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2%% Please don't hide work names in potholes.
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5%% Image removed per Image Pickin' thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1380799534088295400
6%% Please see thread to discuss a new image.
7%%
8->''"There he goes. One of God's own prototypes. A high-powered mutant of some kind never even considered for mass production. Too weird to live, and too rare to die."''
9-->-- '''Creator/HunterSThompson''', referring to his {{Heterosexual Life Partner|s}}, '''Oscar Zeta Acosta''', via AuthorAvatar
10
11Let's say a character is a {{Ninja Pirate|ZombieRobot}}. Let's say he also has a [[HumongousMecha giant robot]]. Let's say that giant robot also has an InfinityPlusOneSword. Let's further say that said sword is actually a {{katana|sAreJustBetter}}. No, make that a {{chainsaw|Good}} katana. No, let's just say it's [[DualWielding two chainkatanas]]... attached by a chain to make chainkatana[[Webcomic/EightBitTheater chucks]].
12
13Clearly, this character is Made Of Cool. Equally clearly, this character, if he is not the Main Character, must die, because he overshadows the main character.
14
15This is what happens when somebody is Too Cool to Live. This character is often relegated by ThePlotReaper to the job of being a HeroicSacrifice, or the SixthRanger. Many a wise and awesome [[TheMentor mentor]] has [[MentorOccupationalHazard fallen victim]] to this trope. Depending on how it happens, such a death can be a severe example of TheWorfEffect. There's also a very strong overlap with SacrificialLion. Almost inevitably, their surviving comarades will all experience SurvivorsGuilt over their demise and feel it's [[ItsAllMyFault their fault]] the awesome character had to die.
16
17Sometimes, a ''main character'' is Too Cool to Live, and so performs a HeroicSacrifice at the end of a movie or television series. Apparently, there was [[PutOnABus no bus service]] in the area.
18
19Sometimes results in a DisneyDeath due to ExecutiveMeddling if the character is popular enough, but [[SortingAlgorithmOfDeadness usually only]] if they NeverFoundTheBody.
20
21Alternatively, this character doesn't die, but [[PutOnABus is removed from the stage in some way]]. Or [[FaceHeelTurn he turns evil]], and his superior coolness is put to use as an obstacle for the hero to overcome. And we all know that EvilIsCool.
22
23It may be justified as it allows the next generation, mainly the hero, to [[TookALevelInBadass improve greatly]] to make up for the loss of this person. Many {{Crutch Character}}s in video games channel this trope.
24
25Compare DyingMomentOfAwesome and TooPowerfulToLive, a villain who is just too dangerous thanks to his StoryBreakerPower. See also TooGoodForThisSinfulEarth, a character who is just too gentle to stay in the story; and TooHappyToLive.
26
27Being Too Cool to Live can be very subjective, so please try not to Administrivia/EditWar. Since this is a [[DeathTropes death-related trope]], '''Here There Be {{Spoiler}}s'''. [[Administrivia/HandlingSpoilers You have been warned.]]
28
29----
30!!Examples:
31
32[[foldercontrol]]
33
34[[folder:Cross-Medium]]
35* As mentioned below, almost any character played by Creator/SeanBean.
36[[/folder]]
37
38[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
39* ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'': [[spoiler: Yamamoto]] finally kicked the bucket but not before showing why he is feared by even the BigBad.
40%%Don't add the Espada. They're villains. By definition, the plot requires them to die.
41%%* Cougar from ''Anime/{{Scryed}}''.
42* [[spoiler:Ryoji Kaji]] from ''Anime/NeonGenesisEvangelion'' who was shot dead by an unseen assailant.
43* ''Anime/TengenToppaGurrenLagann'':
44** Kamina, though Simon [[spoiler:becomes ''[[TookALevelInBadass more]]'' [[TookALevelInBadass awesome]] after the TimeSkip. Kamina himself admits this in the LotusEaterMachine]]. But hey, that comes with the job description.
45** Kittan, although he did die laughing about how awesome it was (his sacrificing himself to save everyone via a giga drill breaker).
46** Pretty much everyone who is dead on the good side is this. Hell, even some of the bad guys; this ''is'' a WorldOfBadass, after all.
47** Lordgenome, who not only has a mecha that is stronger than Simon at that point, but he gets out of it to pummel it with his bare hands. The fact he had dominated the fight, [[spoiler: and Simon had to use a cheap shot to kill him]] cements him as this
48* ''Anime/DarkerThanBlack'': Lives and breathes this tropes. First season had [[spoiler: November 11, Mai]], and countless others. Second season has had: [[spoiler: Tanya, April, Goran, and July]]. In general, if you are attached to a character on the show, flip a coin to see if they die or become horribly traumatized.
49%%* ''Anime/MartianSuccessorNadesico'':
50%%** Daigouji Gai
51%%** Joe Umitsubame in the ShowWithinAShow, ''Gekiganger 3''.
52* ''Anime/MobileSuitGundam00'':
53** [[spoiler:Neil Dylandy]], the first Lockon Stratos. Also played with [[SuperpoweredEvilSide Hallelujah]], but HesJustHiding.
54** [[spoiler:Sergei Smirnov]] and [[spoiler:Ali Al-Saachez]] in season 2. TheMovie added [[spoiler:Graham Aker]] to the list.
55* Roy Focker in the original ''Anime/SuperDimensionFortressMacross''. As a BigBrotherMentor who was still able to fight, he had to die so that Hikaru could take over command of Skull Squadron. Plus, his macho personality, something Macross makes a point of deconstructing, is what gets him killed.
56* Naomi Misora in ''Manga/DeathNote'' was removed for this reason; WordOfGod was that she figured out stuff about Kira too quickly.
57* [[spoiler:The men of the Zeppeli family]] in ''Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure'' are all doomed to die terrible deaths for helping the heroes:
58** [[spoiler:Will A. Zeppeli: Killed by Tarkus, used the last of his Hamon to empower Jonathan before dying.]]
59** [[spoiler:Mario Zeppeli: EatenAlive by Esidisi after pushing Caesar away from the sealed off Pillar Men.]]
60** [[spoiler:Caesar Zeppeli: Used the last of his Hamon to create a bubble of blood containing his headband and antidote for Joseph after being mortally wounded by Wamuu. Then he got crushed by a roof debris.]]
61** [[spoiler:Gyro Zeppeli: Killed by Funny Valentine, uses his last moments to teach Johnny the last lesson he needs to master the "Spin".]]
62* Balgus from ''Anime/TheVisionOfEscaflowne''. Sure, he was the mentor to TheHero until this point, but he was a giant of a man with badass scars who took out an enemy mecha on foot with a BFS on a show where this sort of thing generally doesn't happen. Even the [[TabletopGame/Warhammer40000 Space Marines]] could be killed.
63* ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEED'':
64** Mu La Flaga. Then [[FanNickname "Bring 'Em Back"]] Fukuda lived up to his nickname and brought the character back in ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEEDDestiny,'' but really [[FanonDiscontinuity he might as well not have bothered]].
65** In the back-story of Gundam SEED, the Original Coordinator George Glenn was assassinated pretty much out of jealousy and envy of his awesome and cool accomplishments by the Blue Cosmos faction making him a sort of in-universe example of being too cool to live. Though his preserved brain was later brought back in ''[[Manga/MobileSuitGundamSEEDAstray Astray]]'' as a hologram.
66* Subverted in ''Manga/RurouniKenshin''; Kenshin's master is a huge, muscular man who is a master of the style. It even sets him up for dying in this way, as the traditional means of mastering the final technique was to kill your master while using it. However, Kenshin's reverse-blade katana saves his master from certain death, yet Kenshin still masters the technique. His master then goes on to save the rest of Kenshin's band from the minions of Shishio, while Kenshin goes to fight the BigBad himself. However, he does drop out of the story after the prologue of the following arc to keep him from overshadowing the main characters.
67* ''Manga/{{Gantz}}'':
68** Joichiro Nishi. Not only was he the only guy who seemed to know what the hell was going on, but he was also smart, badass, funny as hell and something of a MagnificentBastard at that. So of course, he had to die.
69** [[AllLovingHero Kato]], who quite a few people preferred to [[JerkAss Kurono]] before the latter's CharacterDevelopment (thankfully, he comes back in the manga as well). Sakata and Suzuki easily qualify late in the manga as well.
70* Vanessa and Elenore in ''Anime/{{Madlax}}'' were odd examples in that they were somehow both Too Cool To Live ''and'' Too Cool To Die. Their idea of splitting the difference was...interesting...
71%%* ''Manga/VinlandSaga'':
72%%** Askeladd
73%%** Bjorn
74* ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'':
75** Minato Namikaze is a particularly notable example. He was hailed as one of the strongest shinobi ever, saved the Leaf village from the Nine-Tailed Fox's attack, was shown to be able to wipe out whole platoons of shinobi in the ''blink of an eye'' (to the point where enemies were ordered to flee on sight from him), [[StoryBreakerPower and could teleport anything, even a Spirit Bomb level chakra blast miles away without breaking a sweat]]. Needless to say, a lot of potential threats to the Leaf would not be deemed so dangerous if he was still alive.
76** Jiraiya the Toad Sannin has become this over the course of Part II since his death. Possessing a high amount of badass skill, his own SuperMode, and being able to fight the DiscOneFinalBoss and temporarily defeat him, as well as his own wisdom being used to ''redeem'' his fallen student through Naruto Uzumaki, it's easy to see why he's cool. Even Kabuto lamented his inability to use Edo Tensei on him.
77* Max Kaien from ''Manga/TheFiveStarStories'', except that [[SubvertedTrope he isn't dead]]. He was indeed so much of a GameBreaker that he would disrupt the plot, but the plot itself was so [[AnachronicOrder tangled]] and [[MindScrew complicated]], that Mamoru Nagano simply had no need to kill him. Instead, he [[PutOnABus threw Max away]] into an AlternateUniverse, where he found at least some match for him and surfaced only in occasional episodes ever since.
78* Ken from ''Anime/{{Godannar}}''. What can go wrong with a badass pilot who has a NinjaPirateZombieRobot for a mecha? Obviously, they had to take him out. Unless he's in the VideoGame/SuperRobotWars universe.
79* Festa in ''Anime/FangOfTheSunDougram''. He defeats an enemy HumongousMecha on a bike and saves the titular SuperPrototype. Five minutes later he goes for a drive and a grenade goes off in his bike. A grenade that a dying enemy soldier dropped there in the previous episode. A grenade that he conveniently didn't notice at all.
80* ''Manga/OutlawStar'': "Hot Ice" Hilda served as the mentor for Geene Starwind until she sacrificed herself fighting off SpacePirates. A long-time dream of fans is the creation of a {{Prequel}} detailing just how she got to be so badass.
81* Danny in the ''Manga/ZatchBell'' anime. He's a strong fighter barehanded and has a spell that can heal all of his injuries (even resurrect him after getting shot to death) limitless times. So he dies in the same episode he appears, in a very stupid way and only to protect a statue. But like darn near everything else in this series, it's a TearJerker anyway. As a bit of an added punch, the statue he was hell bent on protecting broke before he was in that situation.
82* [[TricksterMentor Cross]] Marian in ''Manga/DGrayMan'' necessitated a hunt across half of Asia by the Black Order, then sauntered in and saved Allen's ass on the Ark. His superiors at the Black Order were not amused by his tendency to go truant and put him under house arrest, and he spent quite a while lounging around headquarters, [[ChivalrousPervert seducing women]], racking up insane amounts of debt on the Order's tab, and completely outshining every damn person in the whole place, as was aptly demonstrated when [[spoiler:Lulu Bell attacked]]. He was attacked at HQ and appeared to be dead, but his body disappeared, with his gun, and mask left at the scene. Komui exams the bullet hole in his mask, and tells other generals that all the blood belonged to Cross and that a wound of such magnitude would have been fatal. [[spoiler: However, it's been revealed that he survived the shot to his head, but has only been placed in a ConvenientComa because of it. Road reveals it when she states she wants him to keep sleeping, in chapter 222.]]
83* Yuuko from ''Manga/XxxHolic'' is so cool that [[spoiler: [[AWizardDidIt Clow Reed]] warped reality to delay her death]] before she died for real.
84* [[spoiler: Jack Rakan]] of ''Manga/NegimaMagisterNegiMagi'', with a suitable send off. [[spoiler: Fate had to ''[[RealityWarper rewrite the laws of reality]]'' to take him out, and even then, he went down swinging.]] Even then he comes back in the next chapter to do a SECOND ObiWanMoment by smacking (literally) some sense into Negi after he gives into his SuperPoweredEvilSide. [[spoiler: Subverted, now that he's WILLED HIMSELF BACK INTO EXISTENCE permanently.]]
