they retaliate, he orders the soldiers to kill everyone and barely escapes from the ensuing slaughter himself.
120* Averted in the Soviet historical drama ''Film/AlexanderNevsky,'' set in medieval times. After winning a bloody battle against [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything brutal German invaders]], Alexander asks what should be done with the prisoners. One of his lieutenants says that the mooks should be set free because "they were forced to fight," and Alexander says that the knights will be held for ransom. He is less forgiving to the Russian traitors.
121* ''Film/ThePatriot2000'': In his opening scene, Colonel Tavington has wounded Colonial soldiers gunned down where they're laying in blatant violation of the laws of war. General Cornwallis later explodes in Tavington's face for refusing to give their enemies of the hour quarter.
122** This comes back to bite him in that not only would Benjamin Martin's militia be less than eager to take captives after that (to the point that Martin himself had to tell those under his command to stop shooting surrendering Redcoats), and absolutely eager to shoot officers first during engagements, but it was the entire reason Benjamin Martin was leading that militia group in the first place.
123* In ''Film/VivaVilla'', Pancho Villa the bandit and guerrilla fighter has a bad habit of slaughtering all his prisoners. Madero gets him to stop doing this for a while.
124* ''Film/KingdomOfHeaven'': During the Siege of Jerusalem, Balian warns his outnumbered defenders that there will be no quarter when the wall is breached, which motivates them to fight harder. Averted later when he and Saladin discuss terms of surrender, in which Saladin allows the surviving inhabitants to leave the city without further incident (In reality, Saladin only allowed the nobles to leave free of charge, while the rest had to be ransomed or sold into slavery. Though many were later freed).
125* ''Film/ThePostman'': During the first battle against the Holnists, the Postman orders his followers to let the last one go, as he's unarmed and defenseless. Others shoot him dead anyway, no doubt wanting revenge after they've suffered so much from the Holnists.
126[[/folder]]
127
128[[folder:Literature]]
129* The pirates in ''Literature/AllHands'' all get killed when the Starcougar [[RammingAlwaysWorks rams]] their ship.
130* ''Literature/TheFallOfGondolin'': A heroic example. Morgoth's troops are burning Gondolin to the ground, but Tuor has managed to lead several hundreds of people out of the city and towards the hills. He then sees six soldiers have managed to rescue his son and make it out of the city, but are being chased by twenty wolf-riders. Tuor picks up fifty soldiers, surrounds the pack of Orcs and Wolves and orders to kill all of them, lest one of them gets away and informs Morgoth about the refugees.
131* ''Literature/AnOutcastInAnotherWorld'': The Dragon Queen wants to kill all humans out of anger and grief for when they murdered her family. The Elven Seneschal wants to prevent The Cataclysm from ever happening again. Many other people are just grief-stricken and need an outlet for their sorrow.
132* In the ''Literature/ConfederationOfValor'' series, the Others are well known to not take prisoners. Which confuses the characters intensely in ''Valor's Trial'': They're in a POW camp. TheReveal? [[spoiler:It isn't run by the Others, a.k.a. the Primacy.]]
133* ''Literature/DeathsHead'': The Enlightened make a show of accepting surrenders because a powerful third-party is watching, but when the prisoner transport convoy crosses a storm that conveniently obscures satellite surveillance, all ships but one are "lost at sea".
134* ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles'': In ''Literature/{{Changes}}'', the Red Court strike teams like to operate this way to send a message to their enemies.
135* ''Literature/HonorHarrington'':
136** Narrowly averted in ''Echoes of Honor''. When the combined Grayson-Manticore fleet with the new [[MacrossMissileMassacre podnaughts]] rides to [[spoiler: the defence of the Basilisk System against a People's Republic of Haven attack]], the Graysons are seeking revenge for [[spoiler:the judicial murder of Honor Harrington by the Peeps]], so their commander, High Admiral Yanakov, orders an all-out attack on the Peep fleet. Earl White Haven, commanding the combined force, nearly has a heart attack when he thinks Admiral Yanakov ordered "no quarter," but then he realizes that Yanakov actually ordered "no ''mercy''" -- which means "destroy any ship capable of fighting, but not the life pods."
137---> '''Admiral Yanakov''': The order is -- ''Lady Harrington, and no mercy!''
138** Narrowly averted once again in ''Uncompromising Honor''. In the final Honorverse novel, the Manticoran, Havenite, Beowulfan, and Grayson fleets translate from hyperspace into the Sol System right ontop of a three Solarian destroyers out on a training exercise. Honor orders her ships to open fire with her very, very long-range missiles. The commander of the Solarian flotilla immediately surrenders. Honor ignores his attempts at surrender and ignores her officers when they tell her the Solarians are surrendering. She ends up aborting the missile strike.
139** Invoked in the Echoes' Children FilkSong "No Quarter", based on the book.
140* During the third book of ''Literature/TheHungerGames'', [[AntiHero Gale Hawthorne]] suggests a plan to destroy a Peacekeeper Fort by causing an avalanche. Not content to [[WouldBeRudeToSayGenocide just kill the majority of those inside]], he also suggested [[KickTheDog bombing the escape to ensure they all die]]. His reason for this is that [[HeWhoFightsMonsters Peacekeepers destroyed District 12, so he is out for revenge]].
141* In ''Literature/TheHuntForRedOctober'', the US wonders what to do with the crew of ''Red October'', who don't want to defect--rejecting the option of killing them all as morally wrong. The reason the sub's destruction is faked is in order to allow the crew to go back to the USSR and claim the sub sunk.
142* Creator/VladimirVasilyev's ''Literature/NoOneButUs'' involves a SpaceBattle where TheAlliance fleet (mostly made up of human ships) conducts a surprise attack of a [[TheEmpire Shat Tsur]]-held planet and has successfully made four passes through the enemy forces, dealing enormous damage to the defensive ships and orbital installations. When the defenders start flashing the universal surrender code with their running lights, the fleet commander orders the fleet to continue making passes, realizing that this is a ploy by the defenders to bog down TheAlliance fleet with tons of prisoners. Only after two more passes does the fleet commander order the taking of prisoners. This is the only time this happens, though, as they quickly find out that the oppressed planetary populations are more than happy to watch the prisoners for the Alliance, freeing the fleet. The Shat Tsurs, though, don't like to take prisoners, especially where their former masters the [[WingedHumanoid Aczanny]] are concerned. By the time of the novel's events, 70% of the Aczanny race has been wiped out, most of them during the first few months of surprise attacks.
143* In ''Literature/OutOfTheDark'', Shongairi soldiers attempt to surrender, but when Buchevsky again sees the children they have killed, he is reminded of his own killed daughters and has them all killed.
144* Often called for by the heroes in ''Literature/{{Redwall}}''. Though given [[AlwaysChaoticEvil the usual temperament of the vermin villains]] and their penchant for taking slaves to treat horribly...
