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1* In ''TabletopGame/BattleSpirits'', though the card isn't legal, this defines Amaterasu-Dragon. First, it gets 10000BP for each core on it, which very quickly makes it stronger than any other spirit. It also [[NoSell can't be affected by effects]], and has a triple symbol. There's also Ultimate-Gai-Asura in the overkill department, with 50000BP. Saigord-Golem and Ultimate-Castle-Golem are the deck destruction equivalents of this, because they can destroy 15-18 cards in a single go. And Libra-Golem could potentially do even more.
2* The board game ''NATO'' about a Soviet attack into Western Europe has rules for tactical nuclear weapons (5-15 kilotons). The rules for strategic nukes: Soak the map with lighter fluid and apply a flame.
3* Invoked in ''TabletopGame/IronClaw'' which actually has a mechanic where dealing more damage to an enemy than it takes to kill them [[SurplusDamageBonus has an effect on gameplay]]. Specifically, nearby allies [[OhCrap become afraid]], there's not enough of the body left for any Necromancy spell that requires a body to work on them, and even the game's only true resurrection spell — while it can still revive them — is unable to completely restore them from their severe mutilation and leaves them permanently disfigured.
4* In many card games, some players will wipe out the opponent’s entire defense, drain his lifepoints to bare minimal, and then summon a full fleet of powered-up monsters to wipe out what little the opponent has left, despite the fact even one of them could wipe out the remaining life points 10x over. Many gamers refer to this strategy as an ''Onslaught''.
5* Virtually everything past level 20 in all editions of ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' fall into this.
6** "The Book of Vile Darkness" has a particularly vicious spell: Apocalypse from the Sky. The damage per square foot isn't stunning by the standards of 9th-level spells, but the blast radius is ten ''miles'' per caster level. According to the description, the spell ''typically levels forests, sends mountains tumbling, and wipes out entire populations of living creatures."[[note]]For reference, you need to be level 18 to cast 9th-level spells, giving it a minimum radius of 180 miles. That's an area roughly the size of Ireland.[[/note]]
7*** The cost of casting that is maybe even more overkill — casting it takes an artifact (high grade {{Unobtainium}} and likely better used another way) and [[BloodMagic damaging your own constitution]] to the extent of killing an average person (severely weakening tougher casters), does even more damage to the caster's wisdom (non-wisdom based casters without overly high wisdom scores are likely to make themselves helpless in an instant) and even damages your wisdom ''just by being prepared''. And it takes an entire day to cast. Still, it has its uses. There is a spell (Sadism) that grants you a bonus on your die roll based on how much damage you inflicted last round. If you just wiped out an entire continent, you can basically succeed in any die roll. Actually, that roll is likely to be overkill too.
8*** In ''Elder Evils'' (a book entirely dedicated to {{Eldritch Abomination}}s), one such Evil, Atropus, the World Born Dead, can only appear / be summoned when a great amount of deaths occur in a catastrophe. One way that the book details that could happen can be by an attack of a demonic army upon the Material Plane. The other… is Apocalypse From the Sky.
9** Some Vile Spells in ''The Book of Vile Darkness'' are so powerful that the cost to cast them is your life. (Seriously, you pay with your life to successfully pull it off.) Clearly, someone who learns such a spell will save it as a true last resort. Curiously, this is also the cost for some of the most powerful Exalted Spells in the ''Book of Exalted Deeds'', but while the cost does take your life, you don't always stay dead. (That isn't to say coming back to life won't be without a few conditions...)
10** There was a homebrewed Ultima spell (from the ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'' games) for 3.5 D&D. It did about all of those things and it required all of your spell slots to memorize it for the duration, had a bit of a time limit before it started damaging even more wisdom, and made you pass full out for like maybe half a month after use. Granted, you could probably kill ''anything'' with it, barring maybe that one virtually-unkillable monster.