85* ''Manga/OnePiece'':
86** A character who is the [[LargeAndInCharge strongest]], [[PersonOfMassDestruction most powerful]], [[TestosteronePoisoning most awesomely manly]], and all-around most utterly badass character in a WorldOfBadass. He dies at the end of the arc in which he finally gets to fight. His name: [[spoiler: Whitebeard]].
87** Fan-favorite powerhouse [[spoiler: Fire Fist Ace]] qualifies; also qualifies for TooGoodForThisSinfulEarth. He and [[spoiler:Whitebeard]] were the first ''One Piece'' characters to be KilledOffForReal outside of DeathByOriginStory. When he was younger and hung with Luffy, he was already stronger than the latter with a Devil Fruit, while the former was BadassNormal beforehand. Not only was he was the third strongest person in a crew said to be the strongest in the current era; capable of fighting with a Warlord to a draw, he was also a much more well rounded person who easily surpassed Luffy in charisma and ability. [[spoiler: It took the most unfettered of the Admirals to kill him after a long battle to rescue/execute with basically almost every superpower aside from a few notable people]]
88* ''Manga/SoulEater'':
89** [[spoiler: Mifune. Yes, his death allowed Black Star to find his own 'path' and all, but ''damn'' wasn't that samurai guy cool. Plus he left behind cute little witch Angela.]] This is, in fact, one of the ways in which the GeckoEnding of the anime improved on the manga. He survives and ends up going over to the good-guy side (can't really call it a HeelFaceTurn since he was never evil in any sense of the word).
90** [[spoiler: BJ. Nifty soul perception skills, he and Marie had a history, and member of a different part of Shibusen - Internal Investigations. He was every bit as weird as the rest of the staff...killed off within three chapters.]]
91** Possibly, [[spoiler: Tezca the South American Death Scythe (the bear guy). Okubo seems to get steadily more bizarre with his characters, and the Demon Mirror could have been fun to watch had he not seemingly been offed by Justin [[SubvertedTrope Of course]], [[FakingTheDead he ''is'' a mirror...]] ]]
92* This was almost played straight with [[spoiler: Joe Asakura aka Condor Joe]] in ''Anime/ScienceNinjaTeamGatchaman''; he would have died and stayed dead if there wasn't a second series in the works, and early planning for the second series had him KilledOffForReal and replaced by an android (while another draft had him resurrected as a villain and replaced by a [[RememberTheNewGuy never-before-mentioned brother]]). In the end, the trope was subverted by having him just barely survive, then implanted with cybernetics.
93* [[spoiler: Reinforce (Eins)]] from ''Anime/MagicalGirlLyricalNanohaAs''. She's [[NoSell untouched]] by Nanoha's point-blank [[DeadlyUpgrade Excelion Buster]] ''and'' shows the girl a '''real''' Starlight Breaker. Clearly too awesome to be allowed to stay alive.
94* ''Manga/{{Claymore}}'' gave us Teresa of the Faint Smile. She's a major fan favorite, but she's so overwhelmingly powerful that she'd inevitably overshadow everyone else if she were allowed to stay, including her adoptive daughter [[TheHero Clare]]. WordOfGod has it that if she'd survived her battle with Priscilla or been revived later, the entire story would have been different.
95* Vegito (Vegerot in the VIZ translation) from ''Anime/DragonBallZ''. Yep. Guy comes, dominates Buu-Gohan (In his base form in the anime, he just transformed for kicks), even when turned into the world's most powerful candy, he lets himself get eaten by Buu so he can go save his friends. Unfortunately, he unexpectedly lets down his protective barrier and defuses. Story repeats itself in both ''Anime/DragonBallSuper'' and ''Anime/DragonBallGT'', with both Vegeto Blue [[spoiler: which used all of his energy while battling Merged Zamasu]] and Super Saiyan 4 Gogeta, who didn't take Omega Shenron seriously while fighting him and defused because his transformation costed too much energy.
96* Anchan from ''Manga/RainbowNishaRokubouNoShichinin''. This guy is looked up to by the other 6 main characters, including TheHero after he completely tears them up in a 6 on 1 boxing match in a prison cell. He's also extraordinarily durable. He lives through nearly being burned alive in a locked cell, and being starved and paralyzed with ice cold water until he could just barely see those white pearly gates as his friends carry him in an epic prison breakout, only to die from a stab wound and a barrage of bullets while on his way to see Mario's HeroicRematch.
97* Prussia from ''Webcomic/HetaliaAxisPowers''. I mean, he's the resident [[EnsembleDarkhorse Darkhorse]] and have you heard of Prussia? I wonder why.
98%%* Leomon and his subspecies in every ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'' series in which he's an ally.
99* Cho-san from ''Manga/TwentiethCenturyBoys'', the detective so awesome had he not died he would have resolved the plot of ''the entire manga'' 21 in-series and 7 real-life years earlier than without him.
100* In her first appearance, ''Anime/PuellaMagiMadokaMagica'''s Mami Tomoe summoned a thousand rifles and wiped the field of {{Mooks}} from space. [[EnsembleDarkhorse She]] then took Madoka and Sayaka [[CoolBigSis under her wing]]. [[spoiler: 3 episodes in, she's violently decapitated and devoured by a witch gone OneWingedAngel.]] Also qualifies as TooHappyToLive, since she had literally just pledged her friendship to Madoka. But wait! [[spoiler:She and Kyouko are BackFromTheDead in the last episode, thanks in no small part to Madoka's [[AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence ascension to goddesshood]]]].
101* Anubis from ''Anime/RoninWarriors'' who had the most CharacterDevelopment to boot.
102* Daguza Mackle, aka [[FanNickname Commander McAwesome]], from ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamUnicorn''. Even his death was awesome:[[spoiler: He jumps out of the Unicorn with a rocket launcher, shoots the Sinanju in the head in an attempt to blind it, and salutes to Banagher one last time before being incinerated by the Sinanja's beam axe.]]
103* Fujimoto of ''Manga/BlueExorcist'', despite only being there for a two episodes/one chapter. He was the most powerful exorcist in the world, holding the rank of Paladin before he died. And he has a cute familiar that looks like a cat.
104* [[spoiler:Zoalord Purgstall]] from ''Manga/{{Guyver}}'' caught on with fans for being a badass, honorable, caring guy who happened to be on the antagonist's side. Fans still cling on to hope he'll somehow come back from the dead.
105* Tatsugoro, [[spoiler:Otose's late husband,]] in ''Manga/{{Gintama}}'' who was an honorable, upstanding, all-around-awesome guy who fiercely defended his town, who got the girl and who was able to fight the baddest punk in town (who later became the yakuza boss and one of the four emperors of Kabukichou) to a draw. Of course, he goes and dies, taking the bullet for that punk (who was also his friend and rival for the girl), which set in motion opposing set-in-stone promises from two of the series' most stubborn characters, Jirochou and Gintoki.
106* Spike Spiegel from ''Anime/CowboyBebop'' is the main character version. Although not even WordOfGod knows whether he's really dead or not.
107%%* BadassPreacher Nicholas Wolfwood from ''Manga/{{Trigun}}''.
108* In ''Manga/{{Hellsing}}'', MOST of the characters are awesome in some form, given that many of them are either vampires or vampire-hunters. And unfortunately, [[spoiler: unless they're Alucard, they're either dead or [[SubvertedTrope permanently injured]] by the end of the series.]] [[spoiler: Father Anderson]] is probably the most noteworthy example here, since [[spoiler: his]] death arguably falls into AssPull territory.
109* In ''Manga/SamuraiDeeperKyo'', we have Muramasa, Taihaku, Fubuki, and most definitely Hishigi. One could also make an argument for Kyosaburo (also known as the Toudai Aka no Ou), a PosthumousCharacter who created the Mumyo Jinpu Ryu, techniques capable of killing ''God'' (the Sendai Aka no Ou).
110* ''Manga/CodeBreaker'' has Hitomi and Code:Seeker, who were both killed at the end of their arcs.
111* ''Manga/FullmetalAlchemist'' being a WorldOfBadass, pretty much any death gets this trope; but [[BunnyEarsLawyer Maes]] [[BadassNormal Hughes]], [[MadBomber Kimblee]], [[MasterSwordsman Wrath]], and [[HeroicSacrifice Greed]] in particular stand out.
112* ''Manga/TheLuciferAndBiscuitHammer'' had Shinonome Hangetsu, the [[AnimalMotifs dog knight]]. He was a martial arts master, [[CharlesAtlasSuperpower even before gaining his]] PsychicPowers, was effortlessly cool and respectable, lightening the mood in a dark story, and was still a FunPersonified ManChild, with a love of {{Toku}}satsu and anime. He is also the first knight in the manga to die, passing on his skills to the AntiHero, Yuuhi.
113* ''Manga/HunterXHunter'' has Uvogin who killed three well skilled Nen users ''while paralyzed from the neck down''. For the plot, he served as Kurapika's starter enemy from the Genei Ryodan as the physically most powerful member, so Kurapika found out that he can defeat the members in terms of raw powers.
114%%** Kite
115%%** Netero
116%%** Meruem
117%%* ''Manga/AttackOnTitan'':
118%%** Ian
119%%** The Special Operations Squad
120%%** Mike
121%%** Nanaba
122%%** Gerger
123%%** Grisha
124%%** Erwin
125%%** Sasha
126%%** Hange
127%%** Zeke
128%%** Eren
129* ''Manga/DemonSlayerKimetsuNoYaiba'' has [[spoiler: Kyojuro Rengoku who was the first Hashira to die shortly after he was introduced.]]
130[[/folder]]
131
132[[folder:Comic Books]]
133* ''ComicBook/TheTransformersLastStandOfTheWreckers'' is an AnyoneCanDie series, so of course, it offers up one of these to die before the rest of the cast. Rotorstorm is TheAce, able to simultaneously pilot two spacecraft and use both to hit small targets, and always ready with a FacingTheBulletsOneLiner... and he dies first.
134* Lord Voll in ''ComicBook/ElfQuest''. He would have been a CoolOldGuy father figure to all races of elves, laughing and flying around while guiding them in unlimited space travel and bringing about worldwide harmony. A single troll arrow kills him. In the end, it takes the elves another 1500 years to achieve what he could have given them in a day.
135* Marv from ''ComicBook/SinCity'', whose only starring role in a full-length story basically serves as one big HeroicSacrifice and ends with him dead in the electric chair.
136* Blink from ''ComicBook/GenerationX'', especially considering very shortly after her death, an incredibly badass alternate reality version of her was depicted in significant detail.
137%%** Sync
138* MVP, from ''ComicBook/AvengersTheInitiative'', gets a lot of focus in the first issue as clearly being the best of the new trainees. This is made doubly-impressive when you find out he has no superpowers. At the end of the first issue, his death signifies that this is not a perfect program for perfect candidates and that this is going to be a story about the more troubled kids.
139* One of the first main characters to die in ''ComicBook/{{Fables}}'' is Colin, Bigby's snarky yet surprisingly wise [[HeterosexualLifePartners best friend]] who's also [[MySpeciesDothProtestTooMuch the only one of the Three Pigs to have any morals]].
140* Rio Morales in ''ComicBook/UltimateSpiderMan''. Her death serves as a major WhamEpisode that lets the reader know how serious things have gotten.
141* ''ComicBook/PlanetHulk'': Caiera is shown to be a very powerful and skilled fighter with an honorable streak despite serving such a cruel master in the Red King. She ultimately turns on him when she discovers he was the one behind the disaster that befell her village in her youth. In the final issue she is killed by a bomb set by loyalists of the Red King which prompts the Hulk to go on a RoaringRampageOfRevenge [[ComicBook/WorldWarHulk against the Illuminati]] whom he mistakenly blames for her death.
142[[/folder]]
143
144[[folder:Fan Works]]
145* In ''Fanfic/DeathNoteEquestria'' [[spoiler:Pinkie Pie]] -- even more awesome than usual and as such, too dangerous to Kira. Didn't stop her from being awesome from behind the grave.
146* WordOfGod for ''Fanfic/TheSecretReturnOfAlexMack'' is that [[spoiler: Charlie [=McGee=]]] was killed for having [[StoryBreakerPower story-breaking power levels]]: ([[spoiler:epic-level pyrokinesis and massive heat tolerance, mind reading, a CompellingVoice, and developing telekinesis too]]). It's possible that [[spoiler: Carrie White]], with epic-level telekinesis, faced a similar problem.
147[[/folder]]
148
149[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
150* Mufasa from ''WesternAnimation/TheLionKing1994'' pretty much needed to die so Simba could [[spoiler: become king and replace him.]]
