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[[quoteright:300:[[Manga/{{Saikano}} https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rsz_render_ultimate_weapon.png]]]]
[[caption-width-right:300:They turned her into the ultimate WMD. They came to regret it.]]

->''"What happens when the soldier becomes the weapon?"''
-->-- ''VideoGame/CallOfDutyBlackOpsIII''

A Human Weapon is someone who has been converted by military forces into a weapon for the purpose of warfare. The methods can range anywhere from {{Genetic Engineering|IsTheNewNuke}} to exposure to nuclear or atomic energy, but the key result is that this person is now capable of [[PersonOfMassDestruction mass destruction]].

Most of the time the people who made the Human into a Human Weapon will not give them much sympathy, treating "{{it|IsDehumanizing}}" as an object rather than a person. This is often due to shame of having to turn their own against their enemies, FantasticRacism, or because they now see {{it|IsDehumanizing}} as nothing more than a weapon, a tool for murder. Or just typical MadScientist ethics. Expect AllOfTheOtherReindeer or BullyingADragon to happen. [[SympatheticSentientWeapon These types of people]] are easy to make into [[WoobieDestroyerOfWorlds Woobies]] as a result.

SubTrope of LivingWeapon. Compare TykeBomb where the Human Weapon is designed and bred from the start to be this and PersonOfMassDestruction where someone has the power to destroy the world without direct military help. Also see IAmNotAGun for when they decide themselves to not be used as a weapon. Compare/Contrast SuperSoldier where the Human Weapon is treated as a human being (though there is some overlap if said Soldier works for an unethical army). Up the coercion factor and you have a SympatheticSentientWeapon.

Not to be confused with tropes GrievousHarmWithABody or EquippableAlly. Also not to be confused with Creator/TheHistoryChannel's 2007 tv show ''Human Weapon''.

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!!Examples:

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
* Eve in ''Manga/BlackCat'' was meant to be this until our heroes saved her.
* The "Codes" of ''Manga/CodeBreaker'' are people of mass destruction under the control of [[OrganizationIndex EDEN]] and protect Japan; the "Re-Codes" are TerroristsWithoutACause led, ironically, by the AloofOlderBrother. People in both groups were [[BullyingADragon abused]] because of their powers, and now feel useful and free, respectively.
* All the titular cyborgs in ''Manga/Cyborg009'', but especially 004.
* The Contractors from ''Anime/DarkerThanBlack'' are coldly logical [[TheSociopath sociopaths]] with super powers. While not all their powers are directly destructive, and most can't kill more than a handful of people at once, their unique outlook make them perfectly suited to being controlled by the government and other organizations. Evening Primrose is a group of Contractors who are fighting back, due to [[spoiler:finding out that the humans are planning to erase all Contractors from existence]].
* The Red Ribbon Army is a private military able to trounce the public armies that protect the towns and nations of ''Manga/DragonBall'' thanks to the technology of Dr. Gero. Gero's dilemma is that an enemy could get their hands on his weapons and turn them on the Red Ribbon Army, with his eventual solution being androids. At first the weapons are autonomous robots for all intents and purposes but these androids [[AIIsACrapshoot do not want to kill]]. After eight failures these [[ArtifactTitle androids]] become more so "cyborgs", modified soldiers and assistants who in theory should be willing to fight and kill for the Red Ribbon cause. In practice, beings with artificial {{ki|Manipulation}} prove difficult to control even after Gero wipes their memories, to the point when an assistant of Gero makes Gero himself into a cyborg he can't make the body too powerful for fear Gero will lose control of it. Eventually Gero decides to grow a completely biological "android" in a lab, but this "Cell" still becomes an OmnicidalManiac in the end.
* The ''Franchise/{{Gundam}}'' metaseries often has the evil side doing this in an attempt to gain superior pilots. The degree of overlap with plain old SuperSoldier varies by series. The Universal Century has most of the Cyber-Newtypes that get created (although there are a rare few people who undergo the process willingly), with the Ple clones being the most extreme, being so thoroughly brainwashed that they see themselves as living weapons who must obey their master in all things. The [[Anime/MobileSuitGundamSeed Cosmic Era]] also has the Extended, who are often referred to as "biological [=CPUs=]" for their mobile suits rather than people, and are literally classified as "equipment" rather than "personnel". ''Manga/MobileSuitGundamSeedAstray'' introduces a whole slew of other characters who are either brainwashed, biologically augmented, and/or cloned for military service.
