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4[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/walker_headshot.jpg]]
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6
7->''"Cut it out! Stop wasting your damn bullets, you jerks! You need to hit their heads! I told you! See, like this!"''
8-->-- '''Zantoro''', ''Film/HellOfTheLivingDead''
9
10The ubiquitous "gotta shoot 'em in the head" scenario. For many different reasons, TheUndead throughout fiction are vulnerable only to [[BoomHeadshot headshots]]. Kinda like how ([[OurVampiresAreDifferent many]]) vampires are only vulnerable to getting stabbed in the heart. Fortunately, removal of the head also works on people who are not a member of the walking dead, so you don't have to worry about it going out of fashion as a killing method. This may have a somewhat scientific basis: first, [[YouCantKillWhatsAlreadyDead a zombie would have a lowered to nonexistent pain response, and would most likely not stop attacking until its nervous system has been effectively severed]] — since it is ''dead'', pettier issues like "missing organs" or "blood loss" won't be as effective as they would be on the living. Second, mindless though they may seem, zombies logically have to still need brains to command to their muscles to walk, to analyze what their eyes send them, and thus know that there is a human to be eaten in front of them, etcetera.
11Accepting this rule is often a part of suspension of disbelief. If it doesn't work this way, and every part of the zombie can work independently of one another, you might find them PullingThemselvesTogether. In this scenario, it's likely the only option is to KillItWithFire.
12
13Subtrope of DecapitationRequired. Sister trope to BoomHeadshot and AttackItsWeakPoint but distinct from them; BoomHeadshot is when a headshot is the most ''efficient'' way to kill something, whereas this trope is where BoomHeadshot is the ''only'' way to kill something, period. If this is the only way to kill a robot, it's CranialProcessingUnit. Related to the ChunkySalsaRule.
14
15Most songs about zombies tend to {{lampshade|Hanging}} this trope.
16----
17!!Examples
18
19[[foldercontrol]]
20
21[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
22* ''Manga/DragonBall'': Namekians are able to regenerate from most wounds or missing limbs so long as their head is still intact. However, doing so takes energy and they can still be killed by a sufficiently powerful attack. Cell, an ArtificialHuman made of the DNA of various fighters including Piccolo, possesses the same ability, as there is a specific nucleus in his head that absolutely must be destroyed[[note]]Which caused a PlotHole when Cell was still able to regenerate when Goku at one point completely annihilates his upper body. The dub changed this to him being to [[FromASingleCell regenerate from any cell]][[/note]] to kill him.
23* Played completely straight with ''Manga/HighschoolOfTheDead''. Despite believing the entire situation to be insane, like something out of the movies, the characters rapidly adapt. [[AnyoneCanDie Or get eaten]] in sometimes [[EroticEating disturbingly sensual manners]].
24* ''Manga/{{Claymore}}''. Due to Yoma's amazing HealingFactor, a quick kill is absolutely necessary, and even then, it's preferred to completely tear their corpses to bits. [[TheOphelia Ophelia]] lampshades this, telling the Awakened who breaks her neck that you need to behead Claymores to be sure.
25* In ''Manga/MermaidSaga'', some people who eat mermaid flesh turn into [[BodyHorror zombie-like monsters]] and some become immortal. In either case, though, the only way to permanently kill them is to decapitate them.
26* ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure'':
27** ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventurePhantomBlood Phantom Blood]]'':
28*** Played straight by ghouls, as destroying their heads/brains or slicing them off their necks is the only way to stop them short of using sunlight or Hamon.
29*** Played with in regards to vampires. The mystical artifact that creates them does so by altering their brains, making total destruction of the head the only way not involving sunlight or Hamon to get rid of them, and even if you ''do'' use sunlight or Hamon they can actually survive as long as they don't get hit in the head with it. Decapitation just creates a pissed-off vampire head. If you're not using sunlight or Hamon; however, you'd need to destroy it right down to the cellular level as at least one vampire was able to regenerate (slowly) from being blown into LudicrousGibs by a bunch of grenades. Granted, sufficient head trauma isn't very nice for them either, as while Dio managed to shrug off getting a bullet between his eyes with only a moment's hesitation, getting his skull caved in and brain punched by Star Platinum's fist gave him one ''hell'' of a concussion that left him unable to properly move his legs until he got a blood transfusion.
30** ''[[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventureBattleTendency Battle Tendency]]'': Similar rules apply to the [[HumanoidAbomination Pillar Men]], who are basically souped up vampires. Esidisi survived being reduced to a ''brain'' by Hamon and only went down for good after taking another Hamon blast there. Wamuu was fatally injured by a Hamon explosion that destroyed all of his body ''except'' his head and was slowly disintegrating from that before he finally succumbed.
31* Played mostly straight in ''Manga/{{Hellsing}}''. [[OurZombiesAreDifferent Ghouls]] will only stop going if they're shot in the head, with which the power of the guns [[BadassNormal the]] [[FriendlyNeighborhoodVampire characters]] are using, usually destroys the head completely. It's been stated that they will stop if shot in the heart, but we only see it with the vampires controlling the ghouls. [[MercyKill Killing them this way is seen as preferable]]; [[NatureAdoresAVirgin the victims who become like this]] had no choice in the matter and are brainless, flesh-eating machines.
32** However, piercing his heart, cutting off his head, and sticking a holy blade through his brain [[FromASingleCell still isn't enough]] to slay Alucard.
33* Subverted in ''Manga/FullmetalAlchemist'' with the zombie-like "mannequin" homunculi. While destroying their heads does keep them from biting, they stay alive and it's much easier to disable them by injuring their legs.
34* ''Manga/AttackOnTitan'':
35** Not exactly true decapitation, but the Titans can only be killed when they are slashed on the nape of their necks. The Rogue Titan usually decapitates titans with its powerful fists and then stomps on their necks in order to kill them. [[spoiler: Later played straight in that slicing out the nape actually decapitates what's left of the human pilot inside.]]
36** Played straight by Titan Shifters, however, as their HealingFactor allows them to regenerate from serious injuries that would cripple or kill normal people, including lost limbs, and while it is possible to overtax their healing with enough consecutive damage it's a hard point to reach, especially if they can trigger their Titan transformation. Destroying their heads or severing their necks are [[spoiler:usually]] near instant fatal wounds for them [[spoiler:and it's why Titans when eating them have a compunction to bite off their upper bodies around their shoulder areas]]. Otherwise, the only way to kill one is to leave NoBodyLeftBehind or the ChunkySalsaRule (preferably with their heads/spines pulped). It's heavily implied the reason for this is because [[spoiler:the original Titan Shifter, Ymir Fritz, gained the power of Titans when an alien creature symbiotically attached itself to and merged with her spine.]]