151* Hexxus in ''WesternAnimation/{{FernGully|TheLastRainforest}}''. It helps that he's voiced by Creator/TimCurry. And he's the BigBad.
152* [=Necron99=]/Peace from ''WesternAnimation/{{Wizards}}''. Dressed head to toe in sleek red armor, a crack shot with a rifle, and willingly takes on an enemy tank all by himself to defend his comrades; so of course, he has to die. Unfortunately, his death at the hands of a possessed Elinore, who literally stabs him in the back, proved to be an extremely underwhelming way to go.
153* Rod "Torque" Redline from ''WesternAnimation/{{Cars 2}}''. Voiced by Creator/BruceCampbell, said many funny one-liners, and killed in his second appearance.
154* Tadashi from ''WesternAnimation/BigHero6'', was a good older brother, a noble worker, and intelligent student - which ultimately means that he dies at the end of the first act of the film. Hilariously lampshaded in [[http://nicktoonsunite.tumblr.com/post/106339553354/mickeycookies-do-you-ever-just-wonder this comic.]]
155* [[TheAce Peter Parker,]] in ''WesternAnimation/SpiderManIntoTheSpiderVerse''. Saved the city more times than he can count, is a fully-fledged celebrity in his Spider-Man persona, used the money to create a fully-fledged superhero headquarters stocked with gadgets and suits, and the first time we see him in person he's fighting off [[TheBrute the Goblin]] and [[TheDragon the Prowler]] at the same time. So, of course, he gets killed off, and it's left to [[KidHero Miles Morales]] to [[ToughActToFollow attempt to save the world in his stead.]]
156[[/folder]]
157
158[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
159* ''Film/TwoThousandTwelve'': You just had to kill off every one of the cool Russian characters ''except'' for Yuri's [[SpoiledBrat bratty]] [[BrattyHalfPint kids]], didn't you, movie?
160** Jerkass deadbeat husband main character Jackson Curtis vs Gordon Silberman, main character's ex-wife's new husband who cares for kids that aren't his own, undergoes major CharacterDevelopment and saves the party multiple times with his flying skills. DivorceIsTemporary. [[DeathOfTheHypotenuse Do the math.]]
161** What, you didn't think that Roland Emmerich could possibly cast Creator/DannyGlover as the President and ''not'' kill him off, did you?
162** Charlie Frost, CrazySurvivalist and ConspiracyTheorist extraordinaire who stands at the brink of an exploding volcano just to give his viewers what it was like. It's too bad he died, but man, [[DyingMomentOfAwesome what a way to go.]]
163* ''Franchise/{{Alien}}'' and ''Film/AlienVsPredator'':
164** Ripley, Vasquez and Hudson, from ''Film/{{Aliens}}'', hell all of the colonial marines for that matter.
165--->"''Game over man! Game Over!''"
166** ''Film/AlienResurrection'': The gravely-voiced head of the Betty crew Captain Elgyn is portrayed as a carefree space pirate and ladies man. He's also the first of them to die in a rather sudden and painful death.
167** ''Film/AlienVsPredator'' (2004): The general opinion people have of Adele Rousseau, with most reviewers stating that she's the only character they liked. So of course she's one of the first to die. And Scar, for somewhat obvious reasons.
168** ''Film/AliensVsPredatorRequiem'': [[spoiler:Wolf]], as some people wished he would've avoided the status quo of [[spoiler:killing the Predator]] thanks to putting up one hell of a fight.
169* ''Film/DogSoldiers'':
170** [[spoiler:Joe and Spoon are {{Badass Normal}}s who do most of the heavy lifting with regards to fighting the werewolves, both of them sharing TheBigGuy role - so it was inevitable they'd go down fighting.]]
171** [[spoiler: Sgt Wells is AFatherToHisMen, played by perpetual darkhorse Sean Pertwee and rejoins the fight after having his intestines nearly ripped out. You know he's going down with an incredibly badass HeroicSacrifice.]]
172* ''Franchise/{{Godzilla}}'':
173** In [[Film/Godzilla1954 the original]], Dr. Serizawa, {{eyepatch|OfPower}}-wearing supergenius who pulls a HeroicSacrifice and ''evaporates Godzilla''.
174** Col. Gondoh in ''Film/GodzillaVsBiollante''. Needless to say, he gets an absolutely badass final scene.
175-->"[[FacingTheBulletsOneliner All this intravenous stuff is no good for you. You should stick to smoking."]]
176** Joe Brody in ''Film/{{Godzilla 2014}}''. Narrowly subverted with Godzilla himself in the final battle.
177** Mechagodzilla in ''Film/GodzillaVsKong'', very much. He's a colossal, silver-and-crimson cybernetic skeletal version of Godzilla, armed to the teeth with missile launchers, thrusters, a plasma punch and a drill tail, and he's [[spoiler:basically King Ghidorah reincarnated to boot once the Ghidorah skull's consciousness remnants hijack him and grant him Ghidorah's sadistic tendencies]]. Compared to [[YMMV/GodzillaKingOfTheMonsters2019 Ghidorah's screentime in the previous film]], Mechagodzilla has only two scenes, and once he [[spoiler:gains a mind of his own]] he only lives for about ten minutes before being destroyed in the FinalBattle.
178* ''Franchise/JurassicPark'':
179** ''Film/JurassicPark'' has [[spoiler: Muldoon]] getting killed off by the pack leader of the ''Velociraptors'', The Big One.
180** ''Film/TheLostWorldJurassicPark'' kills off [[spoiler: Eddie Carr]] by being torn in half by two ''T.rexes''.
181** ''Film/JurassicWorld'' kills of [[spoiler: Simon Masrani]] in a helicopter crash, while [[spoiler: Charlie]] gets blown up by a rocket launcher and [[spoiler: Echo and Delta]] are killed by the ''Indominus Rex''.
182** And finally, in between the second and fourth films, CoolOldGuy HonestCorporateExecutive BigGood John Hammond also passes away.
183* ''Film/KingsmanTheSecretService'':
184** Galahad, the suave, lion-hearted, polite and soft-spoken ass-kicker, who sadly meets his fate. [[spoiler:He got better]].
185** [[HandicappedBadass Gazelle]], the crazy, lethal DarkActionGirl.
186** ''Film/KingsmanTheGoldenCircle'':
187*** Roxy/Lancelot gets killed off at the beginning in an unheroic way, along with the rest of the Kingsmen by Poppy firing missiles at each of their locations.
188*** Agent Whiskey, the charming cowboy with a cool laser lasso, ends killed [[spoiler:at the hands of Eggsy and Harry when he turns out to be a villain.]]
189* ''Film/MadMax'':
190** Warrior Woman from ''Film/MadMax2TheRoadWarrior''.
191** ''Film/MadMaxFuryRoad'' gave us the Coma-Doof Warrior, who spends the whole movie suspended on bungee cords to a mobile amp wall called the Doof Wagon, [[ThePowerOfRock rocking out on his double-necked flame-throwing guitar]] with wild abandon, and took him away at the end of the chase, when the Doof Wagon slams into the overturned War Rig, his guitar flying out of the wreckage.
192* Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse:
193** Pietro Maximoff in ''Film/AvengersAgeOfUltron''. BulletTime speed faster than anyone else in the MCU, has a RunningGag with Hawkeye about how the other "didn't see that coming", and eventually joins the Avengers and SHIELD...only to get mowed down by a minigun (thanks to a OnceIsNotEnough moment created by Iron Man, The Vision and Thor), which he ''didn't'' see coming. His death helps cement his twin sister's status as an Avenger.
194** [[spoiler: Yondu Udonta]] in ''Film/GuardiansOfTheGalaxyVol2'', suffering from the lethal version of DramaPreservingHandicap. Far too powerful ''and'' far too badass, funny, and noble to survive the movie. If he had lived, [[Film/AvengersInfinityWar dealing with Thanos]] would have been [[StoryBreakerPower a walk in the park.]]
195** Ulysses Klaue in ''Film/BlackPanther2018''. A wise-cracking, [[LaughablyEvil utterly hilarious]] and psychopathic arms dealer played by Creator/AndySerkis with an ArmCannon who gets most of the funniest lines in the whole movie. Naturally, he joins the Marvel Cinematic Universe's increasingly long list of badass villains killed off too soon.
196** ''Film/AvengersEndgame'': [[spoiler: Tony Stark and Natasha Romanov aka Iron Man and Black Widow, two of the coolest, sexiest, most loyal, endearing, compelling and heroic Avengers in the MCU, both give their lives to save the universe from Thanos in the GrandFinale.]]
197* The T-800 from ''{{Film/Terminator 2|JudgmentDay}}'' and ''{{Film/Terminator 3|RiseOfTheMachines}}''. And Sarah Connor between these two films.
198* ''Film/TransformersFilmSeries'':
199** Jetfire in ''Film/TransformersRevengeOfTheFallen''. The [[CoolOldGuy coolest old man]] ever.
200** Ratchet, Leadfoot, and Lockdown in ''Film/TransformersAgeOfExtinction''.
201* ''Film/XMenFirstClass'': Darwin. He has the power to survive anything through gaining whatever adaptations he needs. So, naturally, he gets an anti-climactic death way before any of the other mutant characters.
202* Father [=MacGruder=] from ''Film/{{Braindead}}''. He kicked ass for the Lord, and we sure hope the Lord appreciated the effort when [=MacGruder=] met up with Him shortly thereafter.
203* From the ''Franchise/StarWars'' films: Obi-Wan Kenobi, Mace Windu, Darth Maul and [[EnsembleDarkhorse Boba Fett]].
204** Apparently, while everyone agreed with "cool" describing Fett, they took issues with the [[BackFromTheDead "to live" part]].
205** Guess what? [[spoiler:Maul]] [[WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheCloneWars is back too]]. But presumably [[DoomedByCanon not for long]].
206** In a less action-y way, Qui-Gon probably fits. Had he survived to be Anakin's mentor (as was the actual plan), the rest of the series probably wouldn't have happened due to his extreme level-headedness and wisdom.
207*** Yoda admits as much (at least to himself) in the novelisation of ''Revenge of the Sith'', declaring to Qui-Gon's ghost that Qui-Gon's bend-the-rules-and-adapt mentality had been correct all along and he (Yoda) had essentially led the Jedi to disaster.
208** And as of [[Film/TheForceAwakens Episode VII]], you can officially add [[spoiler: Han Solo]] to that list.
209** ''Film/TheLastJedi'' knocks off [[spoiler: Admiral Ackbar, Supreme Leader Snoke, Captain Phasma, and Luke Skywalker]].
210** Narrowly averted with General Veers in ''Film/TheEmpireStrikesBack''. Originally, he was supposed to get killed when a Rebel snowspeeder kamikazes into his Imperial walker, blowing him up, but the scene was cut.
211** Grand Moff Tarkin from ''Film/ANewHope''. Creator/PeterCushing regretted not being able to reprise the role for the sequels.
212** ''Film/{{Rogue One}}'' ups the ante on this by killing off [[spoiler: ''[[EverybodyDiesEnding every]]'' [[EverybodyDiesEnding single new character it introduces]] who's not already SavedByCanon.]]
213** While the title character is obviously safe, ''Film/{{Solo}}'' still pulls this by killing off [[spoiler: Rio Durant and Val, Tobias Beckett's two likable and very badass mission partners.]] Even the film's screenwriter regretted the loss.
214* Frankie Four-Fingers (Benicio del Toro) in ''Film/{{Snatch}}''. This also applies to Bullet Tooth Tony (Vinnie Jones, [[TheJuggernaut bitch]]), but he lives a bit longer.
215** As well as Boris the blade.
216* Naveen Andrews' BadassBookworm and Freddy Rodriguez' [[TheDrifter Drifter]] in ''Film/PlanetTerror'', the first half of ''Film/{{Grindhouse}}''.
217* Let's be honest, the moment you saw Creator/JohnCReilly playing a badass, funny CrazySurvivalist and war veteran who kills pterodactyls with a samurai sword in ''Film/KongSkullIsland'', you knew he was a goner ''long'' before he pulled out the [[FatalFamilyPhoto photo of his beloved wife.]] [[spoiler: Which is it what makes it all the more shocking and satisfying when he [[DefiedTrope makes it off the island]] [[EarnYourHappyEnding and is happily reunited with his family.]]]]
218* Hero, Heroine, and [[DeadStarWalking Jason Mewes]] in ''Film/{{Feast}}''. The former survives about thirty-five seconds of screen time before being messily eaten. Heroine lives for most of the movie is extremely resourceful and helpful, but also dies. Jason Mewes gets his face ripped off in the first ten minutes.