* There are several examples in the ''Franchise/LyricalNanoha'' series, such as the Combat {{Cyborg}}s of ''Anime/MagicalGirlLyricalNanohaStrikers'' created by [[MadScientist Jail Scaglietti]], the [[ShroudedInMyth Dark King]] [[{{Necromancer}} Ixpellia]] of ''AudioPlay/StrikersSoundStageX'' who is depicted as more of a PuppetKing that her kingdom used to create an endless supply of zombies cyborgs, and the [[ViralTransformation Eclipse Drivers]] of ''Manga/MagicalRecordLyricalNanohaForce'' that were created by the [[spoiler:[[EvilInc Vandein Corporation]]]] through [[YourHeadAsplode often fatal]] human experiments involving the Eclipse Virus. How evil a group is tends to be based on whether they treat their {{Super Soldier}}s as mere weapons, or as adopted family members.
* The otome from ''Anime/MyOtome'' are a direct WMD analogy, and therefore fit perfectly with PersonOfMassDestruction as well. Not only can they not unleash their full powers without a master's approval, but if the otome dies, so does their master, which does help bring life-and-death decisions a bit closer to home.
* Jinchuuriki in ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'' are almost always this.
* Kuma, one of the Seven Warlords in ''Manga/OnePiece'', volunteered to become a human weapon for the World Government.
* The eponymous character of ''Manga/{{Saikano}}'', or: ''Saishuu Heiki Kanojo'', or: ''She, the Ultimate Weapon''. For reasons unknown, the JSDF took a high-school girl and, through means unknown, turned her into a super-weapon powerful enough to destroy humanity. Nobody, from the JSDF to the many invading armies, took any responsibility, with all involved parties going "it's like a rubber band that's been stretched too tight, nobody's at fault." [[spoiler:End result: ApocalypseWow, Earth tearing itself apart.]]
* In ''Manga/ToLoveRu'', Golden Darkness' conflict between being a weapon and a person is one of the main plots in the (restarted after CreatorBreakdown) sequel ''To Love-Ru: Darkness''.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Books]]
* A key plot element in ''ComicBook/TheBoys'' is the decades-long attempt of a MegaCorp to make the US Armed Forces deploy superhumans as weapons.
* ''ComicBook/TheDarkKnightReturns'' has ComicBook/{{Superman}} being nothing but an icon who reports directly to the President, who gives him orders that include waging a one-man war in a BananaRepublic, [[spoiler:stopping the nuclear strike that follows (he fails)]], and [[spoiler:assassinating Batman]], all of which he does without question.
* ''Franchise/MarvelUniverse'':
** The Weapon Plus program initially started off with creating a SuperSoldier and then often went one step further to make living killing machines like Weapon X. Superheroes who were made from Weapon Plus include ComicBook/CaptainAmerica, ComicBook/{{Wolverine}}, [[ComicBook/XMen Fantomex and the Stepford Cuckoos]].
** In ''ComicBook/SpiderBoy'', Madame Monstrosity spliced Bailey with a spider to turn him into one of her Humanimal enforcers to sicc on her foes and guard her lairs. But Bailey was rescued by Spider-Man before she could break Bailey's will. Spider-Man and Daredevil would then teach Bailey to control his powers well enough to be able to return to a somewhat normal life.
** ''ComicBook/TheUltimates2'' has the rest of the world fearing that the US government would start utilizing these in politically motivated conflicts after Cap saves some hostages in the Middle East. Which is exactly what they do, crippling a nuclear program in Afghanistan.
** ComicBook/{{X 23}} (a.k.a. Laura Kinney) was born and raised to be a weapon, being a female ModifiedClone of Wolverine. Her mother did her best to ensure that she retained some humanity, and in her final moments bestowed her name upon her.
* The enhanced humans in ''ComicBook/{{Uber}}'' are manufactured and deployed as heavy weapons; they're even classed as "tanks" or "battleships" according to their power level.
