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7[[quoteright:250:[[TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_legions_of_hell_-_now_fun-sized_so_you_can_take_a_little_slice_of_eternal_torment_on_the_go.jpg]]]]
8[[caption-width-right:250:Now fun sized, so you can take a little slice of eternal torment on the go!]]
9
10->'''Hedonism-bot:''' To take over the Earth, we'd need a damned army!\
11'''Bender:''' Then a damned army ''we shall have!''
12-->-- ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'', "[[Recap/FuturamaM2TheBeastWithABillionBacks The Beast with a Billion Backs]]"
13
14[[OurDemonsAreDifferent Demons]]. [[EldritchAbomination Abominations]]. [[OurMonstersAreWeird Monsters]]. {{Fallen Angel}}s. [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking Door-To-Door salesmen]]. There is a place where they go to, and a [[HomeOfMonsters place]] from which they spring. Simply calling it AnotherDimension doesn't do it justice.
15
16They are legion, for their numbers are many, and their powers are diverse.
17
18Sometimes {{Mooks}} of {{Satan}}, a SatanicArchetype, or a GodOfEvil (who -- depending on the setting and/or the author's worldview -- may or may not be the same person/thing), and residing in FireAndBrimstoneHell (or [[{{Hell}} the real deal]]). There may or may not be [[TheArmiesOfHeaven heavenly equivalents]], and either one can be treated in a CrystalDragonJesus manner. Heck, if they're in a {{Hentai}} work, they may even have tentacles.
19
20The Shinto version of the afterlife is markedly different from the Christian version; thus, in {{anime}} not influenced by western notions of Hell and demons, Hell acts more LawfulNeutral than evil regardless of how it looks, especially the classic Buddhist and Chinese versions. Demons will be more like [[CelestialBureaucracy administrators]] than tormentors, often taken to the [[FashionableEvil extreme]].
21
22However, if GoodHurtsEvil, one wonders why the heroes don't just "accidentally" let a nun, monk, priest, child, angel, or other nice being walk in and 'crash the gate shut with a resounding bang and atomized, no, disintegrated the great forces of evil.'
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24If SatanIsGood expect these guys to be TheCavalry.
25
26See also: BonusLevelOfHell, for guys slightly higher (or lower) on the infernal totem-pole see DemonLordsAndArchdevils. For the non-demonic version: AlienInvasion.
27
28The EvilCounterpart to TheArmiesOfHeaven.
29----
30!!Examples
31
32[[foldercontrol]]
33
34[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
35* The forces of Hell and Heaven seem more like rival sports teams than vicious enemies in ''Manga/AhMyGoddess'', but even so the demons can be nasty.'
36* ''Manga/AngelSanctuary'' tells the story of war between angels and demons. Among other things, [[GodIsEvil the demons are the good guys....]]
37** Not so much the ''good'' guys as the ''less evil'' guys. God himself is mostly absent.
38*** Except towards the end, where he shows himself to be evil.
39* Thoroughly subverted by ''Anime/BakuenCampusGuardress''.
40* The demons of ''{{Manga/Berserk}}'' are quite powerful, diverse and horrific. Every one of them were once humans who got hold of a [[ArtifactOfDoom Behelit]] and sold their souls and sacrificed those closest to them to the demonic gods of the Godhand in exchange for being reborn as demons. The Godhand themselves are servants of [[spoiler:[[GodIsEvil the Idea of Evil]], a quite evil God that governs the Berserk universe and manipulates events so that behelits get passed down to those destined to use them so that more demons and members of the Godhand get created]]. Needless to say, ''{{Manga/Berserk}}'''s world is every bit a [[CrapsackWorld crappy place to live]].
41** The worst part? [[spoiler:The Idea of Evil only exists because humanity subconsciously ''[[ClapYourHandsIfYouBelieve wants]]'' it to exist. Apparently having demons to blame for your suffering is preferable to accepting that your pain is [[NeverMyFault your fault]] or worse, [[InherentInTheSystem no one's fault at all]].]]
42* In ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'', Hell is not among the villains. In one episode, the [[TheGrimReaper Soul Reapers]] defeat a fallen ghost who was also a serial killer during his life. A Soul Reaper cannot purify sins made by the living, so the Gate of Hell opens up and a demon reaches out and grabs the damned soul. Much better in the manga, where the giant demon ''impales him on an equally giant sword.''
43** On the other hand, Hueco Mundo [[GratuitousSpanish ("Hollow World")]] is a poster child of this trope. The [[TheHeartless Hollows]] themselves were the early antagonists, and the series's BigBad eventually sets up shop there.
44** In the fourth film ''The Hell Verse'', we meet the "Togabito" (defilers), who are the humanoid denizens of Hell.
45* The Arigami from ''Manga/BlueSeed''.
46* The demons of ''Franchise/{{Devilman}}'', led by Satan himself. They also showed up in a {{Crossover}} movie with ''Anime/MazingerZ''.
47* The dead villains from the ''Franchise/DragonBall'' franchise were shown in hell from time to time. Due to censorship issues at the time, any time in the dub the word "HELL" was on a uniform or on the wall, it was edited to "HFIL" or "Home For Infinite Losers." This is the subject of amusement and/or eyerolling among fans.
48* The Invaders from ''VideoGame/GateKeepers'' and ''Anime/GateKeepers21''.
49* The Hundred Demon Empire of ''[[Manga/GetterRobo Getter Robo G]]''. TheDragon of the organization looks like Hitler with demon horns. Like a bonus, his name is "Hidler".
50* Even more thoroughly subverted by ''Manga/HyperPolice'', in which the invasion is long over and the demons are a normal part of the landscape (to the point where humans are a rare and protected species).
51* Pulled off in the 10th episode of ''Anime/{{Kanokon}}'', when a horde of them attack the school. When he reaches his Five-Tailed Form, Kouta lets loose an expanding energy wave that completely obliterates the horde of baddies (save their leader, who flees).
52* No two Orphans from ''Anime/MyHime'' are alike, and their presence is made even more eerie once the characters (and the viewers) realize where (and who) they're coming from.
53* ''Manga/NegimaMagisterNegiMagi'': Negi's hometown was [[DoomedHometown doomed]] by one of those. Is not clear if they ''do'' come from Hell, but they are called demons anyway.
54** Then later on, [[spoiler: Dynamis]] summons an army of ''several hundred thousand'' demons. Same as above, it's not stated whether they're actually from hell, though.
55*** Just a bit later, we are (re)introduced to Zazie Rainyday[[spoiler:'s sister Poyo]], and [[spoiler:Zazie]] too. They are heavily implied to be from hell.
56* The Dark Liege Army in ''Manga/{{Nora}}''. Subverted in the fact that they're actually the ''good'' guys.
57* The Youma Empire of ''Anime/{{Raideen}}''.
58* ''Anime/RoninWarriors'' had Talpa's Dynasty Soldiers, a seemingly endless supply of FacelessGoons.
59* The Creator/DiC dub of ''Anime/SailorMoon'' lumped all of the show's villains and monsters from the first two seasons into a single evil force called the "Negaverse".
60** In the original [[Manga/SailorMoon manga]], they were all forms of the GodOfEvil Chaos.