11** For more homebrewed goodness, there is the [[VideoGame/ViewtifulJoe Viewtiful Warrior]], a burst-damage combatant which, due to [[Tropers/{{Luigifan}} the creator]] vastly overestimating high-level monsters, [[GameBreaker is capable of wiping out mighty dragons in SECONDS with a swarm of Voomerangs]].
12** Most high-level spells tend to run towards this as well, especially when used on lower challenge rated monsters. For example: Meteor Swarm. While its 3.5 Edition incarnation was... [[CoolButInefficient underwhelming]], it's been buffed considerably since then. As of 5th edition, it has a range of one mile and launches four [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin meteors]], each of which do an ''average of 140 damage in a forty foot radius''[[note]]20d6 fire and 20d6 bludgeoning[[/note]]. For perspective, an Elder Dragon, which is meant to be a challenge to a 4 man party of max level characters, tends to have around 350 health. [[note]]The 3.5e version was similar, but did less damage per meteor and didn't allow more than one meteor per casting to actually affect the same creature.[[/note]]
13** So you wanna imprison a potential threat to make sure they don't destroy the world later. Whatcha gonna do, bind them up or put them in prison? Fuck that, with the ''Imprisonment'' spell, you can chain them in unbreakable chains, place them in a gemstone for your viewing pleasure, cast them into a pocket dimension of your choosing, or bury them for all eternity.
14* The eponymous spell in ''TabletopGame/{{Fatal}}'' kills ''every single being in the entire universe'' when cast. Which can happen accidentally as the result of a magical mishap. This is arguably the happiest ending possible for a ''[=FATAL=]'' campaign.
15* ''TabletopGame/{{Shadowrun}}'' has the original ChunkySalsaRule for a reason. And full-auto weapons.
16** In the fiction, after Art Dankwalther received a massive cash bequest from Dunkelzahn's will, he spent it attacking Novatech in the belief that its CEO Richard Villiers, his boss at Fuchi, was responsible for his personal disasters. After the Novatech IPO and the resulting fallout, the Corporate Court decided that they'd had enough of him and ordered him shot... with a [[KillSat Thor shot]].
17** Mitsuhama Computer Technologies uses this trope as a disincentive for Shadowrunners to run against them: Their Corps security is based around the concept of the "zero zone", which covers all their corporate territory -- within the zero zone, there is zero penetration, and zero survival. Consequently, while other {{Mega Corp}}s will hold back security because it's cost-inefficient [[PragmaticVillainy to throw too much military hardware at a petty burglary or some scientist getting kidnapped]], Mitsuhama will pull out all the stops and not stop until either the offenders are reduced to tiny red smears on the walls or they've run out of security personnel in that hemisphere. Consequently, most runners avoid running against Mitsuhama because the cost of entry and escape are so much higher than average. Those who ''do'' run the zero-zone, on the other hand, ''also'' employ this mindset - it doesn't matter how much collateral damage you do to Mitsuhama, because they'll want your head on a spike either way.
18* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000 lives'' off this. Their average pistol — which shoots .75 calibur explosive gyrojet rounds — would be an invocation of the ChunkySalsaRule by anyone else's standards. That's not even counting the standard lasgun of the Imperial Guard, which cleanly blows off the heads and arms of unarmored humans, or the pistols that fire molecule-thick shuriken or bugs that ''eat their way through your body to your brain in the brief few seconds that make up their lives.'' Oh and did we mention the flamethrower pistols that nuns in jet packs can wield [[GunsAkimbo akimbo?]]
19** Tau pulse rifles don't just kill Guardsmen, they kill Guardsmen ''very, very'' thoroughly (without cover, five hits in six are instantly lethal). Pulse rifles are also the only basic ranged weapon except the Necron gauss flayer capable of putting the fear of the Tau'va into Space Marine Rhino vehicles and Ork looted wagons from the front. Railguns are even ''more'' spectacular, capable of reducing the largest and toughest tank (outside of Apocalypse) into a rapidly-expanding cloud of smoke and shredded metal.