145* ''Literature/{{Safehold}}'':
146** The threat of this is often used by the protagonist Empire of Charis when an enemy is either already defeated or clearly outmatched to try and force a surrender. This tends to be effective, more often than not, because the enemy commanders eventually realize that the Charisian making the offer ''isn't bluffing''. One of the few times the opposing commander refused that offer, the Charisian commander not only followed through, but let Siddarmarkian soldiers, whose nation and people had been damaged horrifically because of the Church's machinations, to lead the charge.
147** The Siddarmarkians have a special marching song, the Pikes of Kolstyr, that announces their intentions to do this. It was written in comemmoration of an old atrocity by the Desnairian Empire and is used to announce their intent to avenge similar atrocities, such as the Church's Sword of Scheuler, which sparked civil war throughout the nation.
148** With the Inquisition's penchant for ColdBloodedTorture, there are instances when members of the Church's own forces order no survivors as an act of ''mercy''. An Army of God colonel orders his chaplain and healers to do this, and some of the victims even show ''gratitude'' as their throats are cut. Later, in a battle that allows the Kingdom of Dohlar to capture a Charisian ironclad, the sheer brutality of the Dohlaran sailors when they finally get aboard is attributed at least in part to this.
149* In one of the ''Soldier of Fortune'' pulp novels by Peter [=McCurtin=], the eponymous mercenary Jim Rainey faces off with the BigBad before the battle, and both agree "no prisoners" as a mutual BadassBoast; in fact it's even used as a BattleCry for Rainey's army. In the end Jim Rainey uses this to avert the SaveTheVillain trope. "You forgot our agreement you son-of-a-bitch -- no prisoners."
150* ''Franchise/StarWarsLegends'':
151** One of Boba Fett's targets in [[Literature/TalesOfTheBountyHunters "The Last One Standing: The Tale of Boba Fett"]] is Kardue'sai'malloc, who earned his moniker "{{the Butcher}} of Montellian Serat" for slaughtering hundreds of Rebel [=POWs=] on Devaron. He claims he was forced into it by his superiors: He had been ordered to join up with another force after taking the city of Montellian Serat and not to leave anyone behind to guard the prisoners, and he didn't have the resources to bring them with him either, so...
152** In ''[[Literature/XWingSeries X-Wing: The Bacta War]]'', [[BigBad Ysanne Isard]] orders her minions to pick a random rebel target and wipe it out.
153--->'''Isard:''' Find it and destroy it. No warning, no mercy. No question who the true power is.
154** ''Literature/TheHanSoloTrilogy'': Red Hand Squadron has this policy toward slavers. They offer them no quarter. It's also the source of their name and emblem, a blood-dripping hand. However, as they're [[SlaveryIsASpecialKindOfEvil slavers]], though it makes some uncomfortable this is portrayed as {{paying evil unto evil}}.
155* In ''Literature/TheStormlightArchive'', Sadeas executes a bunch of listeners for the "crime" of trying to surrender to him instead of [[BloodKnight giving him a proper fight]]. Aside from the obvious evilness of this action, this meant that the Parshendi would refuse to surrender or offer any quarter to their human opponents in later battles, which just amplified the bloodshed on both sides. This brutality would lead the Parshendi to believe that the only hope for survival was to seek out their "old gods" to gain access to the Forms of Power and summon the Everstorm, which is what [[BigBad Odium]] needs to advance his plans. If not for Sadeas's actions, the Desolation would have been at the very least delayed and weakened somewhat.
156* The mildly insane royals do this in ''Literature/TalesOfTheBranionRealm'', especially in ''The Stone Prince'' where the cold-bloodedness and strength of mind necessary to be merciless is part of the protagonist's training by his mother. She is known for having hanged a hundred rebels at once, calmly discussing tactics with her aides while the sentence was carried out.
157* In the fifth ''Literature/{{Temeraire}}'' book, ''Victory of Eagles'', William Laurence and his fellow {{Dragon Rider}}s are ordered to attack French raiding parties throughout England and leave no prisoners; this sets off a vicious cycle causing the French to be more brutal, "justifying" Laurence's brutality until another captain refuses to cooperate and snaps him out of it with one pointed question.
158-->'''Tharkay:''' A temporary viciousness may be pardonable in a gentleman, even admirable; but it must brand me forever a savage. Laurence, what ''are'' you doing?
159* UsefulNotes/TheThirtySixStratagems:
160** Rule #22 advises at least completely capturing the enemy, if not killing them all.
161** Conversely, Rule #16 suggests you should avoid letting the enemy ''know'' this trope is your plan. If they believe they can survive or escape, they may hold resources in reserve for those contingencies; if they realize there's no hope, they are more likely to launch a DesperationAttack or try TakingYouWithMe, which will cost ''you'' more resources.
162* ''Literature/TortallUniverse'': In the final ''Literature/ProtectorOfTheSmall'' book, Keladry has to give this order twice while sneaking a band of people into enemy territory, and neither time does she like it. But they don't have the luxury of keeping prisoners and they can't let them go to warn the enemy where they are. A rare heroic example.
163[[/folder]]
164
165[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
166* ''Series/BabylonFive'':
167-->'''President John Sheridan:''' Hit-and-run attacks, very efficient. No survivors, no warning.
168** Minbari policy during the Earth-Minbari War was to destroy any and all combatants, regardless of their ability to fight back or if they surrender. Granted, they did leave many core colonies untouched as they made a beeline for Earth. However, it's likely they would've gone back to mop up every surviving human after Earth was no more.
169** Sheridan {{exploited|Trope}} this tendency in the ''Black Star'' incident that earned him the moniker "Starkiller". With his ships damaged in a prior attack, he sent a fake distress signal, knowing the Minbari would come back to finish the job. Then he laid a minefield between him and the direction in which the Minbari ships had left, and waited for them to take the SchmuckBait.
170* In ''Series/BandOfBrothers'', Easy company comes across another American company who had just won a battle with a German squad. One of the German soldiers was a German-American (born in the US) who was fighting for Germany, somewhat against his will. For some unspoken reason, the soldier seemed sad about being captured, even after getting American cigarettes from Easy. As they left the area, the men of Easy company heard the gunshots of the other platoon. Seems that the Americans didn't have enough supplies to take prisoners and the American-born had understood the discussion about it earlier.
171* ''Series/BattlestarGalactica1978'': In the original series:
172-->'''Imperious Leader:''' There can be no survivors. [[KillAllHumans So long as one human remains alive]], the Alliance is threatened.
173* ''Series/GameOfThrones'':
174** After House Bolton wins the battle against Stannis' forces outside of Winterfel, Ramsay Bolton kills the last wounded enemy soldier who was about to surrender.
175--->'''Ramsay:''' [[ExactWords I accept your surrender.]]