37* ''Manga/MyHeroAcademia'': The only surefire way of ending a Noumu (an Artificial Human with multiple quirks), is to do this. Most of them have really strong healing powers that make damaging or even cutting off parts of their bodies minor inconveniences to them. [[spoiler:In the High-End Noumus case, which are the most powerful of the Noumus, the head needs to be destroyed, because even if they are decapitated, the head can create a new body.]]
38* In ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'', cutting off a [[OurGhostsAreDifferent Soul Reaper's or Hollow's]] head is about the only way to guarantee quick and certain death for the opponent in question. While weaker opponents can be dispatched by "just" badly mangling them, ones with sufficiently high spiritual power can survive having their entire sides and internal organs blown away as long as they get medical treatment fast enough.
39* In ''Literature/{{Shiki}}'' the most effective way to kill the vampires running around is to somehow disable their circulatory system. This means that the best way to make sure they stay dead is either a stake to the heart or severing the head.
40[[/folder]]
41
42[[folder:Comic Books]]
43* ''ComicBook/MarvelZombies'' can only be killed by destroying their brains. Decapitation just usually leaves an irritated head and a lifeless body (as shown by Zombie Wasp and Deadpool), sometimes a headless body walking around (as shown with ''Earth-Z'''s Electro).
44* Subverted in ''ComicBook/JudgeDredd''. Judge Anderson actually tries this on Judge Death as he's holding a woman and her baby hostage, but it barely even fazes him. Standard judge training doesn't really help if your perp is a talking corpse.
45* ''ComicBook/SimonDark'': Averted. While there are several flavors of undead in the comic Simon and his "brothers" fit the pop culture zombie concept the closest and are, at most, mildly inconvenienced by decapitation or being shot or stabbed through the head. Their hearts seem to be more important as the only one of their number to die gets ripped in half and his heart removed.
46* In the Chilean comic ''Zombies en la Moneda'' this is the only effective way to eliminate the undead.
47* In ''ComicBook/DemonKnights'' a vampire army besieging the protagonists can only be defeated by removing the head or destroying the heart.
48* Dracula is vanquished several times in ''ComicBook/TheTombOfDracula'' and ''ComicBook/DraculaLives'', but since his head is never removed afterwards to make his death permanent, he always manages to return.
49[[/folder]]
50
51[[folder:Fan Works]]
52* ''Fanfic/AlienSpeciesCrossoverReturnToLV426'': Boone has run some tests on Lise, and discovered that part of her brain is responsible for triggering her body to regenerate, and believes that destroying this part of the brain would be the only way to kill her or others like her. [[spoiler:This isn't tested in the main story, though Lise's dreams about Xenomorphs include the sense their inner mouths are primed to strike at that vulnerable spot, indicating they know what the hybrids are, how they work, and how to effectively kill them. It is confirmed in the first sequel/side story, where a Xenomorph unleashed on Alfheim by the Predator uses its inner mouth to kill one of the hybrids.]]
53* In ''Fanfic/HarmonyTheory'', Nightmare Umbra's undead minions can only be destroyed by [[HeadCrushing crushing their skulls]]. They regenerate from anything else, including decapitation.
54[[/folder]]
55
56[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
57* Averted in ''WesternAnimation/ParaNorman''. In one scene, one of the zombies is run over by a car and gets dismembered, which also includes his head being separated from his body. However, he doesn’t die, and the next time we see the zombies, they’re finishing putting him back together.
58* In ''Anime/ResidentEvilDegeneration'', Leon warns the S.R.T. members Greg and Angela accompanying him to the hot zone to shoot the infected in the head, and he had to say it ''twice''. [[TooDumbToLive They never listen, and it gets Greg bitten by a zombie, forcing him to stay behind.]]
59[[/folder]]
60
61[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
62* Creator/GeorgeARomero's ''Film/LivingDeadSeries'' of zombie movies. The [[BeamMeUpScotty (superficially, anyway)]] TropeNamer is a newsman who [[ICantBelieveImSayingThis can't believe he actually has to say this in a news report]]. At least in ''Film/NightOfTheLivingDead1968'', the only other option, according to a medical examiner being interviewed in-universe, is to [[KillItWithFire dispose of "all persons who die during this crisis from whatever cause" in funeral pyres within minutes of their deaths]]. Ironically, the zombies in his films are only immobilised by decapitation. It's debatable whether the heads themselves actually die if the brain isn't destroyed, and as demonstrated in ''Film/DayOfTheDead1985'' it's possible to partially reanimate a severed head.
63* ''Film/ShaunOfTheDead'' is the actual TropeNamer, inspired quote from the Romero movie, right down to the ICantBelieveImSayingThis, and even actually quotes the trope verbatim:
64-->'''[[NewscasterCameo Jeremy Thompson]]:''' It's not something you ever really expect to say, is it? "Removing the head or destroying the brain."
65* While not a zombie, the villain in the [[VideoNasties video nasty]] ''Film/Absurd1981'' can only be killed this way. All other attempts to stop him just make a mess.
66* Subverted in ''Film/TheReturnOfTheLivingDead''. The characters assume that they can kill the zombies by destroying the brain, just like in ''Film/NightOfTheLivingDead1968''. Nope.
67-->"You mean the movie ''lied?!''"
68* ''Film/ResidentEvil2002''. The zombies can only be killed by severing the top of the spinal column or massive trauma to the brain.
69* Taught to children at an early age in ''{{Film/Fido}}'':
70--> "In the brain and not the chest. Headshots are the very best!"
71* Played with in ''Film/Scream3''. The killer is wearing a bulletproof vest under his Ghost Face costume, so [[spoiler:Dewey]] has to shoot him in the head to kill him. This is after Sydney stabbed him in the chest with a stiletto, giving you a rather interesting take on the "stake-through-the-heart-and-cut-off-the-head" method of killing a vampire. Lampshaded earlier in the movie when [[spoiler:Randy, in his postmortem trilogy rules video]] explains that the killer is going to be supernatural this time around, requiring some special means to deal with him.
72* Averted in ''Film/{{Outpost}}''. The mercenaries are watching a film from UsefulNotes/WorldWarII and realise the Nazi commander shown is their SoleSurvivor. One of the mercs immediately walks into his cell and puts a bullet in his brain. "Is he dead?" / "His brains are all over the wall. That's good enough for me." Cue MassOhCrap when the 'dead' Nazi lifts his head to look at them and [[DarknessEqualsDeath the lights go out]].
73* In ''Film/JasonX'', Jason is finally put down by having his head blown apart. Unfortunately, they had the misfortune of shooting him into an AutoDoc first, and the damaged machine fixed him up [[CameBackStrong better than new]].
74* Averted in ''Film/TheDeadNextDoor'', where both decapitation and headshots have no effect on zombies, and the US government is searching for a way to kill them permanently.