* Dr. Manhattan is treated as the ultimate nuclear deterrent and anti-nuclear weapon by the US government of ''ComicBook/{{Watchmen}}''. He decides to go play God in another galaxy before things go that far.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Fan Works]]
* ''Fanfic/ChildOfTheStorm'':
** The second book has [[spoiler:Maddie Pryor, who was kidnapped at birth by Doctor Sinister]]. There's a slight twist in that she was intended as less of a weapon in the conventional sense and primarily to be a "Hound", tracking and capturing subjects for experimentation. Some of these subjects are intended to play the trope straight, but thankfully, it never gets that far.
** The trope is played straight with [[spoiler:the Red Army, clones of Maddie, Harry, the other Red Room prisoners, and the Avengers, all of whom are given super-soldier bodies. Unfortunately for them, they're up against the Dark Phoenix, and so are more of a RedshirtArmy. As Harry later observes, the fact that they were completely stripped of their free will didn't help, as it crippled their PsychicPowers]].
** Also of note are Captain America and Wolverine (see the Comic Books folder above), while the latter's son Daken appears in a couple of scenes, and X-23 is mentioned.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
* ''Film/ConAir'': {{Invoked|Trope}} by the HangingJudge who sentences [[TheHero Cameron Poe]] (a [[ReturningWarVet recently retired Army Ranger]] who [[CrimeOfSelfDefense killed a man to protect his wife]]) to justify giving him ten years in prison (with the possibility of parole in eight). [[ArtisticLicenseLaw It's as dumb as it sounds]].
-->'''Judge (paraphrased)''': Cameron Poe, you have pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the first degree. With your military skills, you are a deadly weapon, and are ''not'' subject to the same laws as other people that are provoked, because you can respond with deadly force.
* In ''Film/TheForceAwakens'', it's implied that Snoke manipulated Kylo Ren since birth to turn him into his very own Force-Sensitive weapon.
* In ''Film/IronMan3'', the AIM organization infects people with the Extremis nano-virus for this very purpose. Sometimes, it's taken to a literal extreme as some subjects reject Extremis and violently explode in a ball of energy, turning into human bombs.
* ''Film/{{Serenity}}'': [[spoiler:The Operative activates River's programming to make her start a massacre so that he can find her.]]
* [[spoiler:The protagonists and Yatsu]] in the ''Film/TetsuoTheIronMan'' sequels.
* Numerous examples in the ''Film/XMenFilmSeries'' with various attempts to weaponize mutants as part of the U.S. military's "Weapon X" and their successor [[EvilInc Transigen]].
** Wolverine's adamantium skeleton is the result of Colonel William Stryker trying to turn Logan into a military weapon, as shown in ''Film/XMenOriginsWolverine''. This ended up backfiring when Logan overheard them talking about wiping his mind and broke free, so he used [[spoiler:Wade Wilson's body]] instead.
** In ''Film/X2XMenUnited'', Stryker has turned various other mutants, such as Lady Deathstrike, into his personal foot soldiers, using a mind control serum harvested from his own psychic son to control them.
** In ''Film/{{Logan}}'', Dr. Zander Rice has been performing illegal experiments on child mutants cloned from earlier specimens, including X-23, Logan's "daughter". They tried killing them all off when they decided the experiment had run its course, which caused all of them to escape from Transigen.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]
* ''Literature/AuroraCycle'': [[spoiler:Auri O'Malley was [[TouchedByVorlons transformed]] during her time as a HumanPopsicle in the Fold into the Trigger for a weapon left behind by the [[{{Precursors}} Eshvaren]], intended to combat the [[BotanicalAbomination Ra'haam]]. Among other things, she has powerful PsychicPowers, most prominently [[MindOverMatter telekinesis]], although the full extent of her power is currently unknown. She did, however, turn a highly dangerous predator into LudicrousGibs.]]
* A variety of people in ''Literature/ACertainMagicalIndex''.
** The level 5 espers get this to varying degrees. Accelerator, Kakine, and Mugino are the big ones. Kakine and Mugino are the leaders of powerful black ops groups, where they serve in the "blaster" role. Accelerator is in many ways ''literally'' treated as a weapon, especially once he needs a special device to use his powers, which his superiors can turn off remotely if they don't like what he's doing.