219* Mani, the {{Sidekick}} from ''Le Pacte des loups'', English title: ''Film/BrotherhoodOfTheWolf''.
220* Tristan, the cool dude with the hawk in ''Film/KingArthur2004''. 'Course, he's played by Creator/MadsMikkelsen, so what're you expecting?
221* [[HandicappedBadass The Consultant]] in ''Film/TheInternational'', although admittedly he [[WhiteShirtOfDeath could have been]] more GenreSavvy.
222* ''Film/{{Serenity}}'' kills off the two inarguably coolest members of the crew - [[spoiler: Shepherd Book]] and [[spoiler: Washburne]]. Because this is Creator/JossWhedon we're talking about, he specifically stated they were chosen ''because'' they were the two coolest members of the crew, and because we wanted to indicate to the audience that [[AnyoneCanDie no one was safe.]] Damn you, Whedon...
223* Captain Kaneda in ''Film/{{Sunshine}}''. He's professional, he's pragmatic, and he cares deeply for the success of his crew's mission. Plus, he's played by Hiroyuki Sanada. If he hadn't died within the first half-hour, he'd probably have broken the plot.
224* ''Film/InglouriousBasterds'': Let's face it--as soon as you saw [[spoiler:Hugo Stiglitz and the Bear Jew in all their badassery]], you knew that they wouldn't make it out alive. They are both awarded a DyingMomentOfAwesome.
225* Doc Holliday from ''Film/{{Tombstone}}''. Granted it's based on a true story, and he lived the way he did partly ''because'' he was slowly dying of Tuberculosis, but still.
226* Subverted in ''Film/{{Zombieland}}'' when it looks like resident badass Tallahassee is going to be killed off during the shootout at Pacific Playland. Instead, he's too cool to be too cool to live. His coolness wraps around itself to defy trope conventions. Played straight with [[spoiler:Creator/BillMurray]].
227* Raze from ''Film/Underworld2003''.
228* Sgt. Brodski from ''Film/JasonX''.
229* ''One'' from ''Film/ResidentEvil2002'', The character was in the movie for all of fifteen minutes (and the evil AI had to cheat to kill him), but the actor's strong performance made a lasting impact. ''Film/ResidentEvilRetribution'' revisits the cloning subplot, so One and Rain (who was also too cool to live) do return... [[EvilIsCool As villains.]]
230* [[spoiler:Christopher Pike]] in ''Film/StarTrekIntoDarkness''.
231** Also [[spoiler:Kirk himself, but this is averted when he's brought back to life.]]
232* ''Film/PacificRim'':
233** [[spoiler:Aleksis and Sasha Kaidanovsky, the Cherno Alpha pilots. Also, the extremely talented triplets of Crimson Typhoon, and, lastly, Stacker.]]
234** Subverted with [[spoiler:Hannibal Chau, who survived getting EatenAlive, and he wants his goddamn shoe back.]]
235** Not just the human characters: [[spoiler:Striker Eureka performs a nuclear flavored HeroicSacrifice to clear the way for Gypsy Danger. This trope applies to all Jaegers but Striker Eureka stands out due to its heroic looks, statistics and combat record.]]
236* Parodied in ''Film/TheOtherGuys'', where Danson and Highsmith, two badass policemen, deliberately jumped off a tall building while chasing jewelry robbers in the hopes they would land in the bushes. [[SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome They didn't survive]].
237* [[spoiler:Tackleberry]] between ''Mission to Moscow'' and the next ''Film/PoliceAcademy'' film, [[CharacterOutlivesActor and for good reason]].
238* [[spoiler:Brian]] could become an example in ''Film/Furious7'', for the same reason mentioned directly above. [[spoiler: [[CharacterOutlivesActor He ultimately]] [[SubvertedTrope doesn't]].]]
239* Roy Batty from ''Film/BladeRunner''. In fact, it's his (and his fellow Replicants') impending demise that sets the plot in motion.
240* Out of all the mercenaries in ''Film/RamboIV'', only [[spoiler: En-Joo]] does not survive the climax of the movie.
241* Valli from ''Northmen: A Viking Saga.'' He was played by Music/AmonAmarth singer Johan Hegg, which made him incredibly cool and was one of the first characters to die.
242* Saurod in ''Film/MastersOfTheUniverse''. A slinky, almost silent reptilian mercenary in gold armor with a CoolHelmet shaped like a flared cobra's hood, complete with syringe-like projections on his face mask and what amounts to a metal ponytail coming out of the back of the cobra hood/helmet. And then when the QuirkyMinibossSquad [[YouHaveFailedMe disappoints]] Skeletor, it's this guy he chooses to zap out of existence. Even better, right as Skeletor is about to strike, Saurod can be seen ''drawing his gun in anticipation of the attack'', proving he had some quick reflexes and enough self-preservation to draw a weapon against his boss. Unfortunately, he wasn't quick enough.
243* ''Film/MortalKombat2021'': [[spoiler: Kung Lao]] is built up as by far the strongest of Earthrealm's fighters as well as easily getting the best [[FinishingMove Fatality]] of the movie. [[spoiler: He also ends up being the sole Earthrealm casualty of the film (aside from Kano who had already made a FaceHeelTurn beforehand), [[YourSoulIsMine courtesy of Shang Tsung himself.]]]]
244[[/folder]]
245
246[[folder:Literature]]
247* Garet Jax in ''Literature/TheWishsongOfShannara''. The man is called a "weapons master" because no matter who his opponent is, and what weapon he uses, he will still manage to come out alive. Well, until he defeats an ancient EldritchAbomination in a heroic sacrifice.
248* Boromir in ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings''. The ''only'' member of the Fellowship to bite it, he combines this with RedemptionEqualsDeath. In the film, he's played by doomed-cool-guy extraordinaire Creator/SeanBean and has a glorious DyingMomentOfAwesome.
249** Possibly even more so Gandalf (though [[BackFromTheDead he got better]]), whose magical powers could have solved many of the problems the fellowship faced after Moria.
250* Both Thomas and Pug from the ''Literature/TheRiftwarCycle'' have become too powerful to be sufficiently challenged by the threats that often appear in the later books. As such they are often described as being elsewhere or just missing.
251* Inigo Skimmer is the best damn character in ''Literature/TheFifthElephant'' (beyond Vetinari, who is, to be fair, employing him). He's also an absolutely superb fighter and Assassin. Sadly, when he's attacked by a large group of werewolves, not superb enough. One of the best Discworld characters and he only got through half a book. Tragic.
252* ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'': [[spoiler: Syrio Forel, Beric Dondarrion, and Oberyn Martell, the Red Viper of Dorne, to name a few.]]
253** [[spoiler:Robb Stark]] and [[spoiler: badass wolf Grey Wind]].
254** [[spoiler:Eddard Stark]] however is pretty awesome and his death sets the tone for the whole series brilliantly.
255*** Fittingly, in the HBO adaptation, he's played by [[spoiler:Sean Bean]], who tends to play these sort of characters a lot.
256** And [[spoiler:Khal Drogo.]] His actor in ''Series/GameOfThrones'' was so upset that the character got killed off that he proposed to the showrunners that a BackupTwin could show up in the second season. [[spoiler:They worked him into the season finale, albeit in a different way (from beyond the grave).]]
257** [[spoiler:Qhorin Halfhand]]. Too badass.
258** [[spoiler:Oberyn Martell]] deserves a special mention - the guy certainly gained a huge following while he was around.
259* ''Literature/{{Everworld}}'' has a character with the [[MeaningfulName appropriate name]] of [=MacCool=] who fits the trope very well for a minor character. [=MacCool=] is an elf who is a [[RomanticFalseLead romantic rival]] to Christopher, and as his name implies, his characterization mainly consists of being cooler and more impressive than Christopher. He dies fighting against a danger very unfamiliar in Everworld: humans armed with machine guns. And of course, there is a perverse satisfaction in the fact that Christopher was the one who had known about the gunmen and how to protect against them, but [=MacCool=] didn't follow his instructions.
260** The series' MagnificentBastard was also [[DracoInLeatherPants way too cool]] to live, [[spoiler:and she would probably have won if she had.]]
261* Primus and Septimus, from ''Literature/{{Stardust}}''.
262* Talaan, the main ActionGirl from ''[[Literature/TheActsOfCaine Heroes Die]]'', who may have been a better fighter than ''Caine''.
263* Rachel from ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}''. Though she does last quite a while (she dies in the final book).
264* ''Literature/LesMiserables'': [[spoiler:Enjolras and all the Amis. Gavroche. In the end, even Valjean has to be united with the For... wait, wrong fandom.]]
265* [[Literature/TheWonderfulWizardOfOz The Wicked Witch of the West]] and her [[AlternateContinuity counterpart]] [[Literature/{{Wicked}} Elphaba]].
266* In Creator/GuyGavrielKay's ''Literature/TheFionavarTapestry'', first [[spoiler:Kevin]] then later [[spoiler:Dairmuid. Basically all the most cheerful characters.]] Though the later is partly a {{subver|tedTrope}}sion as [[spoiler:Dairmuid]] dies to save [[spoiler:Arthur]] from this trope.
267* [[spoiler:Joe Buckley]] in ''[[Literature/SixteenThirtyTwo 1634: The Galileo Affair]]''.
268** This is a Baen Books (the publisher of 1634) in-joke. Anytime a character of that name appears in a Baen title, he will die.
269* ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles''
270** [[spoiler: Shiro Yoshimo]] is a CoolOldGuy with A [[KatanasAreJustBetter FREAKING HOLY KATANA]]... Although it turned out that he was [[spoiler: diagnosed with cancer, and was going to die anyway]], but he instead went out with a HeroicSacrifice.
271** [[spoiler:Shadow of Lasciel]][[note]]A weak carbon copy of the Fallen Angel but with all her knowledge and personality[[/note]] started off as a villain to tempt Harry and turn him evil. But his inner goodness and stubbornness lead to years of resisting its charms and temptations [[spoiler:for three years when most people submit to a Fallen's Shadow in less than a month. No one lasted this long. After Harry notes that as something living in his head, which is malleable enough to be turned evil, she can be the victim of the same aspect. She can change, and after said three years, she is no longer the same Shadow he first met. So, he calls her Lash]] and this kick starts her quick HeelFaceTurn. However, [[spoiler:as she would be able to grant Harry perfect memory, perfect recall, the knowledge of a Fallen Angel without needing him to sacrifice his morals]] the former villain would be a huge GameBreaker in-universe. So a HeroicSacrifice was used to remove the redeemed villain.
272* [[spoiler: Roy Meritt]] from ''Literature/{{Daemon}}''. His status transcends death, being revered by Darknet operatives well into the sequel.
273* ''Literature/BridgeToTerabithia'': [[spoiler: poor Leslie. This is intentional, as this book is BasedOnATrueStory of how the best friend of the author's son was suddenly killed by lightning, AND she is described as remembered by Jess and others, thus looking cooler than she would otherwise.]]
274%%* It was a wonder [[Literature/HarryPotter Albus Dumbledore]] made it as long as he did.
275* In the timeline of ''Literature/WorldWarZ'', [[BadassNormal General Raj Singh]] narrowly escapes this trope (unwillingly--he rediscovered tactics that would have worked against the Zombies with enough ammo, and has to be punched unconscious to be 'coptered to safety), only to play it straight during an evacuation--by [[HeroicSacrifice manually detonating the bomb on a mountain pass]], so that the safe zone remains ghoul-free.
276* TheGoodCaptain Hajj in ''Literature/GalaxyOfFear''. For the captain of a space cruise liner, he was quite the ReasonableAuthorityFigure.
277* [[spoiler: Penny]] is probably the most notable example from ''Literature/{{Gone}}''; she had [[MasterOfIllusion the most unique ability to horrify people]] in the entire series, as well as being slightly insane. Other candidates for this trope include [[spoiler: Orc]], [[spoiler: Duck]], and [[spoiler: Brianna]].
278* In ''[[Literature/{{Sandokan}} The King of the Sea]]'' we have Paddy O'Brien, a MadScientist calling himself [[NamesToRunAwayFrom "The Demon of War"]] and saying he has invented [[DeathRay a ray that blows up enemy munition stores from afar]] (in the ''[=1860s=]''). During the final battle he's told to prove it, he does by blowing up one of the five enemy warships... And then he's killed by a grenade that also destroys his death ray.