75* ''{{Film/Mythica}}'': Thane instructs his soldiers how to kill zombies, which includes this and [[KillItWithFire burning them]].
76* ''Film/Overlord2018'': In keeping with the usual zombie portrayal, this appears to be the only way of killing supersoldiers except for being burned or blown apart-they shrug off anything less.
77* ''Film/{{Eternals}}'': The Deviants that have resurfaced on Earth [[HealingHands can heal their injuries]], making them much tougher foes. Destroying their heads is an effective way to dispatch them.
78* In ''Film/SixGunSavior'', the only way to destroy Zathera's zombies is by removing their heads or using [[HolyHandGrenade a blessed weapon]].
79* Soundly lampshaded in ''Film/CockneysVsZombies.'' "Everyone knows" to shoot the zombies in the head. However, one of the gang's former friends is an insane criminal with a steel plate in his bonce from a wartime head injury, which makes his skull bulletproof(!).
80* ''Film/JuanOfTheDead'':
81** The first zombie that Juan and friends (assuming it is a "vampire") try to kill keeps on attacking even though it is stabbed with a wooden stake multiple times.
82** Later, when Juan is offering a seminar to his neighbors on how to kill the "[[NotUsingTheZWord dissidents]]", all present know that the only way to dispatch one is by destroying the brain. When Juan asks who knows why that is, however, nobody knows the reason, to Juan's dismay. He was hoping someone would tell him.
83[[/folder]]
84
85[[folder:Literature]]
86* Zombies from ''Literature/TheZombieSurvivalGuide'' and ''Literature/WorldWarZ'' are vulnerable only to headshots because the virus causes radical mutation, making everything but the brain completely vestigial.
87** Partly averted. Removing the head renders the zombie harmless, but not destroyed. The head is still 'alive' and can still bite. In fact, the Record Attacks comics recount a rite of passage involving spending the night locked in a room full of moaning zombie heads (the author ''does'' note that it's impossible for them to moan if they lack a torso, although it has been suggested the moaning is psychosomatic; it's expected, so it's fervently imagined to happen).
88** A soldier also recounts in ''World War Z'' how it ''is'' entirely possible to shoot the skull but miss the brain and, thus, need more than one headshot to finish the zombie. The author includes this as a warning for people not to panic that the zombie is invincible if one shot doesn't do it... unlike the men in the soldier's squad that day...
89** Late in the war the United States developed and mass-produced very simple, and thus cheap and reliable, rifles designed from the ground up to be good at headshots, along with ammo that burns out the brain. Individual soldiers using them rack up kill counts in the thousands.
90* Some ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}'' novels dealing with TheUndead-and indeed, the Vampire Counts Army Book- state that only a headshot dissipates the BlackMagic animating the corpses. [[GameplayAndStorySegregation You'd think that'd affect your chance to wound them...]]
91** The Vampire Counts book, however, suggests that when you "wound" a zombie, you're actually smashing it into enough pieces that it can't do anything - which, given the state of decay involved in one of these things (they're literally held together with fence posts and nails), is easier than you might think.
92* Decapitation is actually the only way to kill a vampire in Bram Stoker's original ''Literature/{{Dracula}}''. ([[Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer Buffy-style]] staking is kind of a PlotTumor of the Dracula-derived vampire mythos; driving a stake through the heart is used to ''immobilize'' the vamps in Dracula so it's easier to take the head off.)
93* In the even earlier vampire novel ''Literature/{{Carmilla}}'' they took it a step further and cremated the vampire's remains after impaling and decapitating her, then scattered the ashes in running water.
94* Lampshaded in ''Brains: A Zombie Memoir''.
95* In ''Literature/SkulduggeryPleasant: Playing with Fire'', Kenspeckle Grouse mentions that decapitation is one of the few methods of killing a vampire that is effective and not pure fiction - he then adds that, in fairness, decapitation is effective against most things. Surprisingly, it's shown three books later that cutting off a ''zombie's'' head will ''not'' kill it. The body will stop working, but the head can last and keep talking for ''years''.
96* Averted in ''Literature/CounselorsAndKings''- it's explicitly stated that removing the head does ''not'' destroy a zombie, though it does blind and deafen it (since the now-headless undead has no eyes or ears). Magic or completely destroying the corpse (through dismemberment or fire) is what kills it).
97* In ''Literature/TheForestOfHandsAndTeeth'', zombies can only be killed by chopping off their heads.
98* Averted in ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'': the only way to destroy a wight is to chop them into little pieces (just dismembering them is not enough, the severed limbs will come after you) or [[KillItWithFire burn them]].
99* Not a zombie, but in ''Literature/GalaxyOfFear'', UltimateLifeForm SuperSoldier [[spoiler: Eppon]], which was [[AllYourPowersCombined developed with a zombie-making project among others]], has a HealingFactor that lets it shrug off any wounds... except [[ExplosiveLeash the bomb]] in its [[YourHeadASplode head]]. [[spoiler:TheStinger at the end suggests that even that isn't enough.]]
100** The earlier zombies weren't even slowed down by a barrage of blaster fire, presumably including some headshots, only thing that could kill them was a compound designed to counteract the reanimation serum.
101* In ''Literature/WarmBodies'', any human not "debrained" comes back as a zombie. [[BrainFood Brains are, however, a zombie's favorite part]], so humans that rise from zombie bites require the attacker to be somehow prevented from doing so.
102* In the {{Web Serial Novel}} ''Literature/TheZombieKnight'', it is stated that the zombified [[ShrinkingViolet protagonist]]'s weak point is his brain. He doesn't stay dead, because at least for him, {{Death Is Cheap}}, but in practice, reviving costs time and there may be other [[TearJerker tragic consequences]].
103** Interestingly enough, to actually get rid of a servant, you have to avert this trope. No matter how thoroughly you kill them, as long as their reaper is alive, a servant can always regenerate. Aside from taking out the reaper, the only way to disable a servant permanently is to put the servant's {{Brain in a Jar}} so the reaper can't regrow their body or respawn them someplace else. It also has the added benefit of the servant being unable to communicate with their reaper and tell them their position.
104* In ''Literature/UndeadOnArrival'', it's a specific part of the brain. They don't think, so they don't need the front, they don't remember so they don't need the top, but they can bite. So to kill that zombie variant, you have to destroy the reptile part: the medulla.
105* The ''Literature/SandmanSlim'' novel ''Kill the Dead'' has a variant. Permanently killing a zombie requires the removal of the entire central nervous system.
106* Those infected with the Shaod in ''Literature/{{Elantris}}'' can only be killed by removing or destroying the head.
107* In ''Literature/TheGolgothaSeries'', the Tainted can shrug off most wounds; one of the only ways to put them down is a gunshot to the head.