61* The Guze no Tomogara (Denizens of the Crimson Realm in the dub) and their Rinne servants from ''Literature/ShakuganNoShana''.
62* The Lucifer Hawke/Lucifer Folk from ''Manga/SilentMobius''.
63* In ''Literature/{{Slayers}}'' NEXT, Xellos is introduced. A Self proclaimed Trickster Priest with EyesAlwaysShut and apparent ally, he is actually more of a PhysicalGod and one step removed from being the single most powerful entity of darkness currently active in the world. While not quite mightiest of the mazoku (evil race), there is very little, short of the dark lords themselves, that ranks above him in power, and to date, every season he has appeared in ends with there being one less creature superior to him in power as result of his companions. The mere fact of his presence is enough to make the [[OurAngelsAreDifferent dragon race]] tremble in fear and do everything possible to avoid a direct confrontation.
64* ''Literature/ThatTimeIGotReincarnatedAsASlime'': The demon race who reside in the underworld are this. In order to manifest in material world when they themselves are a spiritual race, they need to acquire physical vessels for themselves. The largest "legions" are those that serve the [[MonsterProgenitor Seven Primordial Demons]], though two particular legions are of note:
65** The first is the hundreds, if not thousands-strong demon army that serves the [[DemonLordsAndArchdevils Primordial Red and top Demon Lord Guy Crimson]], with the Green Primordial Misery and Blue Primordial Rain as his two top subordinates. While ostensibly always a threat to humanity, Guy is more interested in acting as a "mediator" who keeps humanity on its toes with various raids from the northern Ice Continent. It's noted that none of these have been serious since [[OrcusOnHisThrone he's never led such an invasion himself]], as if he did humanity wouldn't have a prayer and it would start a massive civil war with the other Demon Lords.
66** The second is the "Black Numbers" of Tempest, made up of 711 of the strongest demons in the whole world and lead by Primordial Black Diablo, Primordial White Testarossa, Primordial Violet Ultima, and Primordial Jaune Carrera. The latter three brought 202 of their strongest from their personal legions, while Diablo recruited 101 various demons who he deemed strong enough. They are considered the [[BadassArmy strongest army]] under the banner of [[TheHero Rimuru Tempest]] despite also being the smallest, though ironically in their position [[DarkIsNotEvil they're actually among the good guys]] despite serving one of the strongest Demon Lords.
67[[/folder]]
68
69[[folder:Comic Books]]
70* ''ComicBook/BlackMoonChronicles'': The demons of hell are summoned in battle by Haazheel Thorn [[spoiler:and sent by Lucifer to TakeOverTheWorld after {{God}} is out of the picture]].
71* Shows up from time to time in Franchise/TheDCU. ComicBook/TeenTitans has had to deal with Trigon, ComicBook/{{Superman}} has traded blows with Karkull, and even ''[[WesternAnimation/BatmanTheAnimatedSeries Batman]]'' has fought both alongside and against ComicBook/{{Etrigan}} the Rhyming Demon. ''ComicBook/TheSandman1989'' makes quite a few visits there as well.
72* In ComicBook/{{Supergirl}} story ''ComicBook/DemonSpawn'' the Innerverse -- a PocketDimension spawned by Supergirl's dark side -- is inhabited by legions of misshapen demons.
73* In ''ComicBook/GodzillaInHell'', they have to contend with the King of the Monsters. However, they do have King Ghidorah on their side.
74* ''ComicBook/{{Hellboy}}'' has the Legions awaiting for Hellboy to lead them to destroy the world. Unfortunately for them, Hellboy was RaisedByHumans and (repeatedly) tells them to piss off.
75* In ''ComicBook/{{Lucifer}}'' a damned but repentant human soul, Christopher Rudd becomes the MessianicArchetype of Hell, and leads the demons and the damned together against the Lilim attempting to conquer the Silver City...and conquer it themselves as revenge for the injustice of allowing Hell to exist.
76* Mephisto and his son Blackheart serve as the rulers of a Hell-like dimension in the Franchise/MarvelUniverse. They are responsible for the creation of any number of heroes and villains, such as Ghost Rider (who sold his soul) and Dr. Doom (who tried to access Mephisto's dimension to save his mother's soul, but wound up scarring his own face). Blackheart was the primary villain of the ''Ghost Rider'' movie, with bookend appearances by Mephistopheles.
77** Marvel has been largely inconsistent in its portrayal of hell (largely due, it seems, to an unwillingness to flatly confirm or deny the existence of God in the comics, quite unlike DC). Some Ghost Rider series have had Satan himself (not Mephisto, Satannish or any other almost-Satan Marvel has used in the past) be the one who made the deal with Johnny Blaze, while most have had it be Mephisto. For the most part, Marvel seems to go with the idea that there are many different hells, with many different devils.
78*** The current canon is that demons feel free to style themselves as "Satan" or whatever name a culture gives to the Ultimate Evil, but any demon who tries to make that claim ''to other demons'' is set upon by his/her/its peers and destroyed, since allowing anyone to get away with making the claim would be seen as placing themselves beneath the claimant.
79** Originally Johnny Blaze had made a deal with the same Satan that was the father of Daimon Hellstrom (Son of Satan, natch) and Satanna, Marduk Kurios, who is definitely NOT Mephisto.
80** Note that part of the inconsistency has been explained by the fact that demons ''lie all the time''.
81** The Neyaphem, a race of exiled demonic mutants led by Azazel, who is also the father of Abyss, Kiwi Black, and Nightcrawler.
82* Averted in ''{{ComicBook/Preacher}}'', where Hell appears in only one arc, and even then we only see a few devils complain of the cold (a man who felt such hatred that it froze Hell over, and ended up shooting the Devil over an insult). Heaven's armies get a lot more screentime, [[CurbstompBattle if equally dangerous.]]
83* ''ComicBook/{{Spawn}}'' got his superpowers under the conditions of leading the Legions of Hell. [[FaustianRebellion He ended up not, but he still kept the powers]].
84* ''ComicBook/WonderWoman'' [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 Vol 1]]: After his fall Hades warps the denizens of Tartarus into an army of undead monsters and leads them against Paradise Island. As they are not living killing them doesn't break the Amazons' oath of never taking a life, but they prove nearly impossible to dispatch until Diana has a moment of inspiration and tries turning the Purple Healing Ray on them and discovers ReviveKillsZombie.
85[[/folder]]
86
87[[folder:Films]]
88* In ''Film/ArmyOfDarkness'', a bunch of dead bodies are possessed by demons released by the ''Necromonicon Ex Mortis''. They attack a medieval castle, and it's up to Ash, his chainsaw, and his boomstick to defeat them.
89* In ''Film/BlackAdam2022'', Sabbac summons an army name-dropped as this in the final act.
90* ''Film/TheGate'' has some kids accidentally summon demons in their backyard by contrived coincidence.
91* The main antagonists of ''Film/BloodyMallory'' are the armies of darkness, who intend to release the fallen angels and destroy the world.