20** ''VideoGame/DawnOfWar'' brings this to the extreme within the game's system — no EarthShatteringKaboom, though. Granted, it starts off small with highly gruesome finishing moves between individual units, but reaching the top tier of almost any race brings wholesale death and destruction. The Necron's fully-awakened Monolith, for example, is a slowly-moving, ''teleporting'', troop-producing, death-beam ''spewing'' glacier of epic proportions, and usually signals game over for anyone who receives it teleporting into the back of their one remaining base. Meanwhile, the Imperial Guard Baneblade can take a Monolith down.
21** ''Apocalypse'' demonstrates what happens when both sides come to this conclusion at the same time. [[spoiler:Piles of rusted metal coated with guns and {{chainsaw|Good}}s, black hole grenades, tanks large enough to qualify as small cities, and Tyranid horrors that look like bad-tempered hills with spiky legs, happen.]]
22*** ''Apocalypse'' just takes it up to eleven (and then 40,000). A Strength value of 10 is considered the highest you can go in the normal game. ''Apocalypse'' one-ups this with the D rating, which automatically wounds regardless of any modifiers and inflicts [[ChunkySalsaRule Instant Death]], as well as automatically penetrating any tank it hits. On top of that, there's also the Void Missile, which includes the D-Strength value as well as having the ability to just remove any models it hits (with only Invulnerable Saves being able to save you) regardless of any rules (Vehicles and Eternal Warriors usually don't suffer as bad if they're hit by a D-strength weapon, but Void Missiles outright negate their ''existence''). On top of that, all of the templates got doubled in size (and many of these possess the D-strength).
23*** [[HumongousMecha Emperor-Class Titans.]] Their primary guns are overkill against anything smaller than another Titan and nothing in the game except another Emperor is worth shooting all of the thing's guns at. If you made a model to scale with a Space Marine the thing would be the size of a 10-year-old player. The aforementioned primary weapons are each similar in size to a Baneblade.
24*** ''Planetstrike'': possibly the only ''40K'' expansion suited for less than 3000 points in which dropping fragments of a starship on your enemy, blasting a [[EnergyWeapon Frickin' Laser Beam]] from orbit into the heart of their base, and pummelling them with a meteor shower, are all standard tactics. The ship fragments, in the inaugural Planetstrike battle report, were described as going through a Guard Valkyrie flyer "like a sledgehammer through a pane of glass." Ouch.
25** Two races in particular employ this level of thoroughness as one of their [[PlanetOfHats hats]]: The Tyranids will devour animals, vegetables, and minerals, as well as the geothermal energy within a planet, leaving it a lifeless husk, while the Necrons will systematically destroy all life on a planet right down to the last bacterium, to destroy anything that could even theoretically be corrupted by the Warp.
26** The current Blood Angels are like this with dreadnoughts: With a certain weapon equipped, a Dreadnought is fully capable of an infinite number of attacks, so much so that the rules actually had to list "this stops when you've either had a bad roll or everyone else is dead." They also have a spellcasting Dreadnought; a Cyborg/mecha/battlesuit that ''can cast spells''.
27** The Space Marine ''Apocalypse''-only tank Terminus Ultra Land Raider has ''8 Anti-tank cannons''. The Imperial Armor Helios Land Raider might be a better example, fully upgraded it mounts 4 of the same anti-tank cannons, a long-range artillery rocket launcher, an even longer ranged cruise missile, a tank-killing heat ray, and a ''recoilless grenade launcher machine gun'' for point-defense.
28** Chaos runs with this with their champions: they will "bless" you to the point of overkill, and if you can't take it you get turned into a mewling spawn of chaos. If you can take it, you become a Daemon Prince, an ungodly powerful creature of death. Tzeentch is even more in love with this trope, since he is the lord of change after all.