108* In the Literature/CiaphasCain novella "Old Soldiers Never Die", the revenants created by [[TheVirus the Plague of Unbelief]] keep going until/unless their spinal column is severed. (Or [[KillItWithFire the whole body is destroyed by flamers]].) Justified in-universe in that the Chaos-tainted virus is able to electrically stimulate the brainstem ... but can't remote-control a body that's been detached from its head.
109* ''Literature/EdenGreen'' plays with this by making head/brain destruction the most effective way to take out a needle-symbiote-infected human... ''temporarily''. When their brain grows back, they may be docile and amnesiac for a time, but once they learn what was done to them, they won't be happy.
110* Those are the only ways to kill undead in Creator/SergeyLukyanenko's ''Quazi''. This applies to both the Risen (mindless zombies) and the Quazi (those Risen, who have managed to restore their sanity and become thinking beings again). Both types of undead are extremely tough, although a bullet to the head or a complete head removal will work. Breaking the neck will only slow them down for a minute before their HealingFactor repairs the damage. The protagonist habitually carries a machete along with his sidearm and has grown adept at cleanly removing Risen heads with a single blow.
111* ''Literature/TheStormlightArchive:'' In a rare non-undead example, a [[ThePaladin Knight Radiant]] can only be killed by a blow to the head. Anything else, up to and including being stabbed through the heart or having [[AnatomyOfTheSoul part of their soul cut off]], they can recover from with sufficient [[{{Mana}} Stormlight]].
112* ''Literature/Area51'': This turns out to be the only way the Airlia can be killed since their technology heals anything else.
113* In the ''Literature/DoctorWhoMissingAdventures'' novel ''[[Recap/DoctorWhoMissingAdventures29ColdFusion Cold Fusion]]'', Time Lady Patience is unable to regenerate after being shot through her brain.
114* {{Invoked|Trope}} in ''Literature/{{Tasakeru}}''. During a fight with a MadeOfIron [[OurZombiesAreDifferent Revenant]], Commander Nadeshiko wonders how invincible he'll be with a split skull. [[spoiler:She doesn't get a chance to find out.]]
115* ''Literature/JanitorsOfThePostapocalypse'': [[TechnicallyLivingZombie Feral humans]] (and [[UpliftedAnimal cured humans]], since they retain [[BizarreHumanBiology feral physiology]]) ''can'' be killed in other ways (starvation, asphyxiation, electrocution, etc.), but it takes serious trauma to the brain or upper spine to be sure they're dead without those more elaborate methods. They are tough, don't feel pain, and any wounds stop bleeding by themselves in a hurry. A severed head will be conscious and responsive for several minutes before dying. However, they can certainly be hurt to the point of needing medical attention, cybernetic parts, and a long time to heal, and cured humans taking severe injuries sometimes revert back into ferals.
116* ''Literature/ParanoidMage'': When a nest of vampires moves into town and starts abducting and killing people, Callum learns that killing them requires either [[KryptoniteFactor special materials]] that he doesn't have, or destroying their brains. [[spoiler:So he uses [[WeaponizedTeleportation tiny spatial portals]] to [[BoomHeadshot headshot]] them all ''from a sealed room in another building''. The investigators are freaked out by how someone managed to shoot a dozen vampires in the head without even being seen by any of them.]]
117[[/folder]]
118
119[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
120* [[NotUsingTheZWord Geeks]] in ''Series/TheWalkingDead2010''; downplayed when the group cuts the head off a walker, but the head is still alive. Daryl comes along and shoots the head and comments that only a headshot through the brain will put them down. This is also true in [[ComicBook/TheWalkingDead the graphic novel series it's based on]]. This occasionally crops up later in the series where a severed Walker head is still "alive", but as a disembodied head isn't a threat it can be ignored. Later on in the series, Philip Blake finds himself having to explain this to someone who doesn't understand why shooting them in the chest hasn't been working for her.
121* In ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'', you kill a vampire by beheading it. Leviathans can be incapacitated through decapitation, although the head must be kept away from the body, lest it reattach.
122* [[OurDemonsAreDifferent Some demons]] in ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'' and ''Series/{{Angel}}''. Vampires can be killed this way, but they are usually staked in the heart and can also be offed by sunlight or holy water. Dracula is the exception among vampires that plays this trope straight: he is able to reconstitute from the ashes after being dusted, but in the comic continuation it's revealed the only way to permanently kill him is by decapitating him and burning the head and body separately.
123* The ''Series/{{Community}}'' episode "Epidemiology" has an outbreak of zombies. Chang shouts "You have to destroy the brain!" after [[spoiler: Rich and Britta]] turn into zombies while in their safe area. Unfortunately, his attempts to follow his own advice directly lead to a broken window (breaching their own defenses) and allowing the zombies to grab and infect [[spoiler: Annie.]]
124* In the ''Series/AgentsOfSHIELD'' episode "Beginning of the End", Garrett helpfully points out that he isn't dead yet since Mike Peterson didn't cut off his head. While Garrett is [[TemptingFate gloating about how invincible he is]], Coulson uses a disintegrator ray to destroy Garrett's brain, along with the rest of him.
125* The Hand has the ability to resurrect people from the dead. As people like Nobu from ''Series/Daredevil2015'' and Harold Meachum in ''Series/IronFist2017'' show, Hand zombies can only be permanently killed off by decapitation.
126* Averted in ''Series/TorchwoodMiracleDay''. The premise of the mini-series is that no one is dying, anywhere in the world. A suicide bomber is still alive despite being, well, exploded. Jack Harkness suggests that they cut off the head to see if it'll still live. They do so, and it looks like the bomber is finally dead... AndHisEyesOpen.
127* In ''Series/{{Heroes}}'', it's the only way to kill someone with [[HealingFactor Rapid Cell Regeneration]], unless you can DePower them. If impaled through the brain, they'll stay dead until the impaling object is removed, and shooting them through the head kills them permanently.
128** A deleted scene in season 2 has Sylar trying to kill an indestructible man and steal his powers. The only way he can manage to do it is to telekinetically pull his brain out through his nose and the roof of his mouth.
129* In ''Series/AlteredCarbon'', nearly everyone has their memories and personality stored in a [[BodyBackupDrive stack]] in the back of their neck and can be transferred into a new body after death as long as the stack isn't damaged. Though the super-rich have their memories beamed up to a satellite every 48 hours.
130* In the ''Series/DoctorWho'' episode "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS35E1TheMagiciansApprentice The Magician's Apprentice]]", Missy suggests that the best way to kill her so that she doesn't [[ResurrectiveImmortality regenerate]], is getting three snipers to shoot [[BizarreAlienBiology both hearts]] and her brain stem at the same time.