176** In the penultimate episode, [[spoiler:Daenerys offers no quarter to King's Landing after they failed to surrender and her forces have already breached the gates. Even after leveling nearly the entire city, her general Grey Worm is shown executing surrendered Lannister soldiers.]]
177* ''Series/HouseOfTheDragon'': Corsair Craghas "The Crabfeeder" Drahar owes his [[RedBaron nickname]] to the fact that he crucifies the captive survivors of his {{boarding part|y}}ies on beaches to be eaten by crabs.
178* ''Series/RedDwarf'': Comedic version: In one episode, a shuttle crashes and most of the gear on board is wrecked. While trying to find something worth salvaging:
179-->'''Kryten:''' At least [[DreadfulMusician Mr. Lister's]] guitar survived intact.
180-->(Cat smashes the guitar to smithereens against the wall)
181-->'''Kryten:''' Not even Mr. Lister's guitar survived intact!
182* ''Series/{{Revolution}}'': The title of the episode "[[Recap/RevolutionS1E3NoQuarter No Quarter]]" is the same as the alternative name of this trope. This episode features the Monroe Republic fully intending to kill off every single rebel they find. The only reason they left one group of rebels alone was because [[spoiler: they exchanged Miles Matheson in return for being spared]].
183* ''Series/StargateAtlantis'': There's a heroic version. After repeatedly failing to kill Michael, and now dealing with his latest scheme which has taken control of the city, Sheppard orders the soldiers to give no quarter.
184* ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'':
185** {{Exploited|Trope}} (and mixed with a WoundedGazelleGambit) by Klingon General Martok and the ''Defiant'' (under Dax's command) after full-scale war with the Dominion breaks out. The ''Defiant'' and Martok's IKS ''Rotarran'' take turns sitting in space faking serious damage (low power, leaking fuel, weapons and engines off) and sending out a distress signal, then wait for the Jem'Hadar to come by looking for an easy kill, whereupon the other ship decloaks and blindsides them.
186** When the Cardassian rebellion becomes a full-scale civilian revolt in "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS07E25E26WhatYouLeaveBehind What You Leave Behind]]", the Female Changeling gives the order to kill every last one of them (the ''entire'' planetary population). Her only response to being told "That's going to take some time" is "Then I suggest you begin at once". Fortunately, our heroes manage to prevent it being completed (in part because most of the guards at Dominion HQ were sent out to kill Cardassians), but over eight hundred million are still killed during the attempted genocide.
187* ''Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries'': The Romulans are noted to not take captives in the 2nd season episode "[[Recap/StarTrekS2E12TheDeadlyYears The Deadly Years]]". However, they try to do exactly that in the 3rd season episode "[[Recap/StarTrekS3E2TheEnterpriseIncident The Enterprise Incident]]". Possibly, they do take prisoners, but instead of ransoming them, they keep them and refuse to acknowledge that they do. Certainly, Saavik's Vulcan parent was a prisoner, as was Tasha Yar.
188* In the ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'' episode "[[Recap/SupernaturalS01E04PhantomTraveller Phantom Traveler]]", a demon causing airplanes to crash vows that there will be no survivors.
189* The good guys do this in ''Series/SEALTeam's'' 2nd season in the episode "Payback." After completing the usual objective to attack a terrorist stronghold and capture the cell leader, Bravo Team receives word that enemy reinforcements are on the way. Normally, in previous snatch missions, their standard operating procedure would be to take the prisoner and bug out as quickly and stealthily as possible. But because this particular terror cell had earlier seriously injured [[ItsPersonal one of their own]], Bravo decides to stay and fight the reinforcements to ensure that every single terrorist in the cell is killed.
190* ''Series/WallenbergAHerosStory'': Eichmann's goal is to transport every Jew remaining in Budapest to Auschwitz. When the trains stop running he starts death marches instead.
191* ''Series/TheWitcher2019'': Nilfgaardians' general policy, as stated in the pilot and shown to be the case. Instead, they slaughter everyone they come across. In the nobles' case, it was said they'd have tortured them first. They do make an exception with Ciri however, as she's heir to the Cintran throne.
192[[/folder]]
193
194[[folder:Music]]
195* In the video for Music/LadyGaga's song "Telephone", featuring Music/{{Beyonce}}, the two of them kill off an entire diner full of people. Well, except for their [[SummonBackupDancers backup dancers]].
196-->'''WebVideo/ToddInTheShadows:''' [[http://thatguywiththeglasses.com/videolinks/teamt/tis/tpsr/22745-ep-04-telephone "Now, begin the murder dance!"]]
197[[/folder]]
198
199[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
200* Not an uncommon position for player characters to take with regard to enemy {{NPC}}s, for reasons ranging from in-game practical considerations to the infamous "they aren't worth experience points alive" (though it's worth noting that the latter hasn't been true for "modern" tabletop [=RPGs=] for at least a couple of decades by now). While non-player characters are of course technically not "real", this can still cause friction with other actual people at the table (players and {{Game Master}}s both) who might not be as comfortable with the "ruthless killing machine" approach to "heroism".
201* ''TabletopGame/BattleTech'': In the First Succession War, the Coordinator of the Draconis Combine was assassinated by a sniper while conducting a campaign on the Davion world of Kentares IV. His heir orders the Draconis troops to "kill them all" and summarily executed the first general that questioned the order. By the end of the massacre, 52 million people were dead and the morale of the Draconis troops [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone was absolutely crushed]] from being forced to execute helpless civilians with katanas. Even among the countless atrocities of the First Succession War, the Kentares Massacre stands out for its sheer brutality, and the horror helped pave the way for more 'civilized' warfare aiming to avoid unnecessary destruction.
202* ''TabletopGame/{{Chainmail}}'': Swiss, Landsknecte and Turkish troops do not take prisoners as a matter of policy. In any situation where opposing troops would surrender, they are considered killed instead.
203* ''TabletopGame/ForgottenRealms'':
204** Drow nobles have such a nice tradition. ''Literature/TheDarkElfTrilogy'' put this to use by making it completely unspoken. {{Klingon Promotion}}s are a cornerstone of drow society: noble houses move up in rank by slaughtering the house above it. However, by their definition of "justice", if even one survivor is left to accuse them, ''their'' house will be exterminated as punishment. It's kind of hard to track them all, and hard to tell when they try to disguise, so there's no need for those in command to order their soldiers to kill anything that moves and then comb the compound afterward for any secret rooms where others may be hiding.
205** Later sources elucidated the details. The obvious reason for this tradition is that whenever two parties among the drow are allowed to enter a CycleOfRevenge and others start taking sides, this eventually ends in an open civil war and complete destruction of the city. Naturally, with such prospects the rest of a community prefers to limit the damage to those already involved. Thus if two Houses begin an assassination war or other escalating hostilities, others will ''push'' them into an open attack as soon as possible -- one side ceases to exist, the conflict ends. This also is applied only to legitimate members of the House, i.e. anyone who officially switched allegiance to another House, mercenary band or merchant clan doesn't belong to the House which gets eradicated/accused; this doesn't happen every day, but one guy survived the destruction of his House with Spider Queen's personal involvement without so much as leaving his city.