279* Nehemia in ''Literature/ThroneOfGlass''. She's reminiscent of [[Franchise/StarWars Princess Leia]] in that she's a courageous and strong-willed princess who is WiseBeyondTheirYears and is secretly [[RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething supporting the rebellion]]. She's skilled at deceiving and manipulating others, with her strengths lying more in political maneuvering and spy-work than than just throwing her weight around. She's actually more proactive and heroic than [[TheProtagonist Celaena]] is (at first). Unfortunately, she gets killed off just two books in, with her death even serving to motivate Celaena into actually ''being'' the hero. A lot of readers were disappointed by this; it's also been pointed out that it has problematic implications given that Nehemia is a woman of color - and pretty much the only major character of color in the series to boot - whose main role is to die to motivate the white protagonist.
280* Murtagh, the EnsembleDarkHorse of the first ''Literature/InheritanceCycle'' book, is a snarky, shrewd BadassNormal with a mysterious and troubled past. His fans often find him to be a better written and more compelling protagonist than Eragon, who in the first book can come off as a very naive, flat Luke Skywalker {{expy}} before his CharacterDevelopment in subsequent books. Murtagh goes missing at the start of ''Eldest'' and is presumed dead...until he turns up in the ending, now serving Galbatorix (and cooler than ever, seeing as he's now a dragon rider as well). Some readers wondered if Murtagh was made a villain in an attempt to avoid overshadowing Eragon. Ultimately, this trope [[spoiler:is averted; though he [[WhatCouldHave been considered it]], even Creator/ChristopherPaolini thought that Murtagh was too cool (and had been through [[TheWoobie too much crap]]) to kill him off and he gets RedemptionEqualsLife]].
281* ''Literature/ThePendragonAdventure'': Vo Spader, the BreakoutCharacter SurferDude Traveler from Cloral, would clearly have overshadowed VanillaProtagonist Bobby if he was kept in the story for any long periods of time, hence his multiple [[PutOnABus bus trips]] throughout the series.
282[[/folder]]
283
284[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
285* Tuvix, from the ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'' episode of the same name. Those MURDERERS!
286** Also One, the future Borg from "Drone."
287* [[DarkActionGirl Faith]] from ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer''. Actually, she was lucky -- she got off with eight months in a coma and then most of the rest of the series in prison.
288** Likewise Kendra, Joyce Summers, and Jenny Calender.
289** Doyle from ''Series/{{Angel}}'' also fits this. [[spoiler: Sadly, Glenn Quinn in real life as well.]]
290** A few one-shot or minor recurring characters might count, as well. Some examples include Holden Webster from "Conversations With Dead People" and Skip from the 3rd and 4th seasons of ''Angel''.
291* Curtis from ''Series/TwentyFour''. Whom TWOP calls the show's "Handsome Black Agent", who teams up with Jack and [[RedShirt dies ignominiously]].
292** And President Palmer.
293** And Bill Buchanan.
294* ''Series/{{Fringe}}'' has quite a number of these, unfortunately...
295** [[spoiler:First up is David Robert Jones, the first real villain in the series.]] ''Twice.''
296** [[spoiler:Alternate Lincoln Lee was as cool and they come.]]
297** [[spoiler:Thomas Jerome Newton, the series most badass and suave villain to date - and the only one to transition over two seasons. Sadly, it was not meant to last.]]
298** [[spoiler:September too.]]
299** [[spoiler:Sam Weiss.]] Yes, HIM - and worst of all, he was given an extremely unceremonious off-screen death accompanied by only a passing mention.
300* [[spoiler: Omar]] from ''Series/TheWire''. Not until the last season though.
301** Not to mention [[spoiler: Snoop]].
302* Pretty much any character that the audience likes from ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'' as the show seems to relish in killing off fan favorites (sometimes bringing them back seasons later just to kill em off). Honestly, it's easier to count the ones that don't die.
303** Gordon Walker
304** Likewise, Agent Henricksen.
305** Gabriel seems to be this in spades.
306** And now as of the previous season, [[spoiler:Bobby Singer.]]
307** Ellen Harvelle.
308** Most recently, Charlie Bradbury.
309** Benny.
310** Castiel was intended to be this in "Hello, Cruel World", [[SubvertedTrope but was brought back several episodes later]].
311** [[spoiler:Kevin Tran]].
312** On Hell's side, Azazel and Lucifer certainly qualify.
313** And of course, John Winchester.
314** Death himself ends up being this.
315* [[spoiler:Chris]] dies at the end of the second series of ''Series/{{Skins}}''.
316* The BBC's ''Series/RobinHood'' introduces Meg, a smart, spunky girl who shows intelligence, compassion and an endearing sense of entitlement that gets Guy of Gisborne to stop moping and rethink his priorities. Meg's counterpart Kate spends the entire episode sulking and moaning (as per usual) and tops it off by trying to manipulate a dangerous situation so that her romantic rival is killed off. Now, guess who dies and guess who survives the ''entire show''.
317* Victor from ''Series/BurnNotice''. He's as intelligent as Michael, he plays off Michael's personality very well, he would be very useful and interesting in Michael's day-to-day jobs, he is funny, he is played by [[Series/StargateSG1 Michael Shanks]], and he dies in the episode where he teams up with Micheal.
318* [[Series/BattlestarGalactica2003 Alas, poor Peggy.]] When the battlestar ''Pegasus'' shows up halfway through Season 2 of ''Series/{{Battlestar Galactica|2003}}'', she was doomed from the start by virtue of being a more advanced and awesome battlestar than the ''Galactica''. And so, alas, she was taken from us far too soon, at the hands of recently-promoted (idiot) Commander Lee Adama - after only appearing in any significant roles in a couple of episodes before her demise. Because RammingAlwaysWorks.
319* ''Series/{{Vikings}}'': Erik, a towering, heavily muscled Viking warlord who hewed apart Saxons with a single strike, who sent men flying with a single shield bash, and who was played by Vladimir Kulich, is this in spades. He was mourned, both in-universe and out. His death also spurs the main character to bring down the despot Earl who rules the tribe.
320* ''Series/GameOfThrones'': [[TooCoolToLive/GameOfThrones Has its own page]].
321** There are so many examples of this present, it has led to some fans jokingly suggesting that the show could easily be renamed, "''Too Cool To Live: The Series''".
322** This trope could conceivably be renamed [[spoiler: "The Oberyn"]] without any problems.
323* Salim from ''Series/SnabbaCash'' was an effective career criminal and NiceGuy to boot. He tried to leave the criminal lifestyle for good. Unfortunately, he was killed by the BigBad due to sacrificing himself to save his loved one.
324* The ground rule in ''Franchise/SuperSentai'' seems to be that if you are an anti-hero/villain with ranger-like powers, you will not survive your respective series. Examples include ''Series/ChoujinSentaiJetman''[='=]s [[TheLancer Gai]], ''Series/KyoryuSentaiZyuranger'''s [[SixthRanger Burai]], Mikoto Nakadai of ''Series/BakuryuuSentaiAbaranger'' and Rio from ''Series/JukenSentaiGekiranger''.
325* There's no way ''Series/{{Dollhouse}}'' could keep [[Creator/SummerGlau Bennett]] around. She's just too damn distracting.
326* The white-haired British guy in Creator/StephenKing's ''Series/RoseRed''. Level-headed, brave, not too bad-looking, and friendly with the rest of the characters, even the crazy leader who, like a certain [[Literature/TheShining Jack Torrance]] was ''way'' too comfortable in the sapient, giant, evil house -- yup, he was doomed.
327** What makes his death a real shame though was that he died saving the life of a woman who was stupid enough to leave the group in the middle of a house that was trying to kill them. And why did she leave? She wanted some ''iced tea.''
328* Adam Monroe from ''Series/{{Heroes}}'' definitely fits this trope.
329* who's the second most short-lived Doctor after the Eighth Doctor (who has the excuse of being in a TV movie), in spite of being concentrated amounts of eccentric awesomeness.
330* Really, all the Doctors from ''Series/DoctorWho'' qualify to a certain extent. They all get replaced by another awesome incarnation right after regeneration, though, so it's all good.
331** The Tenth Doctor may fit this trope more than most, being the shortest-lived Doctor in canon since he is confirmed to have only lived for 6 years whilst other incarnations such as the 11th and 1st are known to have lived for centuries. The Ninth Doctor also had only one season, making him the shortest Doctor onscreen (except for [[spoiler: the War Doctor]], who only appeared in the 50th anniversary and a prequel).
332** [[spoiler: The [=DoctorDonna=]]], who had all of the Doctor's experience and Time Lord knowledge combined with human creativity.
333** Father Octavian, from the 2010 series. Iain Glen really is just THAT awesome. Even the Doctor is genuinely bummed out by his death.
334** Mrs. Moore from ''Rise of the Cybermen/Age of Steel'' also qualifies.
335** Rita from ''The God Complex'' is intelligent, competent, witty and all-around awesome, to the point that the Doctor jokingly tells Amy she's fired as his companion within a few minutes of meeting her. She is so very doomed.
336*** {{Lampshade|Hanging}}d earlier in the episode by Rory.
337---->'''Rory''': Every time the Doctor gets chummy with someone, I have the urge to inform their next of kin.
338** PlayedWith in the case of Jenny, his cloned daughter from the 2008 season. Witty, tough, and capable of standing up to her dad when necessary, as well as proving to be both an ActionHero who very much took after her father in ''joie de vivre'' and love of adventure. She got killed at the end of the episode, pulling a HeroicSacrifice, [[ChronicHeroSyndrome naturally]]. Then she was resurrected. Then she [[LongBusTrip has never appeared since]].
339* An episode of ''Series/EerieIndiana'' featured a classmate of Marshall's named Devon Wilde. His name alone tells you what was in store for him.
340* ''Series/BoardwalkEmpire'' has [[spoiler: [[DecoyProtagonist Jimmy]], Manny and [[BreakOutCharacter Richard]].]]
341** And later [[spoiler: Albert "Chalky" White]].
342* From ''Series/LegendOfTheSeeker'' resident Badass, DeadpanSnarker, HellBentForLeather, AgonyBeam wielding, {{Tsundere}}, Cara and KnightTemplar, MagicKnight, BadassLongRobe, ManipulativeBastard, {{Faustian Rebel|lion}}, Darken'Rhal had a kid. Take a moment and ''guess'' what happened the same day said kid was born.
343* ''Series/Lucifer2016'': [[GoodShepherd Father]] [[BadassPreacher Frank]], so much. The man only lasted one episode, but he had a ''piano duel with Satan.''
344* While [[Series/{{Chuck}} Bryce Larkin]] might not be the most sympathetic guy in the series, he is certainly much cooler than the lovable loser the main character is at the beginning of the series. Accordingly, he is killed in the pilot. [[UnexplainedRecovery He gets better.]]
345** [[spoiler:Until he's KilledOffForReal at the end of season 2.]]
346* Sokichi "Boss" Narumi from ''Series/KamenRiderDouble'', a hard-boiled detective who lives by the ideal created by authors like Creator/RaymondChandler and who radiates awesome and badass from every single fiber of his being, but deep down still has his soft side. And all this is ''before'' you factor in that he's also a Kamen Rider. To put it simply, the Boss is [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cN02xjAiLcs a smooth criminal]].
347* Lawrence Kutner and possibly Amber Volakis from ''Series/{{House}}''.
348* Brain Cooper was considered the car-fixin' BigBrotherMentor to pretty much every kid on the block. He was even one of the few people to [[PetTheDog tell Wayne to stop beating up on Kevin]]. He gets shipped off to [[UsefulNotes/TheVietnamWar 'Nam ]] and dies in the first episode of ''Series/TheWonderYears''.
349* Pearl from ''Series/TheVampireDiaries'' was a 400-something-year-old Asian vampire who [[LadyOfWar kicked all sorts of ass]], put the series' biggest {{Jerkass}} in his place and still managed to be pretty high on the {{Friendly|NeighborhoodVampire}} side of the SlidingScaleOfVampireFriendliness despite being introduced as an antagonist. And then a few episodes after she's introduced she gets [[DroppedABridgeOnHim a bridge dropped on her]].
350* Travis in ''Series/BlakesSeven''.
351* Kristina Kell in ''Series/{{Survivor}}: Redemption Island'' was probably the ''only'' player besides Rob on the Ometepes who had a brain. First thing she thought upon seeing the return of [[CreatorsPet Boston Rob and Russell Hantz]]? Rob's gotta go ASAP. She proceeds to find a hidden immunity idol ''before the first tribal council'' with ''no clues''. A show ''record''. Unfortunately she's voted out fourth and booted early, ending hope of anyone ''interesting'' from the Ometepe tribe going far.
352** Kristina definitely had a bunch of enemies in the editor crew - She only got screentime when she was shown finding the idol, during tribal council, and on redemption island. The "recap" before the finale ''conveniently'' glossed over how Kristina caused a schism in Rob's tribe so early, and Probst didn't even so much as ''look'' in her general direction at the Reunion show.