131* In ''Series/IZombie'', destroying the brain is just about the only way zombies can be killed.
132[[/folder]]
133
134[[folder:Music]]
135* Music/CreatureFeature's "Aim for the Head".
136-->With a loaded gun\
137And a steady hand\
138We can make it through this\
139If you kill the brain\
140Then you kill the [[NotUsingTheZedWord ghoul]]\
141And its motor functions
142** IZA has a song with the same title and premise.
143* [[http://www.songstowearpantsto.com/songs/shoot-the-zombies/ "Kill the Zombies (By Shooting Them in the Head)"]] by Music/SongsToWearPantsTo.
144* "Go Zombie" by Zombie Girl repeatedly suggests you do this.
145* "If You Shoot The Head You Kill The Ghoul" by Jeffrey Lewis.
146[[/folder]]
147
148[[folder:Radio]]
149* In ''Radio/BleakExpectations'', Victorian schoolchildren apparently have a nursery rhyme on the subject;
150-->'''Ripely:''' ''"Undead Georgie felt no pain,''
151--->'''Til Isabella destroyed his brain!"''
152-->'''Pip:''' [{{beat}}] ...What the ''hell''[[PunctuatedForEmphasis ...]] kind of ''[[WhatDoYouMeanItsForKids nursery rhyme]]''... is ''THAT?''
153[[/folder]]
154[[folder:Religion & Mythology]]
155* Cutting the head off and stuffing the mouth with something was a common way to kill vampires. What the mouth was stuffed with has a few variations, including:
156** A lemon (Germany)
157** Garlic (Bavaria and Romania)
158** A coin (Northern Germany and Poland)
159[[/folder]]
160
161[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
162* In ''TabletopGame/BattleTech'', certain mech configurations are made to be extremely resilient, and can keep firing back despite losing both arms and one leg. The usual way to take down such mech is to shoot their head (because that's where the cockpit usually is), or blowing through their torso (overloading their fusion reactor). Such mech configurations are fittingly called 'zombie mechs'.
163* In ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'':
164** Averted in 3.0 and 3.5 Editions, where undead (including zombies) are immune to the bonus damage from {{Critical Hit}}s since they are sustained by supernatural forces and don't rely on any particular body parts to function. This even applies if they suffer [[OffWithHisHead automatic decapitation]] from a Vorpal Blade.
165** In 4[[superscript:th]] Edition, a critical against a zombie is a OneHitKill, in a nod to this trope. The increasing prevalence of zombies in popular culture in the time between 3[[superscript:rd]] and 4[[superscript:th]] Editions was very likely the influence for the change.
166** Downplayed in 5E, where zombies have the ability to potentially survive what would be lethal damage if they succeed a saving throw. The only ways to get around this are to either use [[HolyHandGrenade Radiant]] damage or score a critical hit. But even if you don't, they don't have particularly good saving throw bonuses and it's based on how much damage the attack inflicted, so they tend to die pretty easily either way.
167* In ''TabletopGame/VampireTheRequiem'', vampires' HealingFactor can restore them from anything short of death (which usually takes [[KillItWithFire fire]], [[WeakenedByTheLight sunlight]], or a ''lot'' of punishment), but decapitation is instantly lethal. One vampire comments on the oddity of being vulnerable to decapitation even though she functions just fine without her ''brain''.
168* In ''TabletopGame/RedMarkets'' [[TechnicallyLivingZombie Vectors]] can be killed in any of the same ways as an uninfected person, but if their brain is left intact the Blight forms a new neural nexus in it and reanimates the corpse as a Casualty in a couple days. Casualties do need a headshot but at least they’re slow.
169[[/folder]]
170
171[[folder:Video Games]]
172* ''VideoGame/ConkersBadFurDay'': In the beginning of [[BigBoosHaunt Spooky]], Gregg specifically states that the only way to kill the zombies is a shot through the head.
173* ''Franchise/ResidentEvil'' zig-zags the trope, but until a certain point, it's played straight with T-Virus zombies (there's even a note in one of the mansion's rooms explaining this, adding that [[KillItWithFire incineration]] is another way to keep the zombies down). Shooting them or their crimson heads "evolutions" anywhere else on their bodies do take them out of the fight for a good while, but only until they mutate to the next form. The crimson head's next form, the Licker, averts it quite spectacularly, in the sense that its (fully exposed) brain ''isn't even a weak spot'' -- its (also exposed) '''heart''' is.
174** ''VideoGame/ResidentEvil2'':
175*** [[DirtyCop Chief Irons]] calls this trope out nearly word-for-word in regards to the mayor's daughter, an [[spoiler:apparent]] zombie victim [[spoiler:killed by Irons himself; he just [[NotMeThisTime blamed]] the zombies]].
176*** ''VideoGame/ResidentEvil2'': Actually defied in the 2019 remake. Shooting a zombie's head with a handgun is no longer a OneHitKill; the shotgun [[YourHeadAsplode produces more reliable results]] but ''even then'' it isn't a guarantee. Headshots ''can'' still instakill a zombie in the remake. However, for this to happen you have to get a lucky [[YourHeadAsplode critical hit]]. This can happen with any weapon, even the basic handgun, but more powerful guns have a higher chance. Anything short of the entire head exploding does no more damage than a body shot. The best way to deal with zombies in the remake is by [[AnArmAndALeg shooting them in the legs]]. Blowing off a leg makes them unable to walk, they can only crawl pitifully slowly, making them easy to finish off with a knife. They can't attack you if they're on the ground and you're behind them.
177** Subverted in ''VideoGame/ResidentEvil4'' and ''[[VideoGame/ResidentEvil5 5]]''. The "zombies" of the game, the Ganados/Majini can often be stunned by shooting them in the head, but doing so brings risks. Namely, destroying their heads may release difficult-to-kill Las Plaga, some of which can [[OneHitKill kill the hero in one hit]][[note]]Although Plagas will still erupt from their neck even if you don't shoot them in the head, so long as your guns or knife are what "killed" the regular enemy[[/note]]. The best option is to shoot them in the body, legs, or head once to stun them, then use melee attacks.
178** ''VideoGame/ResidentEvil7Biohazard'': Headshots aren't the only way to kill the Molded, but it's definitely the best and most ammo-efficient way, as they can take a surprising amount of lead to the body before succumbing (think one shotgun shell to the head vs. five or six to the torso).
179* ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'':
180** In some games, the skeletal Stalfos can only be killed with headshots. However, in others, the only way to kill Stalfos is by using bombs ([[ChunkySalsaRule in order to shatter their bones]]). ''[[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaBreathOfTheWild Breath of the Wild]]'' has a variation in that Stalfos spawn in groups and their bodies won't stop regenerating until all their skulls are destroyed.
181** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOcarinaOfTime'': The Dead Hand needs to be struck in the head, although it's unclear if it's undead or [[HumanoidAbomination something else]].
182* ''VideoGame/ColdFear'': The Exocell parasite that animates zombies nests in the cranium, feeding on the brain, and needs to be destroyed to bring the shambling corpse down.
183* ''Franchise/DeadSpace'':
184** Subverted with most of the Necromorphs: a headshot alone will not kill one unless you've cut off at least one other limb, and on harder difficulties, not even then. One of the gameplay features is called "strategic dismemberment", where removing or destroying certain parts has different consequences, depending on the Necromorph. For all intents and purposes, the head counts as another limb you can dismember, and it has an effect: the monster will lose all sight and attack blindly.
185** Played straight with certain Necromorphs, who either counts dismembering the head as enough "limbs" to cause it to drop dead, or its head is the only piece that you can dismember safely (the Infector and Crawler respectively).
186** In ''VideoGame/DeadSpace3'' there's a new enemy called the Creeper, which is a disembodied zombie head that pilots a dead space marine body. These are one of the few neromorphs who consider the head as a OneHitKill.
187* The zombies from the ''VideoGame/HalfLife'' franchise are best dealt with this way. Although damage to the body will severely wound them, they never truly are down until their Headcrab parasites are bleeding yellow.
188* Minor zombies in the ''VideoGame/HouseOfTheDead'' series can be taken out like this. Bosses have their own weak points (although some ''are'' in the head).
189* ''VideoGame/{{Fallout}}'':
190** Ghouls in the series are humans mutated by radiation to merely ''look'' like zombies (though many of them are "feral" and act the part as well). Though FantasticRacism has perpetuated a rumor that they need to be killed with headshots, they die just fine from anything that would kill a human. One ghoul in ''VideoGame/Fallout3'' hires you to kill some specific people he says are racist against ghouls and will pay you extra if you give them a KarmicDeath by headshot. [[spoiler:Except only one of them is actually racist, the others just have keys to a treasure that he wants. If you discover this and tell him he'll admit he was lying and that he just wants the keys, but he still wants the one actual racist dead]].
191** In the ''VideoGame/FalloutNewVegas'' DLC ''Dead Money'', the Ghost People do not die unless one limb is destroyed; it doesn't have to be the head, though it's undeniably convenient. If not killed in this manner, they just revive with full health within a minute. Fortunately, you can still amputate during this period. If you have the super-mutant Dog with you, he can eat them instead, which is also a permanent death, and can teach you to kill them without needing to take a limb. Amusingly, the "Bloody Mess" perk, which greatly increases the chance of LudicrousGibs and is usually just a cosmetic effect (aside from a small damage boost), becomes ''highly'' useful in ''Dead Money'' since its triggering will put down a Ghost Person permanently. Frying them into piles of ash with your Holorifle also works, though it requires a good amount of luck and/or stealth since energy weapons only turn enemies to ash if you kill with a critical hit.
192* Invoked in ''VideoGame/EternalDarkness'' with Ulyaoth-aligned Zombies. One has to decapitate them or they will start singing and explode. However, zombies of all four Ancients will still fight without their heads (and will be momentarily stunned, comically patting their neck stump as if to say "Oi, who turned off the lights?"). Chattur'gha zombies will eventually [[HealingFactor regenerate their head]] and Xel'lotath's zombie will instantly produce a ghostly head in the original's place; that said, aiming for the noggin is a guaranteed way to deal good damage to them.
193* Used in the final boss battle in the Marine storyline for ''VideoGame/AliensVsPredator2010''. The boss is a Synth and you're in a QuickDraw duel against him; shooting him anywhere except the head won't kill him before he blows your brains out.
194* [[ZigZaggingTrope Triple Subverted]] in ''VideoGame/PlantsVsZombies''. Zombies, when decapitated, need one more shot to kill them... or just a few seconds, and then the body falls down by itself.
195* Not a zombie example, but in ''VideoGame/StarTrekBridgeCommander'', destroying another ship's bridge (which can be considered a brain), will cause the entire ship to explode, even if the rest of the ship was fully intact. This is subverted with Klingon ships, as it's very easy to blow off the front of it and would be game-breakingly easy to defeat them. Though you have to wonder who's flying the thing...
196* ''VideoGame/TimeSplitters'':
197** In the [[VideoGame/TimeSplitters first game]], getting a headshot is necessary to kill zombies. Get a bodyshot and they'll just come back to life a few seconds later. Averted in multiplayer mode, where every enemy can be unlocked and played as, but are mechanically identical.
198** In ''VideoGame/TimeSplitters2'', the quickest way to kill a zombie is to shoot off its head.
199** Subverted in the second and third games' multiplayer modes. Zombie characters have the unique ability to continue fighting without their heads if they still have health remaining and lose their head after a single headshot from any weapon. Headshotting a zombie character with a low-powered weapon on multiplayer can make them ''tougher'' to kill.
200* Zig-Zagged in ''Franchise/{{Halo}}'' with regard to the Flood Combat Forms. After becoming Flood, the head is useless and they can lose it with no real problem. But the vital zone is their chest, where the Infection Form is. After having their chest destroyed, the Combat Form is effectively killed... until another Infection Form comes along and reanimates it. The only way to ensure no reanimation is to destroy the corpse (most efficient way is to burn it, but continually shooting/meleeing it also works).
201** That said, a headshot to a fallen Flood Combat Form in the [[VideoGame/HaloCombatEvolved first game]] was the quickest way to make sure a 'dead' Combat Form wouldn't rise back up to attack the player from behind.
202* Invoked in ''VideoGame/UrbanDead''; zombies killed by headshot take a 5 AP penalty to their "[[BackFromTheDead Stand Up]]" ability.
203* Invoked in the ''VideoGame/{{Borderlands}}'' DLC "The Zombie Island of Doctor Ned". True to their humanoid shape, the zombies' weak point is the noggin. Granted, this is also true of every human enemy.
204* In some installments of ''Franchise/{{Castlevania}}'', [[BigBad Dracula]]([[OneWingedAngel s first form]]) has to be hit in the head to cause damage.
205* Averted in ''VideoGame/Doom3''. Headshots do cause a good amount of extra hurt on everything, including zombies. However, body shots work just fine, and some zombies don't even really have heads to begin with.
206* This is notably not required in ''VideoGame/Left4Dead'' or ''VideoGame/Left4Dead2'' unless you active the NintendoHard "Realism Mode" body-shots do drastically reduced damage. This makes sense because the Infected are {{Technically Living Zombie}}s.
207* In ''VideoGame/SniperElite: Nazi Zombie Army'', if a zombie ''isn't'' killed by a headshot, it has a chance of rising again after a few seconds. Headshots are also instant kills on the most common enemies, so it's in your best interest to aim for the head as much as possible so as to conserve ammo. There are also minibosses and bosses who can only be hurt by headshots; naturally, they take a whole lot of headshots to kill.