206* ''TabletopGame/InNomine'': One of Baal's rites allows his demons to regain essence by making sure that no enemy survivors remain after a battle.
207* ''TabletopGame/{{Paranoia}}'': While the game encourages the [=PCs=] to kill ''some'' of their teammates to set up a DeceasedFallGuyGambit ("'I speak without fear of contradiction...' is the opening sentence of the ideal [[BlameGame debriefing]]"), it warns against this trope because it looks suspicious. Instead, it suggests bribing or {{blackmail}}ing the others into going along with your story.
208* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'':
209** In actual gameplay, wiping out the enemy's force from the table is generally an alternative win condition, as opposed to the point system revolving around battlefield objectives. This is known as "tabling" the opponent.
210** This is functionally or officially standard procedure for many factions. The hateful and xenophobic [[TheEmpire Imperium of Man]] often try to wipe out any alien presence on their planets, and routinely try to exterminate them in wars of conquest. They do try to bring human populations under their control, unless a world [[GodzillaThreshold has become too corrupt]] or [[PragmaticVillainy not worth the expenditure of resources and manpower]] to reconquer, then they resort to [[EarthShatteringKaboom Exterminatus]]. [[HordeOfAlienLocusts Tyranids]] will also try to kill everything on a planet, because it's easier to eat them and harvest their biomass in that manner.
211** [[SpaceOrcs Orks]] and mortal followers of [[TheCorruption Chaos]] will kill just about anything that doesn't fight back, [[AlwaysChaoticEvil more often than not just for the fun of it]]. Still, they will often take at least some prisoners as slaves. [[TheHeartless Chaos Daemons]], however, do not.
212** [[SpaceElves Eldar]], as much as they hate other species, will often kill only as much as necessary to achieve their goals, then they'll usually just leave. Surprising as it would be for those not familiar with them, as much as they like killing, Dark Eldar actually try to avoid this trope with as wide a margin that they can as they prefer to take prisoners. They'll eventually bring this trope into full force ''on those same prisoners'', since they [[EmotionEater literally feed on suffering]]. The [[TheFederation Tau Empire]] ''usually'' averts this trope, as they prefer to bring other species into their sphere of influence through diplomacy and other nonviolent means before resorting to a military conquest. However, there are sometimes aggressive or embittered commanders who will push for a population to be wiped out, or a species is deemed unfit for peaceful coexistence, in which case this trope is used.
213[[/folder]]
214
215[[folder:Video Games]]
216* Every game that requires the player to eliminate all enemies to advance to the next level/unlock a new area/complete a mission falls into this trope. (Aversions fall under InstantWinCondition.)
217* Many instances of this occur in the ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquer'' series:
218** ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquerRedAlert'':
219*** In mission 10 of the Allied campaign, General von Esling tells the player during the campaign in Kiev to destroy EVERYTHING in the Soviet nuke base. "Scorched Earth!" Though, when you play the mission, this turns out to be impossible as the Soviets end up launching nukes during the mission and von Esling hastily changes your objective to instead capture the Command Center and send a commando force in to remotely deactivate the nuclear warheads before they hit their targets.
220*** In the first Soviet mission, your superiors order you to annihilate a rebel village. The battle itself is a total CurbStompBattle, with dozens of innocent civilians wiped out by strafing Yak fighter planes.
221--->'''[[SmugSnake Gradenko]]:''' Let's see how [[NonEntityGeneral you]] handle this. Go at once to [[DoomedHometown Torun]], destroy everything and everyone. [[MoralEventHorizon No prisoners, no survivors. That is all.]]
222** ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquerTiberianSun'': During the first Nod briefing, after CABAL says how to increase the probability of a favorable outcome against the renegade General Hassan's forces, commander Anton Slavik asks CABAL what a "favorable outcome" would be. CABAL's response: "They all ''die''".
223** ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquerGenerals'':
224*** In the third USA mission of the vanilla campaign, the GLA are intent on wiping out a large American force in full retreat. The mission is to rescue 100 American units from their GLA pursuers.
225*** In the fourth China mission of the ''Zero Hour'' expansion pack, the tables are turned as it is now the GLA in full retreat while China is on the hunt. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qp81y_xH238 The opening cutscene]] tells us that the Chinese premier has declared that China will hunt down the GLA to the last soldier. Indeed, the mission itself is about cutting off all escape routes and ensuring that not a single GLA unit escapes the map.
226--->'''Song Meiying''': "This is a wounded animal, declared our leader, but they must not find a cave where they might gather back in strength."
227* ''VideoGame/FateGrandOrder'' has this happen in Lostbelt 6, when an attack is led on the village Tintagel to raze it to the ground. The truth is rather unexpected. [[spoiler: While Woodwose did carry out the massacre on Artoria's fellow villagers, they were already planning on selling her out anyway, and had gone completely berserk while doing so. Woodwose was forced to put them down, as they'd started slaughtering each other before he arrived.]]
228* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI'', [[MonsterClown Kefka]] gives an order to this effect in one of Terra's flashbacks during a ''training exercise'' (for [[{{Tykebomb}} her]], not the helpless [[RedShirt troops]] being cut down, but it still comes off as unnecessarily callous).
229* ''Franchise/FireEmblem'' has Rout the Enemy (in layman's terms: kill all opposing forces) as the standard stage objective in all games.
230** ''VideoGame/FireEmblemThreeHouses'' also has this in-story, when [[MeleeATrois the armies of the three nations face each other]] at Gronder Field after the TimeSkip. Prince Dimitri of the Kingdom of Faerghus, who at this point isn't exactly in the most stable state of mind, explicitly yells at his forces to "Kill every last one of them!" before rushing into battle. This doesn't factor into gameplay, however, even on [[MultipleEndings Dimitri's route]], as the battle's goal is actually to defeat the enemy armies' commanders, which will make them [[NonLethalKO retreat]].
231* The player character in the ''VideoGame/FreeSpace'' expansion pack ''Silent Threat'' gets to do this in the first two missions, in order to protect a fragile alliance with an alien race after a friendly fire incident (the second mission: one ship was scripted to escape the first mission, so you went to its destination and killed everything there).
232* ''VideoGame/SkiesOfArcadia'''s BigBad would have done this when he [[DoomedHometown doomed Vyse and Aika's hometown]] if the Air Pirates had resisted capture. Luckily, they didn't, so the non-combatants were spared and you got to rescue everyone else later.
233* ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'':
234** Drek'Thar gives this order with his buff.