29** The Tau Manta gunship, the largest single model produced by Games Workshop/Forge World (the Emperor Titan is way too big), mounts a pair of immense railguns that can punch through Titan shields, six massive anti-infantry ion cannons, a missile launcher, ''sixteen'' plasma gatling guns, and ten remote-guided cruise missiles. Its transport bays are designed to carry fifty infantry, four main battle tanks, and eight guys in flying battlesuits; but a strict interpretation of the rules allows the gunship to carry ''a hundred and seventy nine'' infantrymen.
30** Da Orks. [[MoreDakka There is no such thing as enuff dakka.]] [[RunningGag EVAR!!]]
31*** Even the most basic ork likes to carry an ax big enough to cut a man in half with little effort. When guns enter the equation, walls of lead and steel will regularly cross the battlefield. And it only goes up from there, until you get gargants, HumongousMecha that are basically ''made'' of gun, and carry an appropriately huge ax. The only reason they have little mention in this page is because it'd be too long; ''everything'' an ork does is overkill in at least one way.
32** Eldar Blackstone Fortress. They were designed as an anti-Star God weapon. The fact that a dozen of them failed to kill a single (albeit the strongest) C'tan doesn't make it any less impressive.
33** A fluff piece in the [[RedshirtArmy Imperial Guard]] Codex talks about how the Death Korps of Krieg stopped a rebellion by bombarding the rebellious Hive City in question nonstop for ''ten years''... Five years after the leaders of the hive transmitted their unconditional surrender, and two years after all life sign readings within the hive had ceased.
34** Even the Imperium's methods of exterminating life on a planet (in itself already a hilarious example of overkill) can be this. Their most basic exterminatus weapon is a simple solid slug that just obliterates everything on the surface through the sheer shockwave. The one after that is a virus bomb, where the initial virus instantly goo-ifies whatever biomatter is on the surface, then the second stage of the attack ''ignites'' the gasses released by the goo, effectively immolating the entire planet into charcoal. The third method involves shooting a melta torpedo, a fusion bomb with the heat of a thousand suns, into the core of the planet, utterly obliterating it into galactic pebbles. And if the Inquisitor is feeling particularly thorough, they can do ''all three'' just to make sure absolutely nothing is left (given the setting, there will often be something left even after all that).
35** The Typhon Heavy Siege Tank has a custom-made casemate artillery cannon mounted on a ''Land Raider Spartan'', one of the largest space marine vehicles short of a Fellbade. This thing was created because Perturabo deemed the Vindicator, already widely known for it's overkill potential (and essentially being the Typhon's smaller, Rhino-based brother), to be ''too weak''.
36** The Minotaurs Space Marines are notorious for always fighting as one chapter in one place, one war at a time - effectively employing ZergRush. Now, remember that [[OneManArmy each and every Space Marine can probably conquer a city by himself]], and you'll realise how bad this is for the Minotaurs' enemies.
37** Warmaster Horus was eventually destroyed because absolutely no one wanted him to come back. The Emperor had foresaw that the Chaos Gods would simply revive Horus even if he was killed, so he unleashed a psychic attack so powerful it utterly obliterated Horus's soul (which is something not even the Chaos Gods can undo). His lifeless husk was taken by his legion and eventually stolen by Bile who unsuccessfully tried to clone him, unaware that Horus's soul no longer existed. Abaddon, Horus's second in command and successor, was so infuriated with Horus's failure and the theft of the corpse that he personally raided Bile's hideout and tore the corpse to bits before incinerating them, ensuring the only thing that will remain of Horus was a bad memory.
38* ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}''
39** The Orcs aren't quite as obsessed with [[MoreDakka dakka]] as the Orks, but only because they've been too busy beating the crap out of everything else to invent it themselves.
40** This has been a mechanic where in a duel between characters, the winner will keep going until they've run out of attacks no matter how many it took to kill them, and each overkill wound increases how much it demoralizes the foe as their champion is not simply killed, but butchered.