92[[/folder]]
93
94[[folder:Fan Works]]
95* ''[[http://www.fimfiction.net/story/23795/princess-trinity Princess Trinity]]'' has the legions from Tartarus launch an attack on Equestria, and the ponies fight back with, among other things, pony-shaped HumongousMecha.
96* The Demon Empire in ''Fanfic/SonicXDarkChaos'' is this trope turned into a political state, complete with extremely advanced technology and slavery. And [[CrapsackWorld it's saying something about the 'verse]] that [[BlackAndGrayMorality they're considered the "nice" faction]].
97[[/folder]]
98
99[[folder:Literature]]
100* ''Literature/TheBelgariad'' and ''Literature/TheMalloreon'' feature demons as a one-shot problem in the former, and a serious threat in the latter. The series makes a point of stating that even a [[{{Mook}} normal]] Demon can't be fought without sorcery, another Demon, or the aid of a God; one of the antagonists is able to usurp control of an entire country just by threatening to unleash his hordes of Demons. Naturally the two [[DemonLordsAndArchDevils Demon Lords]] who put in an appearance later are just shy of indestructible.
101* The Malebranche in ''Literature/DisAcedia'' started out as this, although attrition and shortages eventually forced them to expand and recruit mortals among them.
102* Creator/TerryPratchett's Literature/{{Discworld}} has its Legions of Hell living in the Dungeon Dimensions. (Technically, the Dungeon Dimensions are a home for the {{Eldritch Abomination}}s, while the Legions of Hell are more amiable and bureaucratic, and reside in various Hells produced by the human imagination.)
103* ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles'' delivers in its usual fantasy-kitchen-sink fashion. Demons, Fallen Angels, the Devil, and all other shades of Hell exist, alongside all of Heaven, and the Nevernever, with the Fae, who's BlueAndOrangeMorality isn't evil per se but is often fairly destructive.
104** Earlier in the series, Demons had more of a presence in the story, temptations and all, but their place was usurped by the Fae. Lately, only the "Nickleheads" (Fallen Angels with mortal hosts) have made much of a presence for the Down-Below team.
105** A big point of the series is that while Good and Evil are real, a lot more to life takes place in the grey, orange, and blue. Being a good person is about always working hard at doing the right thing and being clever about it, not necessarily fighting those Legions of Hell. That said, good, strong people also fight Evil. It's just one of the things they do.
106** There's also the Outsiders, who are explicitly not associated with the Down Below, but tend towards AlwaysChaoticEvil, and have as their goal [[spoiler: the destruction of reality. They also have hordes, legions and legions of them, trying to break into reality constantly.]]
107* ''Literature/ForestKingdom'': The demons that swarm out of the Darkwood in book 1 (''Blue Moon Rising''), [[spoiler: although without the Demon Prince's influence they're just random monsters. Book 4 (''Beyond the Blue Moon'') later subverts it when it's revealed the demons are actually humans transformed into murderous monsters.]]
108* Creator/IsaacAsimov's "Literature/GimmicksThree": Shapur says that hell has plenty of common damned souls, but their ratio of demon to damned is growing too high, so they're offering a discount DealWithTheDevil.
109* ''Literature/GoodOmens'': when they arrive for Armageddon, it's noted that the commanders of the Heavenly hosts and the Legions of Hell look remarkably similar, all part of the book's theme that neither side is all that different from the other.
110* In the Creator/CliveBarker novella ''Literature/TheHellboundHeart'', the FilmOfTheBook ''Film/{{Hellraiser}}'' and an ExpandedUniverse [[Franchise/{{Hellraiser}} based on the latter]], the Legions of Hell are the Cenobites (a word originally meaning simply monks in monastic orders, as distinct from "eremites" or hermit monks). Hell is not a place for punishment of sins as such: souls are lured there simply by the temptation of solving puzzles.
111** Barker would later publish ''Literature/TheScarletGospels'' which expands that the Cenobites as a part of The Order of the Gash are only a small part of multiple factions of Hell. This book relates in description to the incarnation in ''Film/{{Hellraiser}}'' but also limits how much it expands the mythology, leaving room for the possibilities of changes as far who makes up the Legions of Hell between the two books.
112* Sarah Kuhn's ''Heroine'' trilogy had a complete disaster of an invasion from Hell. The spell the demons you used was botched, so almost all the invading demons were killed at its casting leading to [[MassSuperEmpoweringEvent their powers being absorbed by humans near the opening gate.]] Even without the miscasting, the invasion would have just been a nuisance -- the demons barely knew a thing about humans so their army only included one demon with a major power, everyone else had [[BlessedWithSuck garbage minor abilities.]] Still a demon gate resulted and every so often a demonic animal comes to possess an inanimate object and annoy people.
113* During ''[[Literature/HomecomingDrizzt Homecoming]]'', with the weakening of the Faerzress, the magical radiation barrier of the Underdark, all sorts of demons and demon lords start to pop up in the cave systems. The only way to get rid of them is killing them -- and so banishing them from the material plane for a hundred years.
114* In Creator/RobertAHeinlein's ''Literature/MagicInc'', the characters demand of the king of Hell, according to Hell's customs, that he let them inspect his legions looking for their enemy.
115* In Creator/PoulAnderson's ''Literature/OperationChaos'', the characters end up storming Hell and facing down the legions to recover their daughter.
116* Literature/TheOtherworldSeries has the demonic armies of the Subterranean Realms.
117* ''Literature/ParadiseLost'' features the legions named in a device called an "epic catalogue". Usually used to name the various heroes on the quest (see ''Literature/TheIliad'' for a classic example), this version instead mentions the various gods of other religions who form the forces of Satan.
118* The Old Ones from ''Literature/ThePowerOfFive''.
119* The Legions of Hell feature prominently in ''Literature/TheRiftwarCycle'', particularly the ''Serpentwar'' and ''Demonwar'' subseries. Essentially, this setting has [[LayeredWorld reality in metaphysical layers]], with each layer being more dangerous than the one above it -- any layers below yours can be considered hell (and yes, this means that the mortal world is considered part of hell by angels, who come from the upper levels). Demons come from the fourth and fifth layers of reality below the mortal world, and have repeatedly tried to conquer it in order to feed on the life force of its inhabitants. There's also the Dasati, from the layer immediately below ours, who aren't ''demons'' per se but as an AlwaysChaoticEvil ProudWarriorRace they're still plenty nasty and their reality ''is'' the first level of hell from a human perspective. On the levels ''below'' the Legions of Hell you start getting ''really'' [[EldritchAbomination bad things]].
120* Hearteater from ''Literature/TailchasersSong'' is the closest thing to {{Satan}} that cats have. He has legions of evil cats that live under the earth wih him and do his bidding.
121* The demons in ''Literature/WarsOfTheRealm'' fight as a literal army with commanders and generals over them. Bonus: they literally are "Legion" - both because they number in the hundreds of millions and because they are organized into groups called "legions."
122* ''Literature/WolfInShadow'' by Creator/DavidGemmell has the Hellborn. Even though they are humans, they are Satan-worshippers and explicitly model themselves after this trope.
123* Terry Brooks' ''Literature/TheWordAndTheVoid'' novels:
124** The "feeders" ''almost'' fit the trope. Though they're dark and oozy and scary, they aren't very dangerous; they're more harbingers of evil than evil itself.