** The Sisters Project started as an attempt to clone a level 5 ([[spoiler:Mikoto Misaka]]) for this purpose. When that didn't work, it was recycled into the Radio Noise project, which created a HiveMind of 20,000 espers for use as a military. That was scrapped as well, and the project turned into [[spoiler:LevelGrinding fodder for Accelerator, so that he could become a more effective weapon]]. Then it turns out ''that'' was a smokescreen for the ''actual'' purpose, [[spoiler:which involved using about 10,000 of them to blanket the world in AIM fields once triggered under the right circumstances would make it impossible to use magic. Yes, they made double the necessary numbers and killed half ''as a diversion'']].
* This is the purpose of the Winter and Summer Knights in ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles''. TheFairFolk empower a mortal giving them access to special versions of ice and fire respectively as well as UninhibitedMusclePower. In return, they have to act as weapons to destroy the enemies of their court. Dresden compares them to living missiles; powerful but easily replaceable.
* ''Literature/IntoTheBrokenLands'': Nonee, a.k.a. "the weapon", is a LightningBruiser with SuperStrength, SuperToughness, augmented senses, and a magical keyword to [[IncapableOfDisobeying compel her obedience]]. A [[WithGreatPowerComesGreatInsanity power-mad]] mage originally [[ArtificialHuman created her]] as a bodyguard with {{Biomanipulation}} and a ''lot'' of donor mothers. By the time of the book, she's settled in a friendly community, but still has to contend with those who treat her as a tool.
* The villain of the ''Literature/NewSeriesAdventures'' novel ''[[Recap/NewSeriesAdventuresSilhouette Silhouette]]'' is an ArmsDealer who creates Human Weapons, enhancing their talents to become PsychicPowers and then mind-controlling them through {{Power Crystal}}s. His ultimate weapon was turning a man who was mildly [[TheEmpath empathic]] into an EmotionBomb capable of unleashing a HatePlague on London.
* Wardens from ''Literature/ThePowderMageTrilogy'' are ordinary people warped with sorcery into nigh- invulnerable juggernauts of destruction which can take on entire squads of infantry and are designed specifically to combat the titular Powder Mages. They are however not very intelligent and can still be taken down by a lucky shot to the eye or just by being swarmed and stabbed to death. The later books also give us black wardens, who were instead created from Powder Mages and possess much of their abilities, making them even deadlier.
* ''Literature/TheStormlightArchive'': Szeth-son-son-Valano, Truthless of Shinovar, also known as [[RedBaron The Assassin in White]], is one of these. Among his people, warriors and soldiers are despised and treated like slaves, and [[GravityMaster Szeth]] is an [[PersonOfMassDestruction exceptionally]] [[OneManArmy powerful]] case. But as a Truthless, he is still bound to obey anyone who possesses his Oathstone.
* The eponymous ''Literature/VioletEvergarden'' was one of these. She was too young to be a soldier in the Leidenshaftlich army, so she was officially a Human Weapon owned by Major Bougainvillea. The story is about her growing out of this.
* The Asha'man in ''Literature/TheWheelOfTime'' are trained this way, to use their [[FunctionalMagic channeling]] for hugely destructive purposes, because of a dire need to get powerful soldiers in time for the Last Battle, but also because the [[PowerAtAPrice price of their power]] drastically shortens their lifespan. Rand's instruction to the man placed in charge of the Black Tower is, "Make them weapons." He later changes his mind, sending in a messenger to tell them, "We're not weapons. We're men." This has its part in causing them to rally around him.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
* ''Series/BabylonFive'': Vorlons use telepaths for their war with the Shadows. Most of the telepaths are of the regular "read thoughts, cause headache" kind, and their only combat use is to disrupt the link Shadow battleships had with their pilots. However, (at least) one telepath, [[spoiler:Lyta Alexander]], is upgraded and becomes [[PersonOfMassDestruction the living equivalent of a]] DoomsdayDevice. Thankfully, [[InformedAbility we never learn what exactly they're capable of]].
* In ''Series/DarkAngel'', Max and the other X-5s are treated as though they are biological warbots rather than people.
* [[spoiler:Irisa]] of ''Series/{{Defiance}}'' is something like this, but the exact implications are not revealed in the first season finale. Season 2 expands on this -- while [[spoiler:Irisa]] ''is'' extremely dangerous thanks to the nanotech in her body, her true purpose is to [[spoiler:act as a WetwareCPU for the [[AIIsACrapshoot Kaziri]], enabling it to destroy and reshape the planet]].