41** The first time someone killed Nagash it involved chopping him into pieces with a sword so deadly it killed the person wielding it, burning the pieces in the hottest fire available, splitting up the ashes, taking them to four distant corners of the world, and scattering them to the winds. He still came back.
42* The second version of Allister Caine in TabletopGame/IronKingdoms, tabletop Warmachine has a Feat(super move) called Overkill. When he uses it the power of his pistols increase with every attack, and models killed by them ''explode'' damaging other models. His pistols have an INFINITE rate of fire, meaning he can make as many attacks with them as he has focus(mana) to spend. This feat makes him arguably the best assassin character in the game, popping the feat and gunning down the enemy warcaster to win on assassination.
43* Noted in the [[GameMaster DM's]] guide to ''TabletopGame/LegendOfTheFiveRings'' is Ryoko Owari. The governess's guiding philosophy is that minor nuisances are to be ignored, but any major problem must be dealt with as much force as she can muster: "Don't resort to violence quickly, resort to violence ''thoroughly''."
44* ''TabletopGame/{{GURPS}}: Ultratech'' has a few wonderful toys. There's the ghost particle beam that makes a massive antimatter explosion inside of the target. Reality disintegrators [[RetGone erase people from existence]]. The best example might be handguns that fire nuclear weapons, which are so much overkill that they have literally no practical use.
45** For vehicles, there is a 100mm gatling that shoots ''strategic nukes'' - average damage for that one is 210 billion per second (the human body is vaporized around 100 damage). On the defensive side, stasis fields can take infinite amounts of damage. There are weapons that can send someone to some point in space far enough away that you can just forget about them. Other supplements have their moments too (a spell to make a volcano, a template of a '''''very''''' minor EldritchAbomination). Also, in GURPS, everything can be [[SerialEscalation scaled up]] if the GM lets you.
46** The ''Azrael''-Class World Killer: It attacks the enemy with a bunch of 700 megaton missiles and ''then'' smashes into the planet with enough force (42 million megatons) to wipe out the dinosaurs all over again.
47** The massive Ogre cybertanks from ''GURPS Ogre,'' whose main guns fire SATNUC ([=SATuration NUclear=] Cluster) rounds -- each round splits into multiple submunitions which detonate over the target into semi-aimed shaped nuclear plasma blasts. Ogres also carry hypersmart missiles (almost smart enough to have ''opinions'') and use APFSDSDU (Armor-Piercing Fin-Stabilized Discarding Sabot Depleted Uranium) rounds for point defense and anti-personnel fire.
48* Any one of a hundred weapons or skills in ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'' would qualify, but of particular note is a supernatural martial art move called Illustrative Overkill Technique, which allows an Exalt to kill an opponent in such an excessive fashion that everyone else has to run away or start retching.
49** The Five-Metal Shrike. Ground zero damage for the Godspear: infinity.
50** Any of the three remaining Titan-class aerial citadels. Main weapon: the Godspear, only more so. Let's put this in perspective: the Shrike can fire the Godspear to deal infinite damage to an area in a 25 yard radius, once per day, with a secondary blast of 50 damage out for 500m. A Titan citadel can do the same, once per ''hour'' (during daylight), from an {{Orichalcum}} lens a mile in diameter, to level an area TEN MILES ACROSS. And the hull is covered with smaller weapons to see off threats that don't mandate the reduction of an entire city to a smouldering crater. And that, ladies and gentlemen, is how you [[RunningGag destroy Gem]].
51*** While this is all over the place, Malfeas (and any Infernal using his Charms) has a particularly impressive line in overkill, starting with being able to add lots of dice to ostentatiously brutal moves and moving up to things like turning into a walking FantasticNuke surrounded by a zone of horrific radioactive death or condemning enemies to ten thousand years of suffering.