125** There are actual demons in that series, the servants of a being called the Void, but there aren't really enough of them to call a "legion" (and they seem to have a hard time working with each other anyway). The highest number of demons ever seen together was ''four'', and that was an explicitly unusual case.
126[[/folder]]
127
128[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
129* ''Series/{{Brimstone}}'' was about a damned soul who made a [[DealWithTheDevil deal with]] [[{{Satan}} The Devil]] to get out of Hell, if he recaptured a set of other damned souls who had escaped.
130* ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'' and ''Series/{{Angel}}'' explained that there were a countless number of hell dimensions. Both Buffy and Angel have been to a few. At least twice on both shows, Hell is said to be [[CrapsackWorld Earth itself.]]
131* ''Franchise/PowerRangers'' has a few seasons with monsters that are the closest the series is willing to get to actual hellborn foes. All of them have involved the "release all denizens to bring about TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt" plot:
132** ''Series/PowerRangersLightspeedRescue'''s villains from the "Spirit World" are explicitly called demons, and there's even ''one'' instance of a deal with one.
133** The villains of ''Series/PowerRangersMysticForce'' come from a place called the Underworld and are ruled by a monster that has DemonicPossession in his arsenal.
134** ''Series/PowerRangersSamurai'' has the Nighloks, who come from the Sanzu River (the Japanese idea of the River Styx).
135** In addition, ''Series/PowerRangersNinjaStorm'' had a similar principle, where Lothor's monsters were sent to the Abyss of Evil when destroyed. Lothor's plan was to have the Rangers fill the Abyss until it burst, causing an en masse monster resurrection.
136* ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'' had the legions of hell bust loose at the end of season two. They fight them for the rest of the series, on and off, though not as much after defeating Satan at the end of Season Five, and less still in Seven, largely because they were so [[TheWorfEffect nerfed]]. OffscreenMomentOfAwesome when the angels (with Castiel apparently taking point, or at least the last survivor of those who took point) laid siege to Hell and cut their way in to rescue Dean, allowing him to get out of Hell without giving in to [[PowerCreepPowerSeep Power Creep]] much. (Dean actually took a hit to his power after Hell due to [=PTSD=], though in the BadFuture he was using his education there for JackBauerInterrogationTechnique.)
137[[/folder]]
138
139[[folder:Music]]
140* Seen in Music/{{Fireaxe}}'s ''Music/FoodForTheGods'', although in this case the army was composed not only of demons, but of damned souls who were very pissed off about where they'd ended up.
141[[/folder]]
142
143[[folder:Pinball]]
144* In ''Pinball/DevilsDare,'' the Devil is accompanied by a flock of green-skinned leathery-winged lesser demons.
145[[/folder]]
146
147[[folder:Religion & Mythology]]
148* Medieval grimoires (books detailing magical theories and practices) that addressed various demon lords often discussed how many legions of demons each one commanded in the service of Satan, under the assumption that, like the culture the writers were familiar with, Hell was organized along feudal lines. An example from the Psuedomonarchia Daemonum (The False Kingdom of the Demons), 1577:
149--> Andras is a great marquesse, and seemes in an angels shape with a head like a blacke night raven, riding upon a blacke and a verie strong woolfe, flourishing with a sharpe sword in his hand, he can kill the maister, the servant, and all assistants, he is author of discords, and ruleth thirtie legions.
150* Literature/TheQuran mentions this tropes in Surah 96 (Al-'Alaq) in a BadassBoast from Allah.
151-->''Have you seen the one who forbids a servant when he prays? Have you seen if he is upon guidance or enjoins righteousness? Have you seen if he denies and turns away - [[CantGetAwayWithNuthin does he not know that Allah sees?]] No! If he does not desist, We will surely [[DraggedByTheCollar drag him by the forelock]] - a lying, sinning forelock. Then let him call his associates; we will call the angels of Hell.'' (variant translations have "guards/soldiers" of Hell)
152** The angels in question are the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zabaniyah Zabaniyah]], the nineteen angels that in Islamic lore are in charge of punishing sinners in Hell.
153[[/folder]]
154
155[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
156* ''TabletopGame/DarkLegacies'' has a far future Earth suffer both a dimensional migration of low-tech races and then an invasion by demons. If it weren't for a rising religious order with holy magic and alliances with some of these new races, the demons would have completely wiped out humanity. As it is, despite being thousands of years in the future, humans have been reduced to steam tech and crossbows as the height of technology.
157* ''TabletopGame/{{Deadlands}}'': The manitou[[note]]a Native American name; Native Americans are generally prominent in the setting[[/note]] are responsible for creating... well, technically every single ghoulie and monster in the setting. They also fuel the spells of Hucksters, are the ultimate cause behind the ScienceRelatedMemeticDisorder of the Mad Scientist "class", and [[spoiler: are the secret source behind the [[AppliedPhlebotinum ghost rock]] that drives the CattlePunk of the setting]]. The manitou's efforts occasionally bite them on the ass; most prominently, while many corpses possessed by a manitou rise up as [[OurZombiesAreDifferent Walkin' Dead]], a rare few instead become the Harrowed, which are intelligent zombies, with the manitou constantly struggling with the original personality for control over the body, who can and often do use their supernatural powers to battle the manitou's purpose.
158* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' has three main varieties. The LawfulEvil devils from the Nine Hells of Baator field ruthlessly-disciplined armies out to subjugate the universe, the ChaoticEvil demons spill out of the Abyss in screaming hordes that try to tear down all of creation, while the NeutralEvil daemons, or Yugoloths, fight for whoever makes the best offer. Fortunately for everyone else, these three groups have been engaged in a conflict called [[EvilVersusEvil the Blood War]] since time immemorial -- the demons' advantage of numbers is matched by the devils' superior strategy and tactics, and whenever one side gets an advantage, some third party (frequently the Yugoloths) takes steps to restore the balance of power. The devils are also the only group of evil outsiders organized enough to have proper legions, which include Merregons, literal "legion devils." Each [[DemonLordsAndArchdevils archduke]] of Hell maintains an army of devilish soldiers with its own distinct equipment and tactics, so the Iron Defenders of Dis are exceptional siege engineers, Baalzebul's Maladominaar are renowned shock troops, and so forth. The Nessian Guard, an elite force under the command of Asmodeus himself, is the only army that does not take part in the Blood War, since it's being held in reserve for an even greater conflict to come.
159* ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'':
160** Hell ruled over by the [[EldritchAbomination Yozis]] (who, as the Primordials, created the world and ruled over it until the Exalted deposed them), and the [[SealedEvilInACan Can keeping them Sealed]] is the inside-out body of the mightiest of their number. Each Yozi has a large number of [[OurSoulsAreDifferent souls]], which are the immensely powerful Third Circle Demons. ''Those'' have souls which are the Second Circle Demons, and all of the above created the hordes of {{Mook}}s that are First Circle Demons.