235** This is one of Sylvanas' quotes if she's ever under attack by an Alliance raid
236--->'''Sylvanas Windrunner:''' Let none survive!
237* In one of the ''VideoGame/DawnOfWar'' Imperial Guard and Sisters of Battle campaigns, you get to witness the fate of captured Chaos Cultists. Justified, since you cannot take any chances with Chaos.
238* As indicated by the opening quote, Darth Malak in ''VideoGame/KnightsOfTheOldRepublic'' orders to destroy the entire planet of Taris. Yes, Franchise/StarWars's Sith like this trope. Malak does this in order to kill exactly ''one person'' who happens to be on Taris at the time. That one person survives.
239* ''VideoGame/CallOfDuty'':
240** Referenced by ''VideoGame/CallOfDuty4ModernWarfare'', ''VideoGame/CallOfDutyWorldAtWar'' and ''VideoGame/CallOfDutyModernWarfare2'' at the beginning of multiplayer matches as Russian forces - the first and third have their announcers say "Take no prisoners, comrades.", ''World at War'' has [[Creator/GaryOldman Viktor Reznov]] say "Show courage, show pride, ''but show no mercy!''" On the other hand, there is no gameplay mechanic to take prisoners anyway...
241** And in ''World at War'''s single player, Reznov encourages you to kill a group of surrendering Germans. If you don't do it yourself, he'll just kill them anyway.
242** The multiplayer announcer for the Cuban Army in ''VideoGame/CallOfDutyBlackOps'' will sometimes open up matches by saying "Remember, no survivors!"
243** Then there's No Russian from ''Modern Warfare 2'', a playable terrorist attack wherein Makarov and his group ([[IfYoureSoEvilEatThisKitten which you are infiltrating]]) utterly massacre everyone in their sight at a Russian airport, which is the inciting event of the game's entire story.
244* Having won the ultimate victory in ''VideoGame/StarCraftBroodWar'', Kerrigan denies the defeated Earth admiral a chance to surrender his troops and mockingly offers his fleet a head start before sending her HordeOfAlienLocusts after it. They devour every last one of them.
245** In the Episode 0 ''VideoGame/StarCraft'' campaign Loomings (which got released as free shareware), a Confederate magistrate sends you, a lieutenant in Alpha Squadron, off to take care of a Sons of Korhal uprising by saying in your mission briefing: "There are to be no arrests, Lieutenant. I hope you understand what I mean. I want this problem solved once and for all."
246* ''VideoGame/DawnOfWarII'' has "NO MERCY!" amongst the random battle dialogue of the Space Marines. Naturally, there are no mechanics for taking prisoners in the game.
247* In ''VideoGame/{{Patapon}}'', one of the things your Patapons can say is "Take no prisoners!" (And indeed you're committing WaddlingHead genocide.)
248* In ''VideoGame/{{Homeworld}}'' and even more so in ''Homeworld 2'', setting a vessel to aggressive tactics is usually met with the ship captain responding "Weapons set to full power. Show no mercy."
249* While not specifically mentioned in the ''VideoGame/TotalWar'' series, starting with ''VideoGame/EmpireTotalWar'', it is no longer possible to take prisoners in battle. In ''[[VideoGame/MedievalTotalWar Medieval]]'', ''VideoGame/{{Rome|TotalWar}}'', and ''VideoGame/{{Medieval II|TotalWar}}'', any enemy struck from behind was knocked out instead of killed and taken prisoner if you win the battle. You could then free, execute, or attempt to ransom (execution as backup) them back.
250** This is probably an aversion, however, since it was about this time that rules about taking prisoners started to be enforced. The likelihood is that the winner ''is'' taking prisoners, but since you have no legal choice about whether to kill them or not it's just being quietly taken care of behind the scenes.
251*** Maybe, but they're still listed in the "Killed" column.
252*** ''VideoGame/TotalWarShogun2'' also doesn't allow the taking of prisoners.
253** Executing captive troops became an option within the game series from ''VideoGame/TotalWarRomeII'' and onward. Specific effects depend on the game, but it at least always affects your diplomatic standings by angering your enemy and factions friendly with them while making those who dislike your enemy to like you better. This is contrasted with the options of ransoming the captives for money, or pressing them to join your forces to immediately replenish some of your troops' losses. ''VideoGame/TotalWarThreeKingdoms'' also allows you to consider executing (as well as ransoming or employing, if they'll allow the latter) generals if you manage to capture them, with executing them giving you their ancilliaries or equipment.
254* This is a favorite habit of ''VideoGame/SuikodenII'''s Prince Luca Blight when ransacking random towns throughout the game. If fact, he takes it a step further by personally and gleefully butchering all of the inhabitants individually while they beg for their lives.
255* In ''VideoGame/{{Spore}}'', this is the only way to conquer an enemy tribe/civilization/planet if yours is warlike. (It can be subverted if you choose to win over the others with music/religion, or with money.)
256* The objective of the winning team in a ''VideoGame/{{Titanfall}}'' match during the "Epilogue" is to wipe the losing team off the map before they can make it to their evac ship. The other solution is to [[SinkTheLifeboats destroy the ship itself before it can take off]].
257* In ''Videogame/BattleZone1998'''s [[DirtyCommunists Cosmo Colonist Army]] campaign, while escorting a team of Soviet scientists in their {{Awesome Personnel Carrier}}s, a dozen American [[EliteMooks Black Dogs]] appear in their {{Hover Tank}}s. Realizing that they are completely outnumbered, the scientists radio that they are willing to discuss terms of surrender, only for the Black Dogs commander to say there will be no terms. The mission then turns into a race towards a CCA base before your squadron and the transports are overwhelmed by Black Dogs.
258* In ''VideoGame/Prey2017'', [[spoiler:The mercenary Dahl brings an army of military robots to do this on Talos 1, human and Typhon alike, so the [[MegaCorp TranStar corporation]] can rebuild with no witnesses. In a recording his boss William Yu says the trope name when Dahl questions the order because it includes William's two children: Morgan and Alex Yu]].
259** In a secret ending, [[spoiler:protagonist Morgan Yu can help Dahl by killing every other human on the station. Doing so makes Dahl transport Morgan back to Earth and gives the achievement "Awkward Ride Home".]]
260* In ''[[Videogame/{{X}} X3: Albion Prelude]]'''s GuiltFreeExterminationWar between the Earth State and its LostColony, the Argon Federation, both sides will indiscriminately murder any civilian craft that is between them and the enemy defenders, and if the invaders kill the defenders, they will then RapePillageAndBurn, systematically destroying all civilian ships and stations. In previous games the AI functioned the same, but it was limited to small border skirmishes between rival empires (Argon versus Paranid, Boron vs. Split) or repelling invading the [[AbsoluteXenophobe Xenon or Kha'ak]], without the wide-scale destruction of the ''Albion Prelude'' war.