-->'''[[CreepyChild Girl]]:''' You must become.\\
'''[[spoiler:Irisa]]:''' Become what?\\
'''Girl:''' My weapon.
* [[spoiler:River Tam]] from ''Series/{{Firefly}}'' was engineered to kill people on order. Subverted because the crew of the ''Serenity'' seem to treat her rather well.
* ''Series/GameOfThrones'': Season 6 reveals that [[spoiler:the children of the forest turned humans into white walkers as a weapon against the First Men]]. Unfortunately for everyone, they TurnedAgainstTheirMasters.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'':
** Eversor Assassins are essentially human weapons of mass destruction massively modified with augmetics and drug injection systems. They're kept in stasis at all times, and are mentally programmed with various targets for their next mission. Once activated, they will attempt to kill their assigned targets, but will also kill every living thing they see along the way, exploding upon death. Even once their mission is over, they won't stop looking for things to kill until their handlers show up and shut them down with a code word.
** The Eccliesiarchy also has Arco-Flagellants, which are heretics that have been [[UnwillingRoboticisation forcibly converted into killing machines]] as a form of punishment and [[GoodIsNotNice redemption]].
** On the Chaos side of things, we have the Obliterators and Mutilators: walking, biomechanical murder machines that can grow guns and bladed weapons out of their bodies respectively. All thanks to a cybernetic [[TheVirus virus]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* ''VideoGame/BlazBlueContinuumShift'' has the Murakumo Units.
* ''VideoGame/BoxxyQuestTheGatheringStorm'': Cornelia is an ArtificialHuman, but she still looks and acts human enough to count. She was designed by her creator to be a heartless killing machine, and while he failed ''miserably'' with the "heartless" part of that (she almost immediately defects to the heroes and becomes an {{Adorkable}} CuddleBug), he most certainly ''didn't'' fail with the "killing machine" part. Many of her abilities are absolute {{Game Breaker}}s, especially once she's been fully upgraded with one of her [[PowersAsPrograms Drives]].
* ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquerRedAlert3'':
** Yuriko Omega is a young girl with immense psychic powers (as in, snatch a massive bomber or literal flying fortress from the sky in an instant, or crush a building in seconds, or levitate a tank the ''size'' of a building while crushing it, or instantly kill infantry near her by screaming). Not only that, but she can be cloned to power a superweapon or be used by multiple commanders. The original is even stronger (able to reflect all damage, mind control half a dozen enemies into willing bodyguards, or levitating objects and people to crash them into other targets, destroying both), and getting revenge on the people who put her through the training that gave her her powers is the focus of her mini-campaign in ''Uprising''.
** Desolators are terminally ill patients given mind-wipes and remade into cybernetic nightmares that pump hideous chemicals to melt their enemies. Their implants let them go without food or sleep... for about three years, which is when the cybernetic implants break down.
* Shriekers in ''VideoGame/DivinityOriginalSinII'' are former Sourcerers the Magisters captured, purged of Source (which also wipes their personalities), crucified, and "modified" to drain Source from others. The Magisters being willing to do this is one of the big hints that something is ''very'' wrong with the order.
* The assassin Argent from ''VideoGame/DragonAgeInquisition''[='=]s multiplayer was trained with this mentality, simply serving whoever wields her and has no loyalty besides.
* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI'', Kefka controls Terra with a [[HypnoTrinket Slave Crown]] so that he can exploit her rare magical abilities for destructive power.
* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXVI'' has the Dominants, humans capable of evoking the power of an [[PhysicalGod Eikon]] and commanding enough magical power to essentially make them living, breathing magical WMD[=s=]. Some nations of Valisthea are more than happy to exploit them as such.
* ''VideoGame/MassEffect2'': He's not ''human'', but this is how the drell Thane Krios views himself and his chosen profession.
-->''"An assassin is a weapon. A weapon doesn't choose to kill; the one who wields it does."''
* ''VideoGame/MetalGear'' has this as the main theme. The plots of the games usually revolve around the protagonist ''and'' their direct opposition being manipulated by politicians, conspiracies, and other forces, and being treated as expendable tools with no goal or aspirations of their own.
** ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid4GunsOfThePatriots'' takes this trope to its logical conclusion with the SOP system, where the economy has become utterly dependent on constant war, and nanomachines ensure that the soldiers used are utterly under control. Wars aren't fought for ideology, resources, or nationalism, but out of routine, and soldiers find themselves trapped fighting in conflicts they don't understand, for causes they don't believe in.
** ''VideoGame/MetalGearRisingRevengeance'' plays with this recurring theme by having the main characters be as close to ''literal'' human weapons as possible (they are cyborgs), but having the protagonist go completely OffTheRails and acting as a OneManArmy VigilanteMan SpannerInTheWorks. It is, however, identical to the other installments in the series, in that the final boss's plan usually revolves around imposing an aversion of this trope, but hypocritically/paradoxically/tragically necessitates playing it straight as a means to get to that stage.
* ''VideoGame/PrayerOfTheFaithless'': After Mia and Aeyr finally meet up again, Luke calls the program to create Infused, a program to make "living weapons", but since they're all retain human form, it's this trope.
* ''Franchise/ResidentEvil'':
** [[BigBad Albert Wesker]] is ultimately revealed to have been this, having been manipulated since birth to become the superhuman weapon of [[GreaterScopeVillain Ozwell E. Spencer]]. It worked perfectly, but with only one problem: Wesker realized there was no actual reason he had to take orders from a [[DarkLordOnLifeSupport crippled old man in a wheelchair]] and [[TurnedAgainstTheirMasters did something about that]].
** According to [[AllInTheManual supplementary materials]], the Ustanak in ''VideoGame/ResidentEvil6'' started out as such, being a human born with a very frail body who willingly subjected himself to experimentation to become a human weapon if it meant having a powerful body. He got what he wanted (oh ''boy'', he got [[ImplacableMan what he wanted]]), but [[WasOnceAMan he can hardly be called "human" anymore]]...
* Many of the characters in both ''VideoGame/{{SUGURI}}'' and ''VideoGame/{{SORA}}'' are this, having had their bodies augmented to go fight in wars. The most notable examples are Sora and Nath (who were both given the title of "Ultimate Weapon"), and [[spoiler:Star Breaker, who is pretty much PersonOfMassDestruction incarnate]]. The one exception however is Suguri; while she may have had her body altered and is armed with enough weaponry to take on an invading army, her true purpose is to restore the planet after it was led to ruin by the ForeverWar. Presumably those weapons must be for self-defense purposes...
* Aliasse in ''VideoGame/ValkyriaChroniclesII'' has been raised by Dr. Foerster to become a weapon, whose only purpose is to destroy Gallia's enemies. [[spoiler:Once she becomes humanized, thanks to her interactions with Class G, Dr. Foerster throws her away like thrash (much to Avan and his crew's anger). Because, after all, if a person raised to be a weapon began to learn concepts like love, empathy, and strive for living, they're bound to be a liability if they are sent into warzones and ordered to annihilate the opposition.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Webcomics]]
* The UsefulNotes/{{Furry|Fandom}} Webcomic ''Webcomic/Generation17'' by Ethan Qix (on extended hiatus since 2014) opens with FunnyAnimal characters called furrans kept caged in an automated facility. These furrans all have a cybernetic implant that will grant them extraordinary abilities. Once they escape from their containment, they witness a battle between mobile robot guns, a GiantMecha, and a huge AttackAnimal. It's clear the escapees were destined to become this trope.
* ''Webcomic/GenocideMan'': The titular characters are designed to take on small armies, even without the use of their [[SyntheticPlague genocide case]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Original]]
* ''Website/SCPFoundation'':
** [[http://www.scp-wiki.net/scp-001 SCP-001]] ("[[http://www.scp-wiki.net/djkaktus-s-proposal djkaktus's Proposal]] - The Children") had their souls replaced by alien entities, turning them into {{Reality Warper}}s who could destroy a target at any distance away on command.
** In some canons, the Foundation's then primary funder, [[{{Eagleland}} US General Bowe]], convinced them to create MTF Omega-7, "Pandora's Box". The project intended to use humanoid [=SCPs=] like 073-2 "Able" and 105 "Iris" as Foundation agents. The project went pretty well, until Able got bored and killed the entire task force except for Iris. [[http://www.scp-wiki.net/resurrection O5-10 is currently looking to get the band back together...]]
[[/folder]]
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