161** The Underworld, the inverted shadow of Creation created when the Exalted armies killed some of the Primordials. Killing beings who could not die caused so much chaos that the Exalted decided to seal the rest of the Primordials away instead of killing them, turning them into the Yozis. Because the Primordials were outside the limits of death and time, however, they didn't actually die but instead became creatures now known as the [[EldritchAbomination Neverborn]], intent on ending their existence by sending their own legions of the dead to take the rest of Creation down with them.
162* ''TabletopGame/{{Infernum}}'' is a third-party setting that uses the 3.5 rules for ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' and, as the name suggests, this trope is all over it. In fact, the default assumption is that the party members ''are'' demons. It has heavy roots in Christian beliefs, mainly Dante's ''Inferno'', but is changed into its own unique setting. For a start, the demons are the result of vile crossbreeding experiments conducted between rebellious angels and "spawn" (prototypes of earthly lifeforms) in an effort to breed warrior-slaves... only for the demons to decide they didn't like the idea of being cannon fodder and promptly devour every last one of their "fathers" that didn't run for their life clean out of reality. Many demons at least profess not to believe in Heaven, and almost none believe that it's anything like the humans think it is (the Fallen Angels can't comment, having forgotten everything down to the reason why they Fell in the first place). There's also vague hints of even stranger forces in the multiverse; Benandanti are humans "touched" by nature spirits, whose souls travel to Hell in the guise of werewolves to steal souls to restore the vitality of nature, while Brokenlanders are the ghostly remnants of Quilipoth, another universe so ancient there's nothing left but a single ringworld orbiting the last dying cinder of a star.
163* , ''TabletopGame/InNomine'' gives players a chance to enact this trope as demons operating on Earth. Their opposition, Angels, have higher stats, and a military organization to support them. Demons have to work undercover and are weaker. The reason? All of this is a Game, and God is a cheater...
164* ''TabletopGame/{{Iron Kingdoms}}'' has the Grymkin who are an army from the areas of Urcaen not controlled by any god and is considered as Hell in the Iron Kingdoms. They are led by the Defiers demigod-like beings that can warp reality to a limited extent and the souls of sinners turned to monsters that represent their sins from various legends as well as 'Nightmares' which are warbeasts created by them. They are not exactly evil as they come to punish the wicked and indirectly save the world from the Infernals but are described as a poison that will hopefully remove the parasites(Infernalists) before killing the patient(The world).
165** The Infernals is also mentioned to be quite similar although they are yet to invade Caen in large numbers. They create contracts with Humans and give them various powers and abilities in return for souls. The souls are used to create demonic monsters to fight their wars in their own realm or collect souls marked for them. If a person's soul is sold to infernals then he cannot entire the afterlife as Gods hate the Infernals and have closed Urcaen completely to them and and souls with their mark.
166* ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'' has a variety of demons and similar events. The best known ''legions'' scenario was in the Invasion block, which had the biomechanical horrors of Phyrexia invading the plane of Dominaria.
167* ''TabletopGame/ObsidianAgeOfJudgement'': The forces of Hell took over the world centuries in the past, reducing humans in North America to living in scattered communities or the sole fortified HiveCity while Europe has been completely subjugated. It's so bad that humans don't know that there are places outside of their respective continents and while bionics and gun technology have improved to new heights, flight has become a lost technology.
168* ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'' has a bunch of varieties depending on what plane you're looking at. Hell has devils and asuras, Abaddon has daemons and divs, the Abyss has demons, qlippoth, and demodands, the Ethereal Plane has sahkils, the Shadow Plane has kytons, the Material Plane has rakshasas and oni, and dorvae just sort of wander. All of them are different, though the differences become more hair-splittingly specific with some of them, and all of them are bad news for mortals.
169* ''TabletopGame/RedHandOfDoom'': BigBad Azzar Kul calls in various demons from other planes to supplement his army and during the final battle of the module at the Fane of Tiamat.
170* ''TabletopGame/{{Rifts}}'': One of the stories is the "Minion War", a war between two separate Legions of Hell: the Demons of Hades, and the Deevils of Dyval. It's beginning to spill over into other dimensions.
171* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'': One of the main factions is Chaos, spewing forth from the Eye of Terror: a rift in spacetime that allows access to the [[HyperspaceIsAScaryPlace Warp]], a nightmare realm made of the emotions and thoughts of the entirety of sapient life in the galaxy. Chaos comes in four main flavors. You have your standard daemons, entities formed from the aforementioned thoughts and emotions of mortals who are usually aligned with one of the main four [[GodOfEvil Chaos]] [[EldritchAbomination Gods]]. You have legions of power armor-wearing SuperSoldiers, sometimes bearing some [[LovecraftianSuperpower nasty mutations]] and [[DealWithTheDevil "gifts"]] from the gods, each led by an immortal [[PhysicalGod Daemon Prince]]. You have scores of [[TheRevolutionWillNotBeCivilized traitor guardsmen]] and [[TheDogBitesBack mistreated Imperial citizens]] who are so fed up with the Imperium's bullshit that they willingly pledge their allegiance to the Ruinous Powers en masse. Finally you have [[TheCorruption the more subtle angle]]; cults disguised as innocuous organizations, daemonic possession of unidentified psykers, and the manipulation of GenreBlind individuals.
172* ''TabletopGame/WarhammerFantasy'' also includes Chaos as a faction. While it does possess a lot of daemons made up of pure magic straight from the Realm of Chaos (ranging from human-level lesser daemons to OneManArmy greater daemons), the bulk of the Chaos army is [[TheCorruption tainted mortal warriors]] and twisted [[BeastMan Beastmen]], all sweeping down from the GrimUpNorth and corrupted forests. The Beastmen are [[BarbarianTribe savage Iron Age tribes]] of mutants that resemble [[FaunsAndSatyrs satyrs, fauns, and minotaurs]], and are considered the lowest CannonFodder of the Chaos ranks. The human followers of Chaos, collectively referred to as Northmen, mainly consist of two ethnic groups: Norscans (barbaric HornyVikings) and Kurgan ([[BornInTheSaddle Turkic/Iranic style steppe nomads]]); a third group, the vaguely Tungusic Hung, [[HufflepuffHouse mostly exist offscreen]]. The Northmen's ranks are complemented by mutated animals, fantastical beasts (such as giants and trolls), and the Chaos Warriors, who are anointed mortals (often chieftains or sub-chieftains of various tribes) who have been "blessed" for their service with increased size and strength (averaging around seven feet tall), a [[TwentyFourHourArmor suit of iron or steel plate that they can never remove]], [[TheNeedless lack of need for food or rest,]] and often various mutations. Less prominent than the humans but still quite important are the [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Chaos Dwarfs,]] who are notably the only Chaos faction with industry. The [[OurElvesAreDifferent Dark Elves]] have also allied with Chaos where convenient, most notably during the Great War Against Chaos and in the Storm of Chaos.
173* ''Franchise/TheWorldOfDarkness'':
174** ''TabletopGame/OldWorldOfDarkness'':
175*** ''TabletopGame/DemonTheFallen'': Demons that escaped from Hell are the player characters; the angels have long since vanished. Whether the demons are {{antihero}}es or [[TheAtoner atoners]] is up to the player. Their former allies have become the Earthbound, who have gone mad from indeterminate amounts of time being SealedEvilInACan.