208* ''VideoGame/DwarfFortress'' undead need to be beheaded or [[HalfTheManHeUsedToBe bisected]] to kill them.
209* The zombies in ''VideoGame/Postal2: Apocalypse Weekend'' will live as long as their head is not destroyed by the sledgehammer or the shotgun. Comedically, the game is very specific that the head must be ''destroyed''. If you simply chop it off with a bladed weapon, the zombie body will still be walking around and attacking just fine while the head rolls around on the ground.
210* The [[ZergRush Zombie Horde]] [[WolfpackBoss boss]] in ''VideoGame/DawnOfTheDragons'' has the individual zombies moan "brains" at you. When your character asks the {{Necromancer}} who is [[GuestStarPartyMember currently guest-starring]] if they want to [[BrainFood eat your brains]], she explains that zombies are actually {{Apologetic Attacker}}s and that they're trying to tell you "destroy our brains".
211* In ''[[VideoGame/ContagionMonochrome Contagion]]'', taking a headshot from a bullet or charged melee weapon will drop anyone, zombie or not. Headshots are critical since zombies take an impractically large amount of torso shots to bring down.
212* Downplayed in ''VideoGame/TheLastOfUs''; [[TechnicallyLivingZombie the Infected]] are most vulnerable in their heads, since the fungus that takes over and sprouts from their brains renders their skulls somewhat fragile, but enough shots to centre mass will do the trick as well. Most of Joel's mêlée takedowns on Infected have him either bashing their heads open against a hard surface (or with his weapon if he's holding one) or stomping on them. It seems as though gunshots to any part of the body can kill an Infected, but anyone hoping to take one out with a mêlée weapon or bare hands ''needs'' to aim for the head.
213* Zigzagged in ''VideoGame/PlagueInc''. Necroa cannot reanimate headless corpses until you evolve Cranial Metastasis; which causes brain tissue to develop in the chest cavity. Another symptom causes the skull to thicken, making it harder for survivors and Z-Com/ Blackwater soldiers to kill them by headshot.
214* ''VideoGame/PrayerOfTheFaithless'': One of the ways to kill Revenants, as said in the Guide:
215--> Severing the head or piercing the heart should be enough to kill it.
216* Destroying the brain is the only way to kill a walker in ''VideoGame/TheWalkingDeadTelltale''. [[spoiler:The ''only'' way; not even the other half of the trope will suffice, as you'll find out if you look inside the Stranger's duffel bag after his death in Episode 5 of Season 1.]]
217* In ''VideoGame/MiddleEarthShadowOfMordor'', an Uruk Nemesis has a chance to "cheat death" and come back to torment you unless you decapitate them (and decapitation is the ''only'' way to make sure a Nemesis with the title "the Unkillable" stays dead). However, Sauron isn't also known as "The {{Necromancer}}" for nothing In the sequel ''VideoGame/MiddleEarthShadowOfWar'', even this might not stop them, as they can come back as Frankenstein's monster-like beasts with their heads stitched back on, or as the undead, and in the original, the game can glitch in such a way that a decapitated Nemesis comes back with no head, still as mouthy as ever.
218* The Bony Beetles from ''Franchise/SuperMarioBros'' constantly pull themselves back together; the only way to permanently kill one through conventional methods that aren't the Ice Flower are by dropping their head into lava, a bottomless pit, or crushing it.
219* Thanks to HollywoodVoodoo, Mr Sunshine from ''VideoGame/SaintsRow2'' can survive anything except having his head cut off and thrown into a meat grinder.
220* The most important body part to remain at least somewhat intact for reanimation to work is the brain. So, ''VideoGame/{{Belladonna}}'' makes sure to specifically and utterly smash Wolfram's head to pulp when she kills him.
221* One BattleInTheCenterOfTheMind-themed level in ''VideoGame/PsiOpsTheMindgateConspiracy'' is set in a graveyard filled with zombies, who can only be killed by "freeing their minds" (i.e. destroying the head.) If you have a shotgun with you, you can blow their heads away with headshots, but this is also a game where you can use your mind to make [[YourHeadAsplode make people's heads explode]], so your PsychicPowers work just as well.
222[[/folder]]
223
224[[folder:Visual Novels]]
225* When dealing with the undead in ''VisualNovel/TokyoNecro'', the only way to really make sure that the dead stay dead is to blow out their brains. This is also [[PrecautionaryCorpseDisposal why shooting fallen comrades in the head is a common practice]], as to deprive an enemy necromancer of the chance of using their corpses.
226[[/folder]]
227
228[[folder:Webcomics]]
229* Both [[http://liliy.net/wam/archive/regenerating-undead/ lampshaded]] and averted in ''Webcomic/TheAdventuresOfWiglafAndMordred''. One character (Gawain) is a Revenant, an intelligent zombie. The first thing that happens to him is a headshot. Arthur, who witnessed the event then calls foul claiming Gawain can not possibly be a zombie -- only to be corrected:
230-->'''Arthur:''' You're not a zombie. Everyone knows you take them out with a shot to the head. And you're still standing.\
231'''Gawain:''' Have you ever killed a zombie?\
232'''Arthur:''' No.\
233'''Gawain:''' Met one?\
234'''Arthur:''' No.\
235'''Gawain:''' Then, how exactly do you know that actually works?
236* In ''Webcomic/StandStillStaySilent'' the only sure way to kill [[BodyHorror troll, beast or giant]] is to destroy its brain. Then again, ViralTransformation makes it problematic to say ''where'' the brain is, and giants are [[BodyOfBodies Bodies Of Bodies]]...
237* In ''Webcomic/DanAndMabsFurryAdventures'', [[http://www.missmab.com/Comics/Vol_1180.php when Lorenda asks Abel and Jyrras what they know about the undead.]]
238* ''Webcomic/CyanideAndHappiness'' made a joke about killing Zombie Jesus this way.
239* In ''Webcomic/TheZombieHunters'', this is accepted zombie-killing procedure. Justified since the ZombieApocalypse has been going on for several years now.
240* Averted in [[EverythingsDeaderWithZombies the "Special Halloween episode"]][[note]][[WebComicTime which ended in March]][[/note]] for ''Webcomic/BladeOfToshubi''.
241* The zombie wranglers of ''Webcomic/ZombieRanch'' declare the front part of the brain "don't matter", but that destroying the rest is a sure way to put a zombie down or prevent an infected person from turning. If you stay ''away'' from the brain you can kill an infected person and they'll still rise again later, which leads to [[http://www.zombieranchcomic.com/2010/03/10/simple-math/ this fateful decision]].