52* ''TabletopGame/{{Scion}}'''s Sun Purview has a Boon called "Fusion" which has a base of 7 Aggravated damage, plus the successes of a Strength+ Science roll. Seeing as 10s count twice, and you could have a pool of 15 dice, and then additional Epic Strength bonuses... and possible Arete (if you're Dodek). It's basically Hiroshima and Nagasaki on your target.
53* [[DoomsdayDevice A Katastrofi weapon]] in ''TabletopGame/GeniusTheTransgression'' can be made with a big enough blast radius to destroy cities.
54* ''TabletopGame/{{Mekton}}'' has nuclear bullets. ''Nuclear'' bullets? It also has, among other things, MIRV remotes packing enough missiles to make ''Literature/HonorHarrington'' jealous (oh, and these can be nuclear too); the [[WaveMotionGun Core Cannon]], which is a hundred times too large to fit on the average mecha and could vaporize one seven times over in one shot; energy beams that can hit every part of a target a potentially infinite number of times; power reservoirs that can absorb your enemy's blasts, then project them back in a bolt of horrible doom that outshines the sun; and Excessive Scale, which is more or less reserved for building [[Franchise/StarWars Death Stars]], [[ThatsNoMoon planet-sized battle fortresses]], and the Anime/TengenToppaGurrenLagann. The sourcebook that introduced most of these systems introduced several harder-to-damage kinds of armour plating to make up for the increased quantities of damage.
55* ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'': every colour except blue (which goes for subtlety). Black and White tend to just vaporise things ([[http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=122423 Damnation]] and [[http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=129808 Wrath of God]]), while Red can do an appalling amount of damage in the right circumstances ([[http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=134740 Shivan Meteor]] can do enough damage to turn an EldritchAbomination into coleslaw, and [[http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=45396 Obliterate]] will kill everything except enchantments that can even theoretically be destroyed). Green's overkill is in the form of huge, bad-tempered monsters, such as [[http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=197759 Omnath, Locus of Mana]] (whose maximum power is limited only by how much mana you can generate between summoning him and victory), and [[http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=192222 Rampaging Baloths]], which can produce a swarm of monsters that eat bears for breakfast. Available to anyone are the [[EldritchAbomination Eldrazi]], such as [[http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=193452 Emrakul]] and [[http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=193632 Kozilek]], each of whom is 2-4 times as powerful as the average dragon. And then we have [[http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=210236 Lux Cannon]], which can be used to destroy anything that can be conceivably destroyed. The flavor text describes this trope perfectly: "There are few problems that can't be solved by putting a hole in the world."
56** Even Blue has some forms of mass destruction; case in point, [[http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=31852 Upheaval]], which ''completely'' cleans the battlefield. Sure, the cards are returned to the player's hands instead of being destroyed, but because of the "maximum hand size" rule, probably a big chunk of those cards will go to the graveyard anyway.
57** The "[[http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?printed=true&multiverseid=135242 Legacy Weapon]]".
58** It's also possible to exploit some [[LethalJokeCharacter "joke" cards]] to kill your opponent ''[[TheresNoKillLikeOverKill an infinite number of times]]''.
59*** Even with a deck carefully constructed ''not'' to be capable of infinite damage, it is possible to deal approximately [[http://soniccenter.org/sm/mtg/megacombo.html 2 -> 34 -> 221 damage]] on turn one. That number is so big that only notations like [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conway_chained_arrow_notation chained arrow notation]] are capable of representing it.
60** With M13 comes [[http://magiccards.info/m13/en/158.html Worldfire]], which flat out negates the existence of everything that's not in a player's deck at the time and makes ''everyone'' vulnerable to the cherriest of taps. On the flip side, there's also [[http://magiccards.info/m13/en/63.html Omniscience]] and [[http://magiccards.info/gtc/en/34.html Enter The Infinite]]. With both cards, you can literally play your entire deck in a single turn. However since you require 10 whopping mana to do so, usually you would have won anyways by that time with more conventional methods.