353* Several characters on ''Series/{{Lost}}''. [[spoiler: Mr. Eko]] steps out though because he died so early on and with so little time on the show.
354* Godric from ''Series/TrueBlood'' was arguably cooler than the main cast. Naturally, he dies just a few episodes after his introduction.
355* This happens frequently on ''Series/{{Merlin|2008}}'' what with the writers' remarkable gift of writing fascinating {{One Shot Character}}s, casting veteran actors to play them, and promptly [[DeadStarWalking killing them off]]. Notable examples include the druid Aglain (played by Creator/ColinSalmon), the WarriorMonk Alator (Gary Lewis) and the sorcerer Ruadan (Liam Cunningham). That last one was an incredibly rare example of a magic-user who was opposed to Camelot and the Pendragons, but not overtly evil, making his death all the more frustrating. There was also Finna, a CoolOldGal and Isolde, one of the show's few {{Action Girl}}s.
356* Tortuga from ''Series/BreakingBad''. A wise-cracking, rather helpful informant to the DEA and played by Creator/DannyTrejo? Obviously can't last for more than two episodes.
357* ''Series/StrangerThings'' revels in this, as any character (espeically newly introduced ones) who aren't closely connected or related to the core group have a horribly high mortailty rate leading to TooGoodForThisSinfulEarth characters like [[KillTheCutie Barbara and Chrissy to die]] as well as nice guys like Bob or manly hardcases like Billy to cark it (after at least redeeming themselves in Billy's case). The crowning example however is [[spoiler: [[EnsembleDarkHorse Eddie]], a HeavyMetal enthusiast, excellent [[TableTop/DungeonsAndDragons Dungeon Master]], charmastic, sweet and hilarious wiseguy who has the most glorious SugarWiki/CrowningMomentOfAwesome [[ThePowerOfRock shredding a guiter solo]] (dedicated to Chrissy) of Music/{{Metallica}}'s "Master of Puppets" in the [[{{Mordor}} Upside Down]] ''while lightning goes off in the sky''. Of course Eddie pulls a HeroicSacrifice shortly after and dies, because he was simply '''too goddamn awesome to live at that point'''.]]
358* One of the first truly major characters to die in ''{{Series/Babylon5}}'' is Kosh, the likable TricksterMentor and one of Sheridan's closest, most powerful allies. His death had a ''massive'' NothingIsTheSameAnymore effect on the show and fully cemented that [[AnyoneCanDie anyone of the cast could die]], even badass aliens that border on being demi-gods.
359* Captain Roy Montgomery from ''Series/{{Castle|2009}}'', who was easy-going enough to allow Castle to shadow Beckett, mainly because he knew Castle could make her more at ease. He kept him on even as he helped her piece together her mother's murder, even with his own place in it. He ultimately died taking one of the bad guys in that conspiracy with him, atoning for his own part in it.
360* The second season of ''{{Series/Garo}}'' has a time-traveling wandering samurai named Igari Juuzou. In order to prevent himself from dying from an incurable disease, he strikes a deal with a demon residing in a katana. What makes Juuzou such an awesome character, is that he is so far the only character in the entire GARO franchise to be fully in control of his body after a demon possessed it. When the demon commands him to kill innocents so it can feed on them, Juuzo simply cuts open his own body and tells it to feed on his blood. In his final battle with one of the heroes, he shows he is in complete control of the demonic powers. The downside of this great character is that he basically amounts to a MonsterOfTheWeek, lasting for only one episode.
361[[/folder]]
362
363[[folder:Myths & Religion]]
364* Myth/CelticMythology: As a child, Cu Chulainn heard a druid prophesize that, were he to take arms that day, he would become renowned for his great deeds and amazing feats but also live a short, fleeting life. Upon hearing this, [[JumpedAtTheCall Cu Chulainn ran down to the king of Ulster's sleeping quarters and demanded a spear.]]
365* Myth/ClassicalMythology: An oracle told Achilles that he would either have a long and undistinguished life and be forgotten after he died, or a short but heroic one and be eternally famous. It's pretty obvious which one he chose.
366[[/folder]]
367
368[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
369* Pretty much all the Planeswalkers in pre-[[CrisisCrossover Time Spiral]] ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering''. Planeswalkers, previously, were godlike beings of immeasurable power over not just one world, but all worlds and the games were supposed to represent their duels (which were more like petty games than actual wars, since they could not be truly hurt). However, Creator/WizardsOfTheCoast realized that this meant that any time a character became [[PopularityPower popular/powerful]] enough, they could no longer [[AscendToAHigherPlaneOfExistence write stories or make cards about them,]] and also made it difficult for the players to relate to them. So it was decided to tone down the power of Planeswalkers, and in the process, the board was wiped clean, with virtually every existing Planeswalker destroyed.
370** To give you an idea, post-time spiral, only [[BigBad Nicol Bolas]] and, later [[EnsembleDarkHorse Karn]] have managed to survive. [[spoiler: Venser, the first of the [[FanNickname "Neo-walkers"]], also proved to be too cool to live]]. [[BigBad Phryexia]] as a concept has also managed to make it back from the dead, though.
371* All the Primarchs in ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'' are dead or ascended in the contemporary setting. As genetically engineered demigods of war, they would unbalance the grimdarkness considerably. They do appear in the ''Literature/HorusHeresy'' though.
372** An example from the latter series would be Hastur Sejanus, a member of the Mournival and Horus' best friend. Famed for his even temper and levelheadedness, his death on more or less the first page of the first book is an 'in-universe' example of this, as with him around, the first trilogy likely would never have played out this way, since the plan hinged on Horus' feelings of loneliness and abandonment.
373** However, the arrival of the 8th Edition and the Gathering Storm campaign present to us the revival of Roboute Guilliman. Now he has taken the task of putting the Imperium back together while fighting the advances of his daemonic brothers, who are not quite happy with his return...
374* It is actually possible for players to [[InvokedTrope invoke]] this in ''TabletopGame/RocketAge'' with the Experienced trait. The trait gives more character creation points while cutting down the number of story points, which are mechanically PlotArmor. The trait can even be taken multiple times, meaning that the more experienced and ''cool'' a character is, the less influence they have on the story and the more likely they are to die prematurely. It essentially turns someone into the cool supporting character.
375[[/folder]]
376
377[[folder:Theatre]]
378* Angel in ''Theatre/{{RENT}}.'' What can be cooler than a transvestite street percussionist with AIDS?
379* OlderThanSteam: Mercutio in ''Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet'', and by extension, Riff in ''Theatre/WestSideStory''.
380[[/folder]]
381
382[[folder:Video Games]]
383%%Zero-context. How are they too cool?* ''VideoGame/Persona3'':
384%%** Shinjiro Aragaki.
385%%** [[spoiler:[[TheHeroDies The protagonist.]]]]
386* ''Franchise/FireEmblem'':
387** ''VideoGame/FireEmblemGenealogyOfTheHolyWar'':
388%%*** King Eldigan of Augustria.
389*** [[TheHero Sigurd]] is PurposefullyOverpowered, intensely noble, and just an all-around amazing guy. It's not incredibly surprising he turns out to be a DecoyProtagonist.
390** Retroactively done with [[spoiler: Uther's brother, Hector]], who dies early in ''VideoGame/FireEmblemTheBindingBlade'' but was a protagonist in ''VideoGame/FireEmblemTheBlazingBlade''. Playing the games in reverse order sets you up for a ''major'' PlayerPunch.
391** ''VideoGame/FireEmblemTheBlazingBlade'':
392%%*** Uther of Ostia.
393*** Archsage Athos. He was so powerful he would've affected ''The Binding Blade'' too majorly had he still been alive, so he had to die. Dark Sage Bramimond is implied to suffer a BusCrash between the two games, likely for the same reason.
394*** All [[HeelFaceDoorSlam post]]-HeelRealization Black Fang leaders/elites, except Jaffar (he's really cool, but he survives the events of the game).
395** Greil in ''VideoGame/FireEmblemPathOfRadiance''. His death was necessary to begin Ike's ComingOfAgeStory.
396** Subverted with Basilio in ''VideoGame/FireEmblemAwakening'', who faked his death to put one over on the BigBad.
397** ''VideoGame/FireEmblemFates'':
398*** Both of the PlayerCharacter's older brothers - Xander in ''Birthright'', Ryoma in ''Conquest''. Thankfully, the third path spares them.
399*** Scarlet in ''Conquest'' and ''Revelation'', even worse on the latter as she dies protecting the Avatar.
400** ''VideoGame/FireEmblemThreeHouses'': Jeralt, which is unsurprising, since he is pretty much a point-by-point {{Expy}} of the aforementioned Greil, with a similar backstory, abilities and reason for dying.
401* ''VideoGame/FatalFrame'':
402** ''VideoGame/FatalFrameI'' has Mafuyu Hinasaki, the protagonist's older brother. Overall presented as an amazing guy, Mafuyu took care of his sister [[PromotedToParent after their mother's suicide]], headed into the haunted mansion simply to find and help his professor and is clever to realize what is going on, leaving notes for Miku to find. [[spoiler: He decides to remain with Kirie at the Hell Gate, so she will not be lonely anymore and ease her suffering.]]
403** ''VideoGame/FatalFrameMaskOfTheLunarEclipse'' the ex-police officer turned detective Choushiro Kirishima. He's the one who discovered the kidnapped girls on Rougetsu Island and has been spending his entire time finding and bringing You Haibara to justice. Badass is the simplest way to describe this guy, for all the things he does. [[spoiler:Turns out, he's been dead for years and his ghost is what's been doing all that work.]]
404* ''VideoGame/MetalGear'':
405** [[NinjaPirateZombieRobot Gray Fox]] in the original ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid'' fits the above description almost to the letter.
406** Same goes for The Boss in ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid3SnakeEater''. She could just stand there and look at her enemies, and every soldier would throw away his weapon and surrender. Ditto for her badass team the [[QuirkyMiniBossSquad Cobra Unit]]: The Pain, The Fear, The End, The Fury and The Sorrow (who died before the game even began and is a ghost).
407** Also from ''Solid'' Liquid Snake. The BadassLongcoat donning, glorious hammy EvilTwin of Solid Snake, who steals and pilots a Metal Gear and almost enacts World War III, drives a jeep one handed while driving gets killed by the Foxdie virus after enaging in some shirtless fisticuffs with his brother. He was so cool he came back (kinda, its compilcated) as an arm possesing Ocelot in later games. FOXHOUND in general also counts, with members that Snake kills including Vulcan Raven a GatlingGood Alaskan Shaman, Sniper Wolf a beautiful DarkActionGirl who has a bunch of pet huskies and Pyscho Mantis a PsychicPowers EvilGenius [[BreakingTheFourthWall who reads your memory card]]. Not to mention TheDragon Vamp who is KilledOffForReal in ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid4GunsOfThePatriots''.
408** ''VideoGame/MetalGearRisingRevengeance'''s RoguesGallery the Winds of Destruction Mistral (a multi-armed french cyborg femme fatale), Monsoon (a poetic sai-wielding MagnetismManipulation cyborg), Sundowner (a LargeHam [[ShearMenace sissor sword]]-wielding cyborg), Jetstream Sam (brazilian samurai BloodKnight) and the BigBad Senator Armstrong (a bare fisted and chested nanomachine-empowered MagnificentBastard) are this. Each of them are awesome to a [[RuleOfCool ludicrously badass extent]], with Sam, Mistral and Monsoon being characters who could easily be protagonists of any other HackAndSlash game. Sadly they're the antagonists trying to plunge in the world into conflict, so they gotta die.
409* ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'' ''loves'' these guys:
410** Zack Fair from ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII'' and ''VideoGame/CrisisCore'' (also TheAce).
411** This also applies to Aerith. For the period she's with the group, she's one of the most useful members (being the best magic-user and the primary healer) who's final limit breaks are flat out game breakers, not to mention her loveable tomboyish personality and status as LastOfHerKind. It makes it very easy to get attached to her, until... well.
412** Auron from ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX'': BadassLongcoat, check... {{Ronin}} style, complete with katana, sake bottle, and arm-in-coat, check... TheStoic, check... Auron is so undeniably too cool to live, he's been [[DeadAllAlong dead since before the game started!]]
413** Judge Magister [[OneSceneWonder Drace]] from ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXII''.
414** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIII'' got a rare female example in Oerba Yun [[LauncherOfAThousandShips Fang]]. Her Australian accent in the English dub only increased her already considerable badass quotient. Fortunately for the shippers, she only goes into crystal stasis. FixFic here we come!.