261* In ''VideoGame/{{Stellaris}}'', this is essentially the entire foreign policy of [[AbsoluteXenophobe Fanatical Purifiers]], [[HordeOfAlienLocusts Devouring Swarms]] and [[AIIsACrapshoot Determined Exterminators]] summed up in three words. All pops on any planet they conquer are [[WouldBeRudeToSayGenocide purged]] automatically, with the player's only option being the decision of ''how'' every man, woman and child on those unlucky worlds is going to die. Methods vary by how long they take until completion, and include bog-standard execution squads going from door to door, species-wide neutering, working the victims to death in labor camps, and for especially deranged empires, either processing the conquered populace into food or energy, or cultivating the entire sentient species as ''livestock''. Most of these options are available to regular xenophobic empire as well, but only the three special examples mentioned above have them hard-coded into their play style.
262* ''VideoGame/SunsetOverdrive'': Eavesdropping on the Las Catrinas shows Esperenza setting this as policy, because somehow she learned that one of the Scabs they attacked and left alive, but without legs, got painkillers before his death. Painkillers that they could've raided from the Scabs for the children in the Las Catrinas' care, so survivors are avoided so their enemies don't use up resources that can be raided for later.
263[[/folder]]
264
265[[folder:Web Animation]]
266* ''WebAnimation/MinecraftEndventures'': Wrecker orders the endermen to kill everyone in the Rebel City during his attack on it. [[spoiler:Only Colin, Red, Shadow, Clickclack, Nobraynes and Katie survived.]]
267[[/folder]]
268
269[[folder:Webcomics]]
270* In ''Webcomic/AmericanBarbarian'' [[http://www.ambarb.com/?p=82 he is told the attackers take no prisoners.]]
271* In ''Webcomic/BobAndGeorge'', [[http://www.bobandgeorge.com/archives/000819c Megaman plays no heed to Fire Man's pleas for mercy.]]
272* In ''Webcomic/ChampionsOfFaraus'', when leading Sarengal's cultists in the attack on the stadium in Dorawn during the champions tournament, Skullcrosis says "No prisoners-if you feel like it".One of the cultists chuckles in response.
273* Karcharoth orders a large group of fleeing opponents gunned down in the first firefight of ''Webcomic/CryHavoc''.
274* ''Webcomic/GirlGenius'': Despite how scatterbrained Count Wolkerstorfer even he knows better than to leave survivors to let the Corbettites know he attacked their rails, though his plan to kill everyone is foiled by the Corbettites.
275-->'''[[SuperSoldier Dimo]]:''' Hyu seem kind ov de forgetful type, so hy is gun ''varn'' hyu... dis iz de Corbettite Railvay! Pipple gets in beeg trouble messing vit dem, und hyu iz ''all by hyuself!'' Vot iz hyu ''tinkink'', hey?\
276'''[[MadScientist Wolkerstorfer]]:''' Oh, ''I'' see, No, no. [[FalseReassurance Don't worry, no one will even know I was here]]! After all, it's not as though there will be anyone left to say differently. Oh, I'll admit this ''suit'' is a bit of a disappointment, but I am by ''no means'' "all by myself." [[https://www.girlgeniusonline.com/comic.php?date=20140718 Good gracious no!]]
277* ''ComicStrip/KnightsOfTheDinnerTable'': [[TheSmartGuy Brian]] has a tendency to do this, especially in the espionage campaigns.
278* In ''Webcomic/NipAndTuck'', the ShowWithinAShow ''Rebel Cry'' features a "scorched earth" order to ensure our hero does not escape.
279[[/folder]]
280
281[[folder:Web Original]]
282* The EvilOverlordList suggests that when one does this, it must be done ''[[GenocideBackfire properly]]''.
283* Said by Jax and Sonya to Hanzo Hasashi, a.k.a. Scorpion, in ''WebVideo/MortalKombatRebirth'' regarding the underground tournament. Apparently, even the cops are too fed up with the crime spree to bother arresting people.
284* ''LetsPlay/{{Mahu}}'': In "Second Chance", the Dyss and other of the galaxy's most genocidal alien races follow this trope, slaughtering whole planetary populations rather than conquering them.
285[[/folder]]
286
287[[folder:Western Animation]]
288* In ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'', Sozin harnesses the power of a once-in-a-century comet to do this to the Air Nomads. [[spoiler: He almost succeeded, had one unhappy twelve-year-old monk not run away from home and accidentally gotten himself frozen in an iceberg shortly before]].
289* PlayedForLaughs in ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'''s season 6 21st episode "The PTA Disbands": [[UsefulNotes/TheAmericanCivilWar a Civil War]] re-enactment shows a Springfield brigade "9th Bearded Infantry" of the Union being offered a unconditional surrender by Confederate soldiers waving white cloths as white flags while entirely unarmed and clearly horribly injured. However, "the Springfield brigade was too ''brave'' to accept their surrender...and the Springfielders heroically slaughtered their enemies [[AintTooProudToBeg as they prayed for mercy]]."
290* ''WesternAnimation/SpongebobSquarepants'': According to Plankton, the "N" in [[FunWithAcronyms "FUN"]] stands for "No Survivors".
291* ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheCloneWars'':
292** [[Recap/StarWarsTheCloneWarsS1E2RisingMalevolence "Rising Malevolence"]]: Count Dooku orders this regarding the fleets that the ''Malevolence'' has destroyed, as he doesn't want the Republic to find out about the warship or its giant ion cannon. Obi-Wan notes that the Separatists are being "unusually tidy".
293--->'''Dooku:''' We must keep our position secret. Send out the hunters. [[SinkTheLifeboats I want all of those life pods destroyed.]]
294** It is standard Republic procedure to gun down all surrendering battle droids. Even when they drop their weapons, raise their hands, and scream for mercy. This is frequently played for laughs.
295* ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'': This was the purpose of [[spoiler: the Diamond's final attack on Earth during the original Gem War]], greatly fueled as a last-ditch revenge act for not only sabotaging their colony but also because [[spoiler: the Rebellion leader Rose Quartz shattered Pink Diamond. However, because Pink Diamond was not with them, the attack corrupts all the unprotected Gems still on Earth instead of shattering them. [[AndIMustScream Not that corruption is much better than death]]]].
296[[/folder]]
297
298[[folder:Real Life]]
299* From ancient times there has been an unspoken rule that if the defenders of a city involved in a siege surrendered, averting the major battles and casualties that results from sieges and siege breaking, they would be treated relatively nicely. The alternative was that once the attackers broke the siege, generally incurring heavy casualties, they pretty much had the right to completely [[RapePillageAndBurn destroy the city and slaughter the inhabitants]] in order to "encourage" the surrounding cities to surrender. Mongols practiced this to the letter, to the point of killing not only all the people but also all the animals and piling their skulls in huge pyramids. Such massacres were comparatively rare, however, since the frightful reputation of the Mongols caused so many of their enemies to surrender without a fight to avoid such fates. In some cultures though, only the males down to age ten or so would be killed, with the rest [[MadeASlave enslaved]] instead (this was common among slave societies, naturally).