176*** ''TabletopGame/WraithTheOblivion'': Specters fulfill this role, with the Malfeans being the overlords waiting til they get to eat reality. The various servants of the Wyrm in ''TabletopGame/WerewolfTheApocalypse'' might also count.
177*** ''TabletopGame/NewWorldOfDarkness'':
178*** ''Inferno'' introduces Hell into the setting. Hell plays host to a number of demons that are born of the first fleeting moments of human wickedness, who occasionally come to humans and offer them great power for a little price... For extra fun, ghosts and 'regular' spirits can be corrupted into demons too.
179*** ''TabletopGame/DemonTheDescent'' is a subversion -- the [=PCs=] are fallen angels, but Hell is their ''goal'', not their home. Hell is a symbol to them, signifying freedom from their former master, the God-Machine, however they choose to go about it.
180[[/folder]]
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182[[folder:Video Games]]
183* ''VideoGame/AncientDomainsOfMystery'' has the Forces of Chaos, an endless amount of [[EldritchAbomination reality-defying horrific beings]] from another dimension. They are invading the world of Ancardia, the setting of the game. They have TheCorruption on their side, turning normal people and animals into more of them (after some BodyHorror).
184* ''VideoGame/AvencastRiseOfTheMage'' sees a daemon invasion into the WizardingSchool setting, followed by a counterassault on [[DemonLordsAndArchdevils Morgath's]] turf.
185* ''VideoGame/{{Bloodhound}}'' sees the demon queen, Astaroth, unleashing her brood of demons into the world, and it's up to you to stop them. You start with fighting cultists, but moves on to imps, winged demons, zombified Valkyries, and increasingly horrifying enemies of all types.
186* In ''VideoGame/{{Bujingai}}'', the earth is overrun with demons of various kind. It's implied that their mooks (seen as golem-like warriors with seals and swords) were once humans turned into monsters by a strange radiation.
187* ''VideoGame/DarkSouls'' has a mess of rather varied demons roaming throughout Lordran, although they are fairly new to the scene, having only come about when the Age Of Fire started to decline and the Witch Of Izalith tried to recreate the First Flame. Her old base of Lost Izalith has since become a textbook FireAndBrimstoneHell, and her seven daughters have either died, gone mad or turned into similarly demonic, [[VolcanicVeins lava infused]] SpiderPeople.
188** Interestingly, by [[VideoGame/DarkSoulsII the sequel]] that race of demons seems to have died out eventually after Izalith's death. The few demons that appear there were [[WasOnceAMan humans that succumbed to their vices]], and are by no means a legion.
189** ''VideoGame/DarkSoulsIII'' confirms that the Chaos Demons of Izalith did indeed perish, since the Flame of Chaos that birthed them is down to its very last embers. You meet (and kill) a tiny handful of ancient, decrepit survivors, and it's implied that with their deaths the demons are truly extinct.
190* In the ''VideoGame/DevilMayCry'' series, Dante foils demonic puppets, demonic sand creatures, demonic clowns, demonic businessmen, demonic cultists, etc. In the past, his father Sparda also rebelled against demonkind and faced the legions of hell by himself.
191* The ''VideoGame/{{Diablo}}'' video games are about the Legions of Hell attempting the world's destruction. While in the first part you venture ever deeper into ever more nightmarish caverns, in the second game the last act is in Hell, and in the third game, [[spoiler:the Legions of Hell storm Heaven itself, and you have to go to Hell to shut down the gateways they're using to invade]]. The expansion to the second game is about an attempt to graft Hell and the mortal world together, and there are portals to Hell where you can go and loot stuff.
192* The [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Legions of the Damned]] are one of the playable factions in the ''VideoGame/{{Disciples}}'' turn-based strategy series. Their leader, Bethrezen, is given a somewhat sympathetic backstory, but the Legion's {{Mooks}} are unquestionably the nastiest faction in the game.
193* The ''Franchise/{{Doom}}'' series centers around invasions from Hell. While many many video games (eg ''VideoGame/{{Quake}}'', ''VideoGame/HalfLife'') are based around monsters pouring forth from another realm, ''Doom'' is one of the few to go the whole hog and use the Legions of The Damned itself as the main antagonistic force. That said, Satan himself is conspicuously absent outside of the occasional reference to an unnamed "Dark Lord", with the closest thing we see in the original trilogy being the Icon of Sin. ''VideoGame/Doom2016'' establishes that there have been multiple leaders of Hell over the eons (generally just the biggest, baddest demon around), but the ''original'' Dark Lord of Hell and his identity have only been explored in ''VideoGame/DoomEternal'''s DLC (in which he is briefly called "the Devil" but not "Satan", and ultimately turns out to be [[spoiler:Davoth, the ''original'' creator of the universe, who was betrayed by the Maykrs who stole his power and his name becaue they feared what he would become]]).
194* The Darkspawn of ''VideoGame/DragonAgeOrigins'' are a kind of [[OurOrcsAreDifferent plague Orcs]]. The Chantry's version of the Darkspawn taint's origin makes the Darkspawn seem demonic - they were overambitious mages who tried to physically break into DreamLand and find the mysterious Golden City at its heart, which the Chantry believes to be the home of the setting's God. It spat them back out as twisted monsters who started a centuries-long cycle of pain. The sequel's ''Legacy'' DLC reveals there's some truth to this, although the City may have been "corrupt" before they got there.
195** The game does feature actual demons as well, which are evil spirits from the Fade that possess the living or dead bodies of human beings, usually a mage due to their ability to go to the Fade in the first place, and feed upon the psychic energies of living beings. There are [[SortingAlgorithmOfEvil five known ranks of demons]]; Rage, Hunger, Sloth, Desire and Pride, in order both of strength and intelligence of the complexity of the emotion they are feeding on. Destroying the host only sends the demon [[FightingAShadow back to whence it came unharmed]], and though some demons are able to manifest in the physical world alone, killing them seems to have the same effect. Their hosts usually mutate when possessed into a HumanoidAbomination of varying degrees of BodyHorror. Demons are rarer than Darkspawn, but are broadly smarter, stronger and more dangerous. In a twist on this there are actually good or neutral spirits with little or no interest in mortals, one of which possesses a corpse totally by accident in the expansion. According to him the idea that demons destroyed in the real world return to the fade is false, and he never does find a way to get home.
196* In ''VideoGame/DwarfFortress'', [[spoiler:this is the "Hidden Fun Stuff" that you come across if you [[DugTooDeep dig too deep]].]]
197** [[spoiler:You have discovered an eerie cavern. The air above the dark stone floor is alive with vortices of purple light and dark, boiling clouds. Seemingly bottomless glowing pits mark the surface.]]
198** [[spoiler:Horrifying screams come from the darkness below!]]
199*** When this happens, it is usually the end of your fortress. Of course, this being ''VideoGame/DwarfFortress'', you could just [[spoiler:massacre said legion and ''[[http://www.bay12forums.com/smf/index.php?topic=65024.0 build a fucking colony in their house.]]'']]