415** Come now, this trope has been in ''Final Fantasy'' since the early days. Tellah from ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIV'', Galuf from ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyV'', General Leo (and possibly Shadow) from ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI''... but the champion of this is ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyII''. Scott, Josef, Minwu, and Richard Highwind... so badass, they made a bonus mode starring them in the afterlife!
416** In fact, the only time this is subverted in the mainstream games is in the very first [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyI Final Fantasy]]. Wherein all deaths are undone due to the heroes destroying the villains GroundhogDayLoop scheme by hitting the ResetButton.
417* Kratos, of ''VideoGame/TalesOfSymphonia'' decides to accompany a giant comet made of mana into outer space at the end of the game, never to be seen again. The big bad is dead, there's no reason for him to go, but he does anyway because he's "A relic of the past."
418* ''VideoGame/TalesOfTheAbyss'': Damnit Asch if you'd stop overshadowing [[TheHero Luke]], you wouldn't be dead now, would you?
419%%** And the rest of the god-generals.
420%%** Er - and Luke. [[GainaxEnding Maybe?]]
421%%* [[CoolOldGuy Don Whitehorse]] in ''VideoGame/TalesOfVesperia''.
422* [[VideoGame/MegaManX Zero]] averted this, thanks to fan outcry over his HeroicSacrifice. (That, and the creator wanted him to be the new Mega Man but [[ExecutiveMeddling Capcom said no.]]) Depending on the endings you get, he dies later, but not canonically. In ''X5'', he dies again, but comes back due to more ExecutiveMeddling, and seals himself away at the end of ''X6''. By the end of his own series, [[spoiler: he [[KilledOffForReal dies permanently]]...but is brought back as Model ZX in ''VideoGame/MegaManZX'' along with the Guardians.]]
423** ''VideoGame/MegaManXCommandMission'' has Spider, [[spoiler: who's so cool that he died before the game even ''started''. Possibly. It's unclear when the real Spider dies, but he definitely never made it to the game's halfway point.]]
424* Wodan Ymir from ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWars''. So imagine that you've got the awesome [[EnsembleDarkhorse Sanger Zonvolt]], and then you CLONED him and said clone inherits ALL his awesomeness. Can the universe keep itself from imploding with the awesomeness those two emit? The clone gotta go.
425** Likewise from the same series, Ouka Nagisa, the School Kids' CoolBigSis. She had her chance being resurrected because the next game after her death would feature R's Duminuss who is famous for resurrecting [[Anime/MobileFighterGGundam Master Asia with Devil Gundam Cells]], and Ouka died being surrounded with Machine Cells, DG Cells equivalent for OG. Yet, [[TheyWastedAPerfectlyGoodPlot they picked Lamia to fill in Master Asia's plot point]] because Ouka was also Too Cool To Be Resurrected.
426** On contrary of the usual routine of ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWars'', in ''[[VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsZ Z2: Hakai Hen]]'', you cannot bring back [[spoiler:[[Anime/MobileSuitGundam00 Neil Dylandy/Lockon Stratos I]] and [[Anime/TengenToppaGurrenLagann Kamina]] from the dead]]. That's right, someone's Too Cool for VideoGame/SuperRobotWars to resurrect.
427* ''Franchise/StreetFighter'' has Charlie Nash. The guy who mentored Guile, can throw a Sonic Boom one-handed who came back after his HeroicSacrifice in ''Alpha'' series as an undead (but still attractive) zombie for TheIlluminati and in both game and Udon comic conuinuites is only one other than Ryu and Akuma who can kick the shit out of BigBad dictator M.Bison (Vega in Japan) in a fight. Naturally Charlie dies again, likely to keep Ryu's status as the poster boy badass unchallenged within the story.
428* In the ''Franchise/{{Metroid}}'' series:
429** [[AnIcePerson Rundas]] from ''VideoGame/MetroidPrime3Corruption''. The kicker is that after the other bounty hunters fall to TheCorruption, he's the first one [[ShootTheDog you have to kill]].
430** Anthony Higgs in ''VideoGame/MetroidOtherM''. He's a beloved EnsembleDarkHorse who treats Samus with friendship and respect (unlike Adam Malkovich) and he's a {{BFG}}-wielding badass to boot, so of course, he takes a plunge into lave courtesy of Ridley. [[spoiler:And then epically subverted when he turns up fine and dandy at the end, having frozen an enemy to use as a springboard to survive.]]
431* Nihlus Kryik from the first ''VideoGame/{{Mass Effect|1}}''. Spectre, intrigued by the potential of the human race, clearly established as a mentor for Shepard, dies thirty minutes into the game. Samara (from the second game) describes how he outwitted her after a ''two week'' game of cat and mouse: namely, turning her own Code against her. Bear in mind that Samara is a thousand-year-old asari [[WarriorMonk Justicar]] that started fighting injustice around the same time Napoleon was marching on Moscow.
432%%** [[spoiler: Samara and Morinth]]. Whichever one dies definitely counts.
433** Thane Krios and Mordin Solus from ''VideoGame/MassEffect2'' are both very popular with fans and highly likely to die during [=ME2=]'s suicide mission; Thane is [[DeadManWalking terminally ill]] and Mordin is [[CoolOldGuy at a fairly advanced age]] for a member of a race with a 40-year lifespan, and neither character's skillset is well-suited to front-line combat. If they make it to [=ME3=], Mordin [[spoiler:is all but guaranteed to die during the mission on Tuchanka unless a [[GuideDangIt very specific set of requirements]] (one of which is killing off ''another'' former squad member) is met]], and Thane [[spoiler:inevitably dies stopping Kai Leng from assassinating the salarian councilor]].
434** Also in ''VideoGame/MassEffect3'', [[spoiler:Legion]] dies no matter how the situation on [[spoiler:Rannoch]] is resolved, either committing a HeroicSacrifice to help save [[spoiler:the geth]], or going berserk and forcing [[spoiler:Tali]] to kill them in order to save Shepard.
435** Depending on your opinion on the characters, any member of the team in Mass Effect 2 if you haven't completed their loyalty missions (and sometimes even then).
436* Parodied with Santino from ''VideoGame/TalesOfMonkeyIsland''. DeadToBeginWith, a skeleton in fact, though [[IdiotBall his crewmates didn't realise.]] When he was alive, he was [[TheAce charming, handsome and looked up to and respected by all]], and was also the only member of Coronado De Cava's crew who could swim proficiently and speak manatee, both necessary skills in obtaining the MacGuffin. Guybrush [[LampshadeHanging lampshades]] this by remarking to De Cava [[CantCatchUp "Kinda put all your eggs in one basket there, didn't you?"]]
437* ''Franchise/ResidentEvil'':
438** Albert Wesker. The SinisterShades wearing, BadassLongcoat wearing, LargeHam, SmugSuper LightningBruiser, overarching BigBad MadScientist of the first six games meets his end during ''VideoGame/ResidentEvil5'' in the most metal way possible being exploded by [=RPGs=] inside an active volcano.
439** ''VideoGame/ResidentEvilVillage'' has quite few of these such as Lady Dimitrescu and Hisenberg but the biggest example is [[spoiler: TheHero Ethan Winters himself the guy [[VideoGame/ResidentEvil7 who braved house full of mutant hicks to get his wife back]] and in ''Village'' decimated the RE equivalent to the Addams's Family to get his baby daughter back, even beating the BigBad Miranda with his heart ripped out. Ethan was cooler than Chris, Leon and most of the other protagionists combined, of course he couldn't be allowed to live.]]
440* [[CoolOldGuy Bill Overbeck]] from ''VideoGame/Left4Dead''. In the new campaign for ''[=L4D2=]'', it is explained that Bill sacrificed himself in order for the other three Survivors to go on, allowing them to meet the ''[=L4D2=]'' Survivors. Even worse is that you can actually see [[TearJerker Bill's dead body later in the chapter]].
441* Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog: Shadow the Hedgehog debuted in VideoGame/SonicAdventure2 as an EvilCounterpart to Sonic, and very quickly establishes himself as his superior, something previous antagonists, even [[BigBad Dr. Eggman]] cannot boast. Shadow possessed ''all'' of Sonic's abilities in addition to his own unique ones, but was a NoNonsenseNemesis compared to [[SmugSuper Sonic.]] And despite that aforementioned statement, [[SnarkToSnarkCombat he could match Sonic's wit too.]] Naturally because RedemptionEqualsDeath, he performs a HeroicSacrifice at the end of the game. It becomes a SubvertedTrope however where he was SavedByTheFans and is brought back in the [[VideoGame/SonicHeroes next game]] and has become a series staple since.
442* [[GuestStarPartyMember Teddy]] from ''VideoGame/EarthBoundBeginnings''. Appropriately enough, his appearance in the popular ''VideoGame/EarthBound1994'' fancomic ''Webcomic/TheChosenFour'' is a hilariously blatant CaptainErsatz of [[Anime/TengenToppaGurrenLagann Kamina]].
443** It should be noted that Teddy doesn't die, but the fact that he's injured to the point that he can't fight (or even speak) until the ending sequence still makes the trope applicable.
444** What about EVE? Too cool and powerful to stay with the team toward the end?
445* The ''VideoGame/{{Suikoden}}'' series loves this trope:
446** In ''VideoGame/SuikodenI'' you have first Odessa Silverberg (Flik's lover and former leader of the Liberation Army), Teo [=McDohl=] (your father), and [[spoiler:Ted (your best bud and the original wielder of Soul Eater Rune)]]
447** In ''VideoGame/SuikodenII'' you have Genkaku (your father figure) and Annabelle (Muse's mayor).
448** In ''VideoGame/SuikodenIII'' Jimba bites it, moments after revealing who he really is to his oblivious daughter, who'd spent a sizable portion of the game searching for him.
449** In ''VideoGame/SuikodenIV'' you have Glenn the chief of the Knights of Razriel and your father figure (more or less).
450** In ''VideoGame/SuikodenV'' you have Ferid and Arshtat, your parents. Actually, whenever you are the parent of the main hero please apply for a swift death at the hand of this trope.
451* Starkiller from ''VideoGame/TheForceUnleashed'' because [[DoomedByCanon logically]] he just can't be around to kick the Empire's ass for the rebels.
452** [[spoiler:Except it didn't really take the first time around. So he was too cool to live and too cool to stay dead. It took being ExiledFromContinuity by [[Creator/{{Disney}} Mickey Mouse]] to really kill Starkiller.]]
453* Your [[DeadpanSnarker snarky]] [[{{Bishonen}} prettyboy]] GlassCannon EnsembleDarkHorse teammate Leon, from ''VideoGame/TalesOfDestiny''. In the remake, he got a nice ObiWanMoment HeroicSacrifice, staying behind to activate an elevator allowing the rest of the party to escape a flooding abandoned mine.
454** Since Namco enjoys teasing their fans, the [[UpdatedRerelease director's cut]] of the remake includes a NewGamePlus option to play through the game following Leon as the main character instead of [[IdiotHero Stahn]]. Fans were hopeful that there would finally be a story path where he wouldn't be too cool to live. Nope, he still dies, and the game ends there.
455** If that weren't enough, [[IdiotHero Stahn]] himself dies between ''VideoGame/TalesOfDestiny'' and ''VideoGame/TalesOfDestiny2''. (Although due to messing around with the timeline, in the end [[UnexplainedRecovery he gets better]].)
456* ''VideoGame/TheWorldEndsWithYou'': [[MadMathematician Sho Minamimoto]]. Zetta duh.
457** And yet he maybe didn't as he didn't get erased despite clearly being in the UG. He probably passed out at best.
458* Pankraz from ''VideoGame/DragonQuestV''. Since he's never actually player-controlled, the game only gives brief glimpses of how badass he is, but it's more than enough to show he would've been a top-tier party member all the way to the end of the game. Especially given his unique ability to attack twice every turn.
459* In the ''Franchise/{{Halo}}'' series, Sergeant Johnson appears to fall into this trope ''twice'', but survives off-screen the first time around.
460** Comes up again with [[spoiler:the five members of Noble Team who die]] in ''VideoGame/HaloReach''. To clarify, the dead characters are [[spoiler:the elite squadron commander, the girl with the robot arm, the guy with the skull on his faceplace, the guy using a turret as his primary weapon and the main character who spends his/her last minutes trying to hold off the entire Covenant army.]] Too Cool To Live indeed.
461* Johnny Gat spends the first two ''VideoGame/SaintsRow'' games establishing himself as an insane badass, only to die in the first half hour of ''VideoGame/SaintsRowTheThird''. [[spoiler: Part IV reveals that he was in fact Too Cool To Die, and he actually survived the events of the third game.]]