300** During sieges, UsefulNotes/GenghisKhan would begin by setting up a white tent. If the city did not surrender before the end of the day, the tent was switched with a red tent, which meant all men of fighting age would be killed regardless. If another day passed, the tent was switched with a black one, which meant every human and animal within walls would be killed.
301* Littoral and archipelago warfare in general. Islands tend to be defended to the last man, and there are few facilities on tending the wounded and the prisoners.
302* The Alamo, The Battle of Thermopylae, and several other {{last stand}}s where the defenders were so effective (and/or annoying) that the victorious attackers finished off whatever survivors, wounded, or captured noncombatants they got their hands on afterward.
303** This was especially notable in the Thermopylae example. Persian tradition dictated that the wounded be cared for and for the corpses of nobles and valiant warriors were to be returned if possible and treated with honor. Xerxes was so enraged by the battle, though, that all were killed and the body of Leonidas was crucified and beheaded (at least that's what the order was)
304* The Massacre of Glencoe was ordered by King William of Orange with the line:
305-->''You are hereby ordered to fall upon the rebels, the [=McDonalds=] (sic) of Glenco (sic), and put all to the sword under seventy[[labelnote:*]]In those days it was rare to find anyone much over 50 and the understanding was that anyone 70 or over would probably die on their own without someone to provide care for them.[[/labelnote]].''
306* This is frequently applied by a force that manages to defeat one much larger than them - they can't maintain so many prisoners, so the logical thing to do is to kill them all.
307** Also the case with insurgencies; who when they do take captives, have neither the institutions to put them on trial nor the facilities to detain them, so are left with no choice but to execute or release them back into the regime's forces. If they ''did'' have the resources, historically often the rest would be enslaved.
308* Famously happened during the Albigensian Crusade against Catharism in southern France. Asked by a soldier how to tell the difference between Cathar heretics and good Catholics, the [[ChurchMilitant Papal legate]] [[KnightTemplar Arnaud Amalric]] replied:
309-->''"Kill them all. The Lord will recognize his own."''
310** This may be apochryphal, as exactly the same comment is ascribed to the man who captured Jerusalem in the First Crusade and was posed with the problem of sorting good Christians out from pernicious Jews and Moslems. It's debatable [[BeamMeUpScotty if he said]] any such a thing, as there doesn't seem to be any record of him saying those words until about 50 years afterwards.
311* Arguably the result of any protracted siege in history. The soldiers, after watching their mates getting killed in various horrific fashions over a period of weeks or months, take out their frustrations on the defenders and civilians inside.
312** UsefulNotes/WorldWarI, with its conditions of troops being subjected to constant shelling and extensive deadlocked trench warfare throughout the Western Front, had some similar results at times when major victories occurred.
313* The [[{{Pirates}} Jolly Roger]]. In real life, the Jolly Roger was a ''good'' thing (assuming you were being attacked by pirates), as it meant that the pirates just wanted to rob you, and would accept prisoners. However, a blood red flag meant "No Quarter". Typically, the black Jolly Roger is what would be flown, because [[PragmaticVillainy it made the pirates' job much easier if a target ship's crew knew that they could surrender and survive]]. If the target fought back and angered them enough though, the red flag went up.
314* In [[UsefulNotes/TheRomanEmpire Roman conflicts]], once the battering ram was deployed, it was the signal that no prisoners would be taken, even as slaves. The ''Series/{{Rome}}'' episode "The Ram Has Touched The Wall" ("Murum aries attigit") explains this.
315** To extend the explanation: when a (Roman) army approached a hostile city and the city surrendered before arrival, the city's inhabitants and possessions were sacrosanct, and there would be no (official) looting or pillaging. If the city held out, but surrendered before the siege engines were in place, the citizens who fought (those of fighting age) were taken as slaves and the city looted, but no (official) rape or other destruction would take place. If the siege continued to the full, and the city overrun, the invaders could do as they pleased, and the commanders either looked the other way or actively encouraged their troops. This even applied to Roman cities, such as those on Sicily, after they rebelled. There are accounts of Legionaries who expressed the hope that the city would not surrender, so they could get some good looting and rape in.
316** The city of Carthage was completely destroyed by the Romans at the climax of the Third Carthaginian War. The Carthaginian citizens were either slaughtered or captured as slaves; none were spared. However, its land was probably not, despite apocryphal belief, [[SaltTheEarth salted so nothing else would grow on it]] as Romans would eventually resettle the area. Not to mention that Rome didn't actually ''have'' enough salt destroy the farmland of Carthage, and "salting" of conquered lands was purely symbolic because salt was too valuable to throw away more than the symbolic handful.
317** Roman deserters were always killed if captured by Rome. There were accounts of ex-Roman soldiers at Carthage building a great bonfire in the Basilica before it fell, and leaping into the flames to avoid mandatory crucifixion for their desertion.
318*** This is shown in ''Series/SpartacusBloodAndSand'': The Thracians who deserted the Roman forces were killed or taken into slavery, along with those of their villages.
319* The Battle of Little Bighorn ended with the complete annihilation of Custer's troops. One horse survived, with multiple arrows in it, as did Custer's Crow scouts, [[ScrewThisImOutOfHere who decided to flee once they figured out just how badly outnumbered Custer's troops were]].
320* The Battle of Shiroyama in 1877 ended with all 500 Samurai rebels being massacred.
321* Hitler's Commando Order in UsefulNotes/WorldWarII; any commandos captured by the Nazis were to be shot, even if in uniform and/or attempting to surrender.
322** They also had a similar order to summarily execute any captured Soviet commissars (the Commissar Order).
323* Most of UsefulNotes/WorldWarII in the Pacific Theater was this, especially after the tide turned and the Americans began their slow advance towards Japan. The Japanese were scornful of those who surrendered, and tended to murder any prisoners they took, while at the same time refusing to surrender in any significant numbers, preferring one LastStand after another. Japanese propaganda also tried very hard (and with considerable success) to convince not only their own soldiers but also the civilians of the islands they occupied that capture by the Americans would be a FateWorseThanDeath. At the same time, Allied troops, either through lack of wherewithal to care for prisoners in some areas, or through paranoia (a well-worn tactic of the Japanese was to secret live grenades upon themselves if wounded or otherwise attack Allied troops coming to render aid) or through out-and-out hatred/reprisal, adopted an unofficial policy of not taking prisoners. This trope was so abused during the war that some units had to offer cash bounties for prisoners so that they could have prisoners from whom they could glean intelligence.