242* Subverted in ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick'', when Roy decapitates an undead dragon. Xykon points out that he controls it with his mind and it doesn't need eyes, ears, or a brain to follow his commands. In fact, the main thing Xykon is annoyed by is that the dragon no longer has teeth to bite with.
243* In ''Webcomic/ElGoonishShive'', Grace's plan for dealing with zombies is to [[http://www.egscomics.com/egsnp.php?id=262 decapitate them with a 4ft claymore]].
244* While a WoodenStake or wooden shafted arrow through the heart also works to take down vampires most of the hunters in ''Webcomic/HereThereBeMonsters'' prefer this method of dealing with them since it allows them to use guns.
245* Subverted in ''Webcomic/BasketsOfGuts'', since TheUndead cannot be really killed again, save for killing the one who raised it. This is a nasty surprise for those who rely on this trope.
246* In ''Webcomic/{{Heartcore}}'', the brain is one of a demon's two weak points, the other being their [[GemHeart heartcore]]. Destruction of either organ is the only way for a demon to truly die.
247* ''Webcomic/{{Unsounded}}'': While plods will carry on regardless of how attached their heads are so long as they are wearing a plod mask, the Black Tongues come up with a new version of a "plod mask" that requires the corpse's head to be attached to the mask can perch on it and these are easy to dispatch with decapitation.
248[[/folder]]
249
250[[folder:Web Original]]
251* Discussed almost like a mantra in ''WebVideo/AfterHours'' when the gang discuss zombies. Subverted by Katy, who's apparently unfamiliar with the rule and mumbles something ending with "... extract Brian."
252* In [[http://imgur.com/sYF70zI this]] ''Imgur'' post, entitled "For Any Aliens Out There..." ''[[HumansAreSpecial humans]]'' are said to be able to keep fighting though [[ImmuneToBullets gunshot wounds]] and severed limbs, and to always go for the head, citing ''Series/{{Heroes}}'' and [[Film/MontyPythonAndTheHolyGrail the Black Knight]] [[AliensStealCable as a reference]].
253* "{{Wendigo}}es" in ''AudioPlay/TheCartographersHandbook'' (it's set near the end of the UsefulNotes/AmericanCivilWar, so "zombies" aren't the first thing to come to mind) can be killed by shooting them a whole bunch elsewhere, but since TheVirus is spread so very readily (and induces [[TheBerserker insane violence]] in its victims), Cartographers prefer head or heart shots
254* Episode 2 of ''WebVideo/MissingReel'', "Zombies!", since it emphasizes how ''Film/NightOfTheLivingDead1968'' established the "aim for the head" method of killing zombies.
255* Website/SCPFoundation:
256** The Global Occult Coalition, despite being an organization that works to kill or destroy the paranormal, invokes this trope in a number of field manuals:
257*** According to the guide on handling [[NotUsingTheZWord Type Grays]], one of the most reliable methods of killing them is just to destroy the brain, however the guide also says the [[OurZombiesAreDifferent wide variety of causes of reanimation]] means [[KillItWithFire Kill it With Fire]] is still the best option.
258*** [[InvertedTrope Inverted]] with KTE-1181, a.k.a. "Infectious Slime Mold". An ameboid that compels hosts to walk into populated areas, then proceeds to [[YourHeadAsplode reproduce at an exponential rate, building up pressure within the skull until the host's cranium bursts]], infecting anybody nearby. Thanks to this, the entry for handling infectees explicitly warns against headshots,and instead recommends having a sniper go for well-placed shots to the chest.
259** In one [[http://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/clef101 lecture]], Dr. Clef says that the best way to kill a Reality Bender is to shoot them through the head before they know you're there.
260*** The article for [[http://www.scpwiki.com/scp-008 SCP-008]], a.k.a. "Zombie Plague" states that terminating the infected requires the use of "Significant Cranial Trauma".
261[[/folder]]
262
263[[folder:Western Animation]]
264* Mophir's tips for dealing with DemonicPossession by an ArtifactOfDoom in ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague'':
265-->'''ComicBook/TheFlash:''' How do we fight it, or them?\
266'''Mophir:''' Two ways. Pure light from Mophir's gem drives evil spirits back into Dark Heart.\
267'''The Flash:''' Great. What's the second way?\
268'''Mophir:''' Separate host head from body.
269:: He is rather fond of method #2.
270* ''WesternAnimation/AquaTeenHungerForce'': Frylock is forced to decapitate a zombified Shake.
271-->'''Frylock:''' I'm sorry you had to see that, Meatwad. But in order to kill a zombie, you have to separate the brain from the spine.\
272'''Headless Shake:''' Hey I just heard, like, a pop. Did you guys hear that?\
273'''Frylock:''' (''throws away axe'') Goddamn Wikipedia!
274* ''WesternAnimation/SeisManos'': Aside from fire, crushing the head or decapitation is the only other way to kill a mutated person.
275* ''WesternAnimation/TransformersPrime'': After accidentally creating a [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot vampire/robot/zombie]], Knock Out suggests this to Starscream, since he has [[GenreSavvy seen human horror movies]]. However, since the Decepticons are not organic, [[WrongGenreSavvy it doesn't work.]]
276* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheClevelandShow'', Cleveland Jr. acknowledges that he'll have to do one of these in the event that his birth mother Loretta comes back as a zombie.
277[[/folder]]
278
279[[folder:Real Life]]
280* With one exception[[note]][[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_the_Headless_Chicken Mike the Headless Chicken]][[/note]], either of these methods will kill any animal you could possibly encounter in real life [[note]]well, okay, aside from the ones that don't ''have'' heads.[[/note]]. (Effect may be delayed in some insects and crustaceans.)
281** Interestingly, in some insects, such as the cockroach, the only reason decapitation eventually kills them is that they eventually starve to death. No head means no mouth.
282** This is because insects have a distributed nervous system. Rather than a single brain, the nervous system of insects uses ganglia which are distributed throughout the body. Effectively a number of subprocessors working in concert rather than a single CPU, it means that damage to any one ganglion, even the one in the head, isn't sufficient to cause a catastrophic shutdown right away, an extremely useful survival adaptation. [[note]]Mantids offer a popular example of this adaptation's functionality. In captivity, many predatory insects participate in sexual cannibalism - the female eats some or all of her mate. In the case of mantids, a male often gets its head eaten first by the female during mating but is able to continue copulation - removing the head simply removes its [[PowerLimiter limitations]] and allows the male mantis's body to [[OutWithABang continue mating until it dies]] or is [[EatMe completely devoured by the female]].[[/note]]
283* While effective against animals, this is sometimes inadvisable; for example, shooting a rabid animal in the head creates a risk of exposure to the virus via airborne brain tissue.
284[[/folder]]

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