462* ''VideoGame/AdvanceWars: Days of Ruin'' features the grizzled, experienced, charismatic, and tirelessly selfless Captain Brenner, the undisputed commander of his unit of heroic soldiers, and, for all intents and purposes, the protagonist of the first half of the game. Since the younger, far more {{Bishonen}} WideEyedIdealist newcomer Will has to have some plausible reason to take the mantle from Brenner, [[spoiler: he pulls a HeroicSacrifice by holding a bridge and telling Will and the others to run. He eventually takes a nuke to the face.]]
463** In the same game we also have Forsythe, a revered CO from Lazuria. A father to his men, and despises dirty tactics, telling Caulder straight to his face he won't endanger his men by using dangerous experimental superweapons. He even called in a cease-fire while fighting Brenner's father in order to bury the dead. In fact, when you face him, he's gone out of retirement just to defend his country. How does this cool old guy meet his death? [[spoiler: Peacefully surrendering to Rubinelle, only to get killed on the spot.]]
464%%* In ''VideoGame/DragonAgeOrigins'', [[MentorOccupationalHazard Duncan]] and, very late in the game, [[spoiler: Riordan]].
465* In ''VideoGame/BatenKaitos Origins'', [[spoiler:party member Guillo is a total badass, a hilarious DeadpanSnarker, a big GameBreaker in combat, and has a compelling backstory. It sacrifices itself almost immediately after the final boss to save Sagi from a malfunctioning machina.]]
466* Ghost from ''[[VideoGame/ModernWarfare Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2]]''. He was all around a badass special forces mofo, but the thing that really set him apart was his iconic skull mask. He was killed off rather unceremoniously, however, the fan reaction to him was so strong that there was talk of making a spinoff game starring him. The game seems to have been scrapped, however, he did end up being included in Sony's ambitious IntercontinuityCrossover commercial ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mdWkKKSckNk Michael.]]''
467* Trevor from ''VideoGame/PhantasmagoriaAPuzzleOfFlesh'' wasn't cool in the traditional sense, but he was still the most likable character in a cast full of assholes and TooDumbToLive idiots.
468* [[spoiler:[[AwesomeAussie Deke]]]] from ''VideoGame/FearEffect''. [[spoiler: Thankfully, he [[UnexplainedRecovery gets better]] in the best ending]].
469* In Season One of ''VideoGame/TheWalkingDead'', the protagonist of the game is an unassuming history professor named Lee Everett, who was in the midst of a personal crisis when the ZombieApocalypse hit. While Lee's personality is determined to a degree by the player's choices, he's charismatic, empathetic, courageous, witty, moral, and above all will go through hell itself just to protect Clementine, [[PapaWolf a little girl he's taken under his protection.]] Even when he's infected with the zombie virus himself, he if anything becomes even more badass when he realizes he now has nothing left to lose. Even as he breathes his last, he uses these moments to give Clementine a few last words of advice on surviving in this horrible new world. Lee may be dead as of the end of the first season, but he lives on through the words of wisdom and encouragement he gave Clementine, who replaces him as protagonist for the remainder of the series. Whenever fans discuss the villains of the second season onward, such as Bill Carver and the New Frontier, the consensus is always, "Lee would have taken care of them easily".
470[[/folder]]
471
472[[folder:Visual Novels]]
473* Random Hajile in ''VisualNovel/{{Snatcher}}''. [[spoiler:However, he does live in VideoGame/{{SD Snatcher}}.]]
474* [[ItWasHisSled Mia Fey]] in ''Franchise/AceAttorney''. So awesome that it doesn't even take - she keeps being channeled through the Phoenix arc by her younger sister and later her cousin.
475** Who else could become an EnsembleDarkHorse post-death than prosecutor and noble thief Byrne Faraday?
476* Sakura Ogami from ''VisualNovel/DanganronpaTriggerHappyHavoc''. The Ultimate Martial Artist with the buffest body among all of the students trapped at Hope's Peak Academy; though strong and intimidating, she was also level-headed and polite. It also happened that she was TheMole for Monokuma, who outed her to the rest of her classmates, which led to them growing distrustful of her. As such, [[HeroicSacrifice she poisoned herself]] with the intent of uniting the students against their common enemy after her death, and also [[DyingMomentOfAwesome broke the lock of the headmaster's office]]; proving instrumental in providing the group vital information.
477%%* Archer in ''VisualNovel/FateStayNight''. Many say the same of Lancer. (In fact, Lancer-class Servants pretty much inevitably fall victim to this throughout the franchise.) Heck, pretty much every Servant qualifies.
478%%** [[FanNickname GARserker]] from ''Literature/FateZero'' definitely qualifies. [[ItsAllAboutMe Gilgamesh]] qualifies too, as does Rider.
479[[/folder]]
480
481[[folder:Web Animation]]
482* ''WebAnimation/RedVsBlue'': Agent York was a charming, snarky badass and quickly became a fan favorite, but died at the end of the ''Out Of Mind'' miniseries after being shot by Agent Wyoming. To make up for this, he was given a large role in the prequels.
483* ''WebAnimation/{{RWBY}}'':
484** Pyrrha Nikos is a ChildProdigy who is a [[FamedInStory world-renowed fighter]]. Kind and compassionate, she becomes both the mentor and LoveInterest to the male deuteragonist, and is identified by [[BigGood Professor Ozpin]] as being the {{Benevolent Conspiracy}}'s best chance to protect the [[ElementalPowers Fall Maiden's magic]] from being stolen by TheHeavy. Even after TheHeavy steals the Maiden power, Pyrrha is still able to briefly gain the upper hand during the fight, until her Semblance runs out of [[{{Mana}} Aura]] and the fight turns in favour of the Aura-independent magic. [[spoiler:Her death then triggers the TraumaticSuperpowerAwakening of TheHeroine.]]
485** Clover Ebi leads the best Huntsman team in Atlas, is friendly, engaging, a willing mentor, and quick to compliment good work. His [[WindsOfDestinyChange Good Luck Semblance]] gives him a [[BornLucky natural counter]] to Qrow's uncontrollable [[TheJinx Bad Luck Semblance]]; they become close friends, with Clover actively working to improve Qrow's self-esteem issues, until Clover's BlindObedience to General Ironwood causes conflict with the heroes. Qrow's own [[BrokenPedestal broken loyalty]] to [[BigGood Professor Ozpin]] contributes to a series of [[ATragedyOfImpulsiveness villain-manipulated poor decision-making]] by the heroes that allows [[PracticallyJoker Tyrian]] to frame Qrow for Clover's murder. [[spoiler:Clover's death triggers Qrow's later discovery that he can use [[TragicKeepSake Clover's lucky charm]] as a concentration aide to [[WindsOfDestinyChange force his Semblance]] to [[PowerUp avert bad luck instead of cause it]].]]
486* ''WebAnimation/TubeClash'': A German Website/YouTube series, where animated versions of german Youtubers team up and fight each other to survive, battle royale style. Max aka [=HandofBlood=] makes it all the way to the penultimate episode, by now qualifying as the greatest badass of the remaining three, having defeated a giant serpent all by himself earlier and using a gigantic Samurai sword as his weapon of choice. Despite his physical superiority over the others however, he chooses to instead sacrifice himself to allow the remaining two to move on. May also qualify as {{Heroic Sacrifice}}.
487[[/folder]]
488
489[[folder:Webcomics]]
490* [[http://www.smbc-comics.com/?db=comics&id=965#comic This]] ''[[Webcomic/SaturdayMorningBreakfastCereal SMBC]]''. Literally.
491* The first major character that was KilledOffForReal in ''Webcomic/{{Homestuck}}'' also happened to be one of the biggest badasses in the entire series: [[BunnyEarsLawyer Bro]] (who, appropriately enough, is a retroactive [[Anime/TengenToppaGurrenLagann Kamina]] {{Expy}}). At the time of death, he and [[FutureBadass Davesprite]] were duelling [[DiscOneFinalBoss Jack]] [[OneManArmy Noir]] and could feasibly have defeated him if [[PhysicalGod he hadn't gained First Guardian powers from Becquerel's prototyping midway through the fight]]; earlier, Bro alone [[DuelBoss successfully duelled him]] on even ground to a standstill.
492* A variant appears in ''Webcomic/CyanideAndHappiness'', with the character being [[http://www.explosm.net/comics/2295/ too hip to live]].
493* K'Seliss in ''Webcomic/{{Goblins}}'' was a character so cool that he needed over 3 weeks worth of strips to properly die.
494* [[CoolOldGuy Lord Shojo]] in ''Webcomic/TheOrderOfTheStick''. Even [[TokenEvilTeammate Belkar]] liked him.
495[[/folder]]
496
497[[folder:Western Animation]]
498%%* ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender'':
499%%** Jet.
500%%** Combustion Man is a villainous version of this.
501* Amon/Noatak from ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra''. He learned how to bloodbend outside of the full moon with his mind by the age 14. At the same age, he left home and went into a raging blizzard by himself and made it out alive. When he was revealed to be a waterbender, his bending was shown to be especially badass. Then [[MurderSuicide Tarrlok blew up the boat they were on]]. It's understandable considering that no matter how much he could change, he'd still always be broken, but still, it's sad to see such a badass like him go.
502** Book 3 ends with only [[spoiler:the ''least'' overtly showy and spectacular Red Lotus operative]] surviving long enough to go back to prison[[spoiler:...and ''he's the BigBad'']].
503* Tigerhawk in ''Franchise/{{Transformers}}: WesternAnimation/BeastWars'' is also the latest of latecomers, being in only the last three episodes. Sell those toys!
504** Ditto Dinobot, Depth Charge, AND Dinobot 2.
505* Omega Supreme in ''WesternAnimation/TransformersAnimated'' who performed a HeroicSacrifice the episode that he came online.
506** Subverted when he was revealed to not only have survived but was brainwashed into becoming Megatron's chief weapon. DoubleSubversion when he ends up back into sleep mode anyway but ''triple subverted'' in that he is eventually brought back fully in control of himself and makes it back to his home planet where he is finally recognized as the hero that he always was.
507** Also in ''TFA'', Prowl. Just when he's mastered the cyberninja arts and has become totally awesome, he sacrifices himself to save Detroit.
508** Also in ''TFA'', Blurr. A very competent secret agent who's able to use his superspeed to curb stomp squads of Decepticons. Too bad TheMole realized Blurr was about to blow his cover and had to dispatch him (according to some cut material, he ''may'' still be alive...)
509** The newest member of the too cool to live ''Transformers'' club, Cliffjumper from ''WesternAnimation/TransformersPrime''. Awesome car form? Check. Has cool Viking horns on his head? Check. Voiced by [[Wrestling/DwayneJohnson The freaking Rock?!]] Check. Dead before the second commercial break? Check.
510*** Skyquake, a Decepticon version of this Trope, could be considered the Decepticon version of Cliffjumper.
511*** Makeshift is another example from ''Prime''. Power to change his appearance? Check. Can replicate the abilities of whoever he changes into? Check. Discovers the location of the Autobot's base? Check. Killed at the end of his debut episode? ''Bingo''. Heck, even the writers confirmed that the reason he was killed off was because he was downright overpowered.
512*** And we can add Dreadwing to the list...
513*** The Star Saber is an [[WreckedWeapon equipment version]] of this trope. Awesomely powerful, and shattered the episode after Optimus got it.
514* Subverted-Charles Foster Ofdensen from ''WesternAnimation/{{Metalocalypse}}''. He died at the end of season 2 only to [[BigDamnHeroes return in the nick of time]] in the season 3 premiere in a truly awesome fashion.
515* [[spoiler: Nabu]] from ''WesternAnimation/WinxClub''. Seriously! On top of being an incredibly sweet and nice guy, he managed to single-handedly [[spoiler: take out Duman and close a powerful magical portal that would've sucked all of the Earth fairies into oblivion in just one episode…only for him die after using up all his energy. None of the other Specialists ever reached the level of Badass that he did and they have had twice as much screen time. Even though he appeared in the second movie, it seems he is still dead as of season 5.]]
516* New Brian was beloved by the Griffins in ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' and replaced Brian...until he pissed off Stewie. After that, [[TheCoronerDothProtestTooMuch it seems he shot himself, hacked up his body and threw it in the trash]].
517* ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheCloneWars'':
518** Ima Gun-Di and Captain Keeli are both fairly badass, which of course means they only show up for one episode and die in a heroic LastStand.
519** This generally applies to a lot of the Clone Troopers. They're all badasses with endearing quirks and likeable personalities, which of course means that most of them die after you get attached to them, particularly if they're serving alongside the main characters.
520* ''WesternAnimation/Primal2019'': [[spoiler:Spear dies in his FinalBattle against the empowered Chieftain, but he doesn't go down defeated.]]
521[[/folder]]

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