324** The Rape of Nanking had an official order to kill all prisoners. It ''seems'' to have been intended as a command to kill all military prisoners (which was bad enough), but by the time Nanking fell the normal Japanese commander was prostrate from sickness, and his replacement took a rather more free-wheeling interpretation of the command.
325** In the European Theater, during particular battles, both Allied and German troops were sometimes ordered or "encouraged" not to take any prisoners. However, often times these orders had practical motivations. During Operation Neptune, Allied paratroopers obviously had no rear echelon or base of operations to send prisoners of war to since they were operating behind enemy lines; the book ''Band of Brothers'' makes a point of the Easy Company commander, prior to the D-Day drop, specifically telling everyone that they were ''not'' taking prisoners in a somber tone ([[WhatYouAreInTheDark they did anyway]]). During the Battle of the Bulge, taking prisoners would slow down the German advance, which was on a time critical mission. Naturally, since the Allies won the war, (only) the Germans that were caught doing this were tried for war crimes.
326*** In particular, as Nazi war crimes came to be more widely known, it became common practice among American and British units not to take Waffen-SS prisoners. Among the Soviets this went beyond common practice and was official policy to kill all SS men. Many of the German prisoners who ''were'' taken by the Soviets likely wished for death, as they were sent to the gulags (thousands died).
327*** After the murder of Canadian prisoners in Normandy and later American prisoners at Malmedy by the Waffen-SS (and before news of the extermination camps was known), the Waffen-SS tended to have markedly fewer prisoners taken by American and Canadian units.
328*** After American troops liberated Dachau for the next day or so anyone found wearing a camp guard's uniform was either summarily shot, or [[DoWithHimAsYouWill left to the mercy of the survivors]]. At least fifty were killed, it was found. No one was prosecuted for it.
329** One American paratrooper once recounted an event during the Battle of the Bulge, in the aftermath of a skirmish where a large platoon of German soldiers surrendered to his squad; The Germans were tired of fighting, starved, and had many wounded and likely would not survive the frigid night, but the American squad barely had enough supplies to provide for their own people. After destroying every other weapon in the Germans' possession, one of the American soldier's buddies took the last remaining gun, loaded it with ''just'' enough bullets for the platoon, and leaned it against a nearby tree, telling the German soldiers [[LeaveBehindAPistol just what]] he left the weapon for, and left. Soon enough, as the squad recovered at camp, they began hearing single gunshots coming from the direction where they left the German platoon...
330** This was also very common in [[LaResistance partisan]] [[LesCollaborateurs warfare]]. Reasons are many:
331*** Deliberate acts of terror or reprisal killings against civilians led to a CycleOfRevenge.
332*** There was no area that was 100% secure, so taking prisoners meant there was a risk they would be set free (this goes double for partisans, who had to constantly move their base of operations, and prisoners would slow them down).
333*** Long-standing ethnic or religious tensions between the local populace.
334*** Ideological polarization (e.g. communists and fascists often neither gave nor expected quarter from each other).
335*** Lack of food or medical supplies meant none could be spared for prisoners.
336* The ''oriflamme'' of the French army between 1124 and 1415 was a blood-red standard and thus a signal that no mercy was to be shown. Unfortunately, they had a habit of losing it, once to the Flemish and three times to the English.
337** At the Battle of Agincourt King Henry didn't have enough men to guard the French prisoners of the first wave and simultaneously repel the counterattack of the second wave. So he killed the (unransomable) commoners and spared the knights (this was expected under chivalry rules too, although not always honored).
338* This is the modus operandi of the Mexican drug cartels; unless the person was literally worth more money alive than dead (such as in the case of ransoms, and even then there was no guarantee they would just take the money and kill the hostage anyways), there was no point taking a risk of the prisoner escaping and spilling the beans on their operations to police.
339* During the Russian Revolution, the Bolsheviks briefly considered killing only Tsar Nicholas and his son Alexei to get rid of the heirs and letting his wife Alexandra and four daughters live to not be seen as callous murderers of women. They decided against it when they realized that their relatives in the rest of Europe (mostly Alexander's cousin Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany) would send their armies to get them out if they were alive. Not wanting to get dragged into a power struggle, all seven of them were murdered in July 1918.
340* This was depressingly common in 16th century European warfare -- the Swiss pikemen, Spanish ''tercios'', and German ''Landsknecht'' were all notorious for it. Pride of place probably goes to the Balkan light cavalry mercenary Stradiots, whose contracts ''specified'' that they would be paid a bonus for every enemy head they brought back.
341* During the UsefulNotes/AmericanRevolution, this was often called "Tarleton's Quarter" on the ground that the British/Loyalist commander Banastre Tarleton had given this order in the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Waxhaws Battle of Waxhaws]] (in 1780 in South Carolina). It's not clear that he actually gave the order, but it's definitely true that his unit--"Tarleton's Raiders," composed of fierce Loyalists with no particular reason to be nice to the Patriot revolutionaries--killed a lot of men that day, many of whom may have surrendered or been attempting to surrender, and irrespective of what they did at Waxhaws, they were noted for being at least a notch nastier than other Loyalist units. Some reports of Waxhaws claim that Tarleton's horse was shot out from under him at the same time the Patriots attempted to surrender, with his Raiders mistakenly thinking Tarleton himself had been shot. Thus the Loyalist forces thought that [[ISurrenderSuckers the rebels had faked surrender and then murdered their commander]]. Regardless of the exact circumstances, afterwards vengeful Patriots in the Southern theater would sometimes respond to attempts by Loyalists to surrender with cries of "Tarleton's Quarter" before carrying out [[CycleOfRevenge reprisal killings]].
342* Throughout history, this became par the course for more brutal regimes. The reason for doing so though wasn't out of sheer brutality, but more by the 'logic' of: "[[DoUntoOthersBeforeTheyDoUntoUs if they are left alive, they'll only want to rise up against us one day. Better to kill them now and save us the trouble of having a rebellion later.]]" And also "if we take them prisoner we have to guard and feed them, if we kill them we can just dump them in a hole in the ground." [[MachiavelliWasWrong To no one's surprise, it's often this level of mindless killing that causes people to rise up against the regime.]] After all, what have they got to lose?
343* At the Battle of Fort Pillow during the American Civil War, some black Union troops were shot by Confederates rather than having been taken prisoner. The Confederate government had actually declared they would not take black troops prisoner at first, but relented when the Union threatened retaliation by doing the same.
344** Similarly in UsefulNotes/WorldWarI, Imperial Germany threatened to do this to any captured American soldier found with a [[TheDreaded dreaded]] [[ShotgunsAreJustBetter Trench Gun]], with the justification that the use of the (incredibly effective) weapon in battle was unnecessarily cruel and thus the captured soldier was being summarily executed for the "crime" of using it. Much like the Confederate example above, Germany wisely retracted this threat after the Americans threatened to do the same to any German soldier found using a flamethrower.
345[[/folder]]

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