200* In ''Franchise/TheElderScrolls'' series, this applies to any [[OurGodsAreDifferent Daedric Prince]] who, for whatever reason, attempts to invade Mundus (the mortal realm) with their [[OurDemonsAreDifferent lesser Daedra]] servants. The purest example is Mehrunes Dagon, the Daedric Prince of [[DestroyerDeity Destruction]]. His legions include the Dremora (a ProudWarriorRace with a very [[RedAndBlackAndEvilAllOver demonic aesthetic]] who serve him in a [[AlwaysChaoticEvil Lawful Evil]] way) as his {{Mooks}} (with the higher-ranking Dremora serving as EliteMooks and PraetorianGuard), [[TheGoomba Scamps]] as CannonFodder, Clannfear as {{Attack Animal}}s, [[NeverSmileAtACrocodile Daedroths]] as {{Giant Mook}}s, and the massive Xivilai as his high end EliteMooks. Dagon has repeatedly attempted to [[TakeOverTheWorld take over Mundus]] in this fashion, most famously in ''[[VideoGame/AnElderScrollsLegendBattlespire Battlespire]]'' and ''[[VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIVOblivion Oblivion]]'', but has yet to actually succeed.
201* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyII'' outright stated at the beginning that the [[TheEmperor Emperor]] of Palamecia summons these to launch his campaign for [[TakeOverTheWorld world conquest]].
202* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIV'' has the denizens of the Void, a dimension that is home to all manner of monstrous creatures and [[EldritchAbomination Eldritch Abominations]]. Also hailing from the Void are the Ascians, humanoid-appearing beings who have dark plans for the realm of Eorzea. [[spoiler:The trope is later played with when the "Void" is revealed to be one of the thirteen alternate realities of the world of Hydaelyn, albeit one where the powers of darkness grew too strong and resulted in the world's ruin.]]
203* ''VideoGame/{{Freespace}}'' invokes this trope with the Shivans, the unholy intersection of StarfishAliens and OmnicidalManiac, by naming every class of their StandardSciFiFleet after demons and monsters from a wide range of mythologies. As such, their planet-killing flagship in the first game is classified as the ''Lucifer'', and the even bigger and badder juggernaut-class warship in the second is designated the ''Sathanas''. Being utterly alien, seemingly infinite in number, and apparently existing only to exterminate advanced civilization everywhere, the monikers fit.
204* Most enemies in ''VideoGame/GhostsNGoblins'' can be described thus.
205* The monsters of ''VideoGame/GloryOfHeraclesIII'' come out of the Underworld through giant holes that form in the world.
206* ''VIdeoGame/{{Hellbound}}'', a game which is set in HellOnEarth after demons emerged from a portal connecting both worlds, have you fighting armies from the underworld the entire game.
207* ''VideoGame/HandsOfNecromancy'' have three demonic brothers unleashing their brood into the mortal world, and you're a sorceror well-versed in the dark arts out to stop them. The monsters you fight hits every cliche in the book as well, from zombies to hooded cultists to Satanic-looking demons and dragons and whatnot.
208* In ''VideoGame/HellgateLondon'', demons have decided to start off their invasion of the world in London, and it's the players' task to stop them.
209* The primary enemies in ''VideoGame/KidIcarus1986'' and ''VideoGame/KidIcarusUprising'' are the Underworld Army, a diverse assortment of monsters who serve Medusa [[spoiler:and Hades]].
210* TheHeartless of ''Franchise/KingdomHearts'' are, as that trope describes, TheVirus made from the 'darkness' in human hearts. The original "Pureblood" Heartless are entirely MadeOfEvil and have been around for a long time, but it wasn't until a MadScientist started messing with them that they became the world-devouring threat they were by the first game. The sequel adds gray-bodied Nobodies, the cast-off shells of Heartless victims.
211* The Ing of ''VideoGame/MetroidPrime2Echoes'' are highly reminiscent of this, despite being "merely" transdimensional alien beings. They come from [[DarkWorld Dark Aether]], a dimension that kills any "light creature" (anything that is not Ing) almost insantly, [[DemonicPossession possess]] creatures to suit their needs, and are [[WeakenedByTheLight repelled by "sacred" light]].
212* The Kreegan infestation in ''VideoGame/MightAndMagic'' is (in-universe) commonly thought to be this (especially played up in VideoGame/HeroesOfMightAndMagic III). As it turns out, they are actually [[AlienInvasion alien invaders]] that sweep across the Galaxy [[PlanetLooters as a plague of locust]]... and happen to look like the common myths of devils and demons (or possibly have breeds that look like the actual devils and demons).
213* In ''VideoGame/NeverwinterNights: Hordes of the Underdark'', Mephistopheles forms his army from the souls of betrayers sent to his realm after death
214* The primary villains of ''VideoGame/NexusClash'' are demons from the hellish plane of Stygia. Since every Demon in Nexus games is a PlayerCharacter, there is a twist in that Stygia isn't all that popular a place to set up in the eyes of the MetaGame. This means that with a couple of exceptions, most Legions tend to steer clear of their actual Hell plane in favor of fighting for a HellOnEarth scenario.
215* ''VideoGame/Nioh2'' 's second DLC features a Japanese take on this trope: aside from the classical ''{{oni}}'' fought before in the series, the DLC features as mooks the Yominogun (Underworld Soldiers) and the Shikome (Hellish Hags), described in the Kojiki as the monstrous hordes that ran after Izanagi as he escaped from his undead wife. The FinalBoss summons the Yakusa no Ikazuchi (lit. Eight Thunder Gods, translated as Lightning Gods of Yomi) the eight thunder deities born from Izanagi's festering flesh and tasked with patrolling the borders of Yomi.
216* A important chunck of backstory for all ''VideoGame/OgreBattle'' games was once that the Underworld's armies of Demons, Ogres and other such nasties invaded Earth, who were aided by Heaven's armies in the titular "Ogre Battle". The Underworld lost, but parts of the legions can still be summoned by humans. They are often very important plot point, like in ''VideoGame/OgreBattleTheMarchOfTheBlackQueen'', where [[BigBad Rashidi]] contacts a General of said Legion, [[DemonLordsAndArchdevils Galf]] or in ''Videogame/OgreBattle64'' is a bunch of Ogres being summoned by [[spoiler: The Holy Lodis Empire]]. However, in battle, you can persuade some of them to join you!
217* ''VideoGame/{{Painkiller}}'' is about the legions of Hell invading another world, although it's another afterlife instead of a physical world. Purgatory, to be specific.
218* ''VideoGame/QuestForGloryIII'' features an attempted invasion of demons that the hero must thwart. They are led by a [[TheDragon Demon Wizard]] who itself serves a [[DimensionLord Demon Lord]] that, if it manages to enter the world, immediately destroys it through its mere presence.
219* The Bydo in ''VideoGame/RType'' are arguably this, even though they were created ''by'' humanity. Thing is, they were locked into ''a pocket dimension'' (read: the future Hell) after they proved to have GoneHorriblyRight, and they were able to use it as a staging ground to attack humanity several centuries into the past. Now consider that there isn't all that much reason -- at least, nothing mentioned in-game -- to believe they would have restricted themselves to just the ''recent'' past...