61** [[http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=435315 Star of Extinction]]. When it hits the board, it vaporizes a land and deals a whopping 20 damage to all creatures and planeswalkers on the field. Considering that, barring boosts from other cards, the biggest creature that can be blown-up by this spell [[http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?multiverseid=414295 only have 13 toughness]], this is plenty overkill.
62* ''TabletopGame/{{Rifts}}'': The "only hitpoint that matters is the last" rule is played deadly straight for supernatural creatures ''even in the fluff'', which means that professional military and police forces use this as standard operating procedure. It even has an InUniverse name, "misting".
63* ''TabletopGame/{{Paranoia}}'' has plasma generators (think 'flamethrower on steroids'), nuclear cone rifle rounds, nuclear ''hand grenades''[[note]]whose blast radius is larger than how far you can throw it, but [[DeathIsCheap as long as you have a replacement clone...]][[/note]], all of which not only kill the target but reduce it to a thick yellow spray of component atoms. In 2nd Edition, where the damage table went from 1 (may be stunned) to 20 (probably vaporized), nukes had a damage rating of ''30'' (standard-issue armor will not even come close to saving you).
64** And then there's the Warbot Mark IV, rivaled for size only by Alpha Complex itself (and maybe a Giant Radioactive Mutant Cockroach or two). In its introductory mission, it would nuke unarmored individuals (rather tha 'just' blowing them away with laser cannons) if they hit its BerserkButton hard enough.
65* In ''Car Wars'', nuclear weapons were described as something along the lines of 'set even a small one off and the game is over'. The maps were poster-sized, two feet by three feet or so, and usually represented about eight city blocks or so. The smallest available nuke would utterly destroy at least six of those maps in every direction.
66* ''Grimm'' has Humpty Dumpty, "reborn" as the Rotten King. Since he's technically undead, he can be put back together an infinite amount of times unless the pieces are: burned by the Dragon (not "a", ''the''), eaten by the Big Bad Wolf, sold to the Devil and haggled back, and thrown beyond the edge of the world. The order doesn't matter and it isn't specified if this has to be done in a single go, but it is stated that he will recover from anything less.
67* ''TabletopGame/BattleTech'':
68** Fire any Battlemech-scale or higher weapon at a non-{{Power Armor}}ed infantry trooper and watch them be reduced to little more than a crater with a name. Bad as that is, the ''Mechwarrior'' RPG makes this worse. Early games multiplied all ''Battletech'' damage values by [=5d6+3=] against infantry, so that, say, a small laser that did 3 points of ''Battletech'' damage now did [=15d6+9=] damage, in a game where the average character has 40 hit points and the absolute maximum value for hit points is 80. There were also no rules against using the largest available weapons against lone humans either--one sourcebook even notes that taking a Gauss rifle hit is ''[=75d6+45=]'' damage to a human being, effectively killing the target so dead that their earthly remains will require a mop to collect, [[NotEnoughToBury if you're lucky]].
69** In the canon, this was also the fate of a certain unfortunate mercenary commander, one Colonel Pythonius Brion, whose 'Mech stopped short due to warnings of badly hidden land mines. The badly hidden mines in fact turned out to be a FakeTrap designed to lure him into a ''real'' trap, whereupon an entire battalion of enemy 'Mechs rose from cover and all {{Alpha Strike}}d him simultaneously. Brion's ''Dragon'' was reduced to [[HalfTheManHeUsedToBe Half the Mech It Used to Be]], by which we mean that all that was left of the machine was a pair of [[SmolderingShoes Smoldering Legs]] and a two-hundred-meter-long scorch mark.
70** The lore also has an inversion of this trope in [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy The Clans]]. Clan society is based around the elimination of all waste because their home worlds are so resource-poor. Consequently, Clans will never engage in overkill. In fact, their ProudWarriorRace honour system is based around being able to use ''less'' kill than expected and thus minimize waste on both sides of the conflict. While this worked wonders in keeping Clan society working despite a constant squabbling for scarce resources by keeping the inevitable conflicts on a limited scale, the inability to even think along the lines of using more force than what they believed necessary caused them to fatally underestimate the Inner Sphere, whose 200-year long ForeverWar had locked them into more of a WeHaveReserves mindset.