220* ''VideoGame/SaintsRowGatOutOfHell'': You have to fight through demons, damned corpses, fallen angels and {{Satan}} himself.
221* The main bad guys in ''VideoGame/SakuraWars'' are demons.
222* Members of the Legions of Hell feature in several ''Franchise/ShinMegamiTensei'' games. Most notably so in ''[[VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiIIINocturne Nocturne]]'', in which the protagonist becomes half-demon, half-human that can survive [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt The Conception]] thanks to the involvement of [[LouisCypher an oddly creepy child and an old man in a wheelchair]]. [[spoiler:And in the game's 'worst'/awesomest ending, said protagonist becomes [[TheDragon the general of Lucifer's armies]] and leads said Legions to the final battle in the war against Heaven.]]
223* The Fek'Ihri in ''VideoGame/StarTrekOnline'' are supposedly this. They claim to be the army of Molor, a tyrant who ruled the Klingon homeworld hundreds of years ago, who were cast into [[{{Hell}} Gre'thor]] by Kahless the Unforgettable and have now returned to take revenge on the Klingon Empire. They come in a wide variety of forms and even have a fleet of warp-capable starships they use to invade Qo'noS. There was some evidence found that they may have been created using technological means instead, but it took years for the thread to be picked up on. [[spoiler: As it turns out, the Fek'Ihri were originally created by the ''Dominion'' as a predecessor to the Jem'Hadar, inspired by Klingon legends. The Fek'Ihri managed to break free, but were driven towards madness by losing access to Ketracel, ending up on Qo'noS, were they formed some form of alliance with Molor.]]
224* ''VideoGame/{{Warcraft}}'':
225** The Burning Legion, an army of demons whose goal is to unmake the universe. They scour all life from the planets they conquer, and the only beings they spare are those whom their leaders deem fit to be "recruited", corrupted and pressed into their crusade. Overlaps with AlienInvasion due to the ScienceFantasy nature of the franchise.
226** ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' has the Mawsworn, the forces of the setting's actual Hell known as the Maw. Rather than demons, the army is composed mainly of souls of the deceased that have been tortured and reforged into armored creatures of various shapes and sizes, [[FallenAngel rogue kyrian]], and other beings of the Shadowlands that have been subjugated by [[{{Satan}} the Jailer]].
227* Inverted in ''VideoGame/WarstrideChallenges'' - you spend the whole game fighting demons in underground caverns resembling ''hell'', but it's ''you'' (and other mercenaries partaking in the titular challenge) doing the invading, not the other way around.
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230[[folder:Webcomics]]
231* These used to exist in ''Webcomic/DominicDeegan'', until Karnak [[spoiler:blew up Hell. No word on whether any survived Hell's destruction and Karnak's subsequent self-coronation.]]
232* Demons are trying to open a gateway into the world in ''Webcomic/PlanesOfEldlor''. Seeing as they are described as having an army at the ready, they are probably not looking to enter peacefully.
233* The "demonic hordes" are the main antagonist of ''Webcomic/TheSenkari'', although it's not clear whether they're really evil or just on the other side.
234* The Dimension of Pain from ''Webcomic/SluggyFreelance'' fits this trope to a T, complete with being the launching pad for a [[DemonicInvaders demonic invasion]] of [[AnotherDimension another, more peaceful dimension]]. Little is seen of the actual ''Hell'', however, and even then it only appears in the [[BSideComics B Side Comic]].
235[[/folder]]
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237[[folder:Web Original]]
238* In ''Roleplay/TheGamersAlliance'', demons appear as antagonists who come from another world and attempt to invade the Land of the Living several times over the millennia first for the glory of their god Mardük, the God of Chaos, and later for themselves after their god is killed.
239* ''Blog/HowToHero'''s guide to [[https://howtohero.tumblr.com/post/166524041006/going-to-hell going to Hell]] talks about avoiding/fighting the legions of Hell.
240* Downplayed in ''Literature/TheSalvationWar'', where [[spoiler:the demons are apparently genetic offshoots from human ancestors -- and are completely mortal. Superhuman strength, speed (on foot at least), some with wings, and not a few with powers, but all killable (AND HOW!). They only managed to successfully invade mostly empty desert before being pushed back into Hell and then being invaded by HUMANS. Heck, a human kills Asmodeus with multiple sniper rifle bullets to the head, and there's nothing showing that ''Satan'' isn't mortal too. In fact, he really only survives a recent attempt by the humans to assassinate him by bombing his palace by sheer luck; he just happened to be out of the city at the time. The angels appear to be slightly tougher, and much faster, but by no means immortal themselves.]]
241** Satan [[spoiler:was killed when he took two anti-ship missiles to the face, although he would have actually survived and possibly recovered from the first]].
242** They may be killable, but they seem to live pretty much forever if they avoid a violent death.
243[[/folder]]
244
245[[folder:Western Animation]]
246* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}: The Beast With a Billion Backs'', Bender recruits an Army of the Damned from the Robot Devil to take over Earth. After every living being in the universe decides to move in with [[FluffyCloudHeaven Yivo]] instead, he leads the army in a {{pirate}}-themed [[RageAgainstTheHeavens attack on Yivo Shklerself]].
247* Miseryville of ''WesternAnimation/JimmyTwoShoes'' is heavily implied to be {{Hell}}, and in the original pitch it officially was. The citizens are just one of the reasons why it's obvious it's Hell, with all the monsters and demons. However, the people of Miseryville are generally a pretty decent lot (they just have crappy lives) and basically like ordinary humans in all but appearance.
248* The Dark Spirits of Book 2 in ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra'' are portrayed as such, with BigBad Vaatu as their master and Unalaq as TheDragon. Like in ''Teen Titans'' they also help their master bring about TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt and bring humans under Dark Spirit rule.
249* Ghosts, demons and dark gods in ''WesternAnimation/TheRealGhostbusters'' (and ''WesternAnimation/ExtremeGhostbusters'') come from various places, sometimes other dimensions. The Ghostbusters [[SealedEvilInACan capture them and put them into their "Containment Unit."]] Over the years, the Containment Unit's inner environment has become a type of Hell due to its growing number of inhabitants. Having to journey into the Containment Unit and battle old foes now teamed together, or the threat of the Containment Unit being broken open and bringing about TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt, are common plots.
250* In the ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' episode "Best Friends Forever," the forces of heaven fought back the forces of hell with the help of Kenny and a divine Sony PSP. The legions themselves owed much design- and action-wise to the Orcs from Peter Jackson's ''Lord of the Rings'' films.
251* The show up as the {{Mooks}} of the fourth season of ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitans2003'', with their boss [[SatanicArchetype Trigon]] as BigBad and Slade as TheDragon. They try to bring about TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt and come within a hairsbreadth of succeeding. [[WhatDoYouMeanItsForKids And yes, this is from a kids show that's normally a lighthearted action-comedy]].
252* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Wakfu}}'', the Sushu armies certainly fit the description, a horde of evil beings who seek only to destroy anything good or beautiful.
253* Dracula's army in ''WesternAnimation/Castlevania2017'' is made up of demons that he summoned from Hell to [[OmnicidalManiac slaughter the population of Wallachia]].
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