71*** Not that the Clans don't occasionally engage in this. In the novel ''Betrayal of Ideals'', Nicholas Kerensky, on uncovering that Khan Jason Karrige was behind the nuking of the city of Great Hope, allows Khan Franklin Hallis the chance to take retribution for it. Hallis has Karrige immobilized, climbs into a 'Mech, and unloads its weapons on him. All that's left when the firing stops is gunpowder smoke.
72*** Early encounters with the Clans - especially their [[SuperSoldier Elementals]], whose PowerArmor could take multiple hits from Mech-grade weaponry - required this. With the Clan technological and training advantages, Inner Sphere forces estimated they had to bring at least two and a half times their numbers to stand a chance of winning.
73** This happened ''by accident'' to the Black Thorns mercenaries. When one writer decided to include them in a sourcebook, their last known location was researched. Turned out it was a planet that had been invaded and faced intense fighting, at which point a SyntheticPlague that killed tens of thousands was released, at which point all the cities were ravaged by OrbitalBombardment, after which the entire surface of the planet was subjected to a two-week campaign of [[NuclearOption strategic nuclear missile strikes]]. The then-lead developer declare that they were most definitely dead.
74** This was how the Principality of Regulus made sure that The Master and the Word of Blake were without a doubt DeaderThanDead at the very end of the Jihad. They chased The Master and the remnants of the Word from planet to planet, completely glassing each planet he sought refuge on with nukes, until they had cornered him on Circinus. There, they not only nuked the living hell out of the planet, bombing every city and military base of the the planet over a series of ''days'', the Regulans used cobalt-laced nukes to make sure that no living thing, ''whatsoever'', would ever survive on the world ever again.
75* In ''Star Wars the Living Card Game'', the aptly named Sith mission "Dark genocide" when completed deals 66 damage to all Light Side units with a specific keyword. The average strength of a unit is 2 (or 3 for the more expensive units) and as of early 2016, the strongest Light Side unit has 5 HP. True, it's a reference to [[Film/RevengeOfTheSith Order 66]], but still ...
76* ''TabletopGame/OldWorldOfDarkness'': During the Week of Nightmares meta-plot, the Ravnos Antediluvian [[NamesToRunAwayFromReallyFast Zapathasura]] reawakens, devours every one of its nearby descendants, and ravages Bangladesh and India within minutes. It takes ''three'' [[ChineseVampire Kuei-Jin]] [[PhysicalGod Boddhisattvas]] working together just to ''stall'' the ancient vampire's rampage. And, not wanting to take chances with a being this powerful, [[TabletopGame/MageTheAscension the Technocracy]] carpet-bombs the battlefield with [[FantasticNuke "spirit nukes"]] so badly that it sends shockwaves to other planes of existence, [[TabletopGame/WraithTheOblivion whipping up a maelstrom in the Shadowlands]] and [[TabletopGame/DemonTheFallen cracking the prison of fallen angels within the Abyss]], setting ''two'' potentially apocalyptic events into motion. And ''that'' only killed the Boddhisattvas preventing the Technocrats' [[PhlebotinumBomb orbital mirrors]] from blasting the Antediluvian with concentrated sunlight, which [[NoOneCouldSurviveThat appears to finally destroy the monster]] after it tanked three god-tier vampires and waves of nuclear fire.
77** Despite all that, familiarity with the setting produces an element of FridgeHorror. As the Ravnos Antediluvian, Zapathasura wields the Vampiric Discipline of Chimerstry at its highest, most impossible levels: a blood magic which crafts illusions. [[OhCrap That's right,]] [[PlayingPossum after all that, neither the Technocracy nor the Kuei-Jin can be sure they actually managed to kill it.]]

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