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Characters / Do It For Me

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The small cast of Do It For Me. Due to the short length and nature of the game, spoilers are unmarked.

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    The Protagonist/Boyfriend 
A boy who loves his girlfriend. He collects hearts and kills Wooffles because his girlfriend asks him to.
  • Ax-Crazy: Especially in the "Psychopath" ending, where he didn't buy his girlfriend's manipulations, and committed the massacre because he wanted to, even killing his girlfriend himself.
  • The Bad Guy Wins: In the "Blind Love" ending, he kills the students alongside his girlfriend, and in the "Psychopath" ending, he kills her too.
  • Character Development: In most routes, he is a Love Martyr who kills students because his girlfriend manipulated him into doing so; but in the "Psychopath" ending, he takes charge of the massacre for himself, and in the Golden Ending, he refuses and decides to end their toxic relationship by turning her in to the police.
  • The Dragon: To the girlfriend in three of the endings, as he kills the students on her behalf (though in the "Psychopath" ending, he betrays and kills her).
  • Even Evil Has Loved Ones: Despite being willing to kill innocent students, he does it because his girlfriend pressured him into it, and he truly loves her. Unfortunately for him, she does not return his affection.
  • Eviler than Thou: The "Psychopath" ending has him mock and kill his girlfriend for thinking she was in control when he killed the students of his own free will.
  • Fall Guy: The "Puppet" ending indicates this is why his girlfriend needs him to kill the students at the school for her instead of doing it herself. Once the police arrive, she immediately pretends to be a hostage about to be killed and gets the boyfriend arrested in her place.
  • In Love with Your Carnage: In the "Blind Love" ending he expresses how much he loves her when he sees her getting a gun and heading to the teacher's lounge so there are no witnesses.
  • Love Martyr: With the exception of the "Psychopath" ending, where he kills her and goes on the massacre for his own reasons, he loves the girlfriend despite her being Ax-Crazy and a Manipulative Bitch to him who wants him to kill innocent teenagers, and he complies in two of the endings. She certainly does not love him back, as she lets him take the fall in one ending and kills him for refusing to comply in another. His Character Development in the Golden Ending is him letting go of his love, realizing that she sees him as a tool, and turning her in to the police.
  • The Sociopath: In the appropriately titled "Psychopath" ending, he not only kills the students, but turns out to have done so because he wanted to, not because the girlfriend told him to; he then kills the girlfriend. Averted in the other endings, where he is a Love Martyr.
  • Spree Killer: In three of the endings, he kills fifteen students in a single day with a knife. Two of the endings have him go on to kill more, one for his girlfriend, one for himself.
  • The Starscream: In the "Psychopath" ending, he kills the girlfriend, who had been using him to kill the other students, because he does not want her to control him.
  • Teens Are Monsters: He and his girlfriend, a couple of potential school shooters, are high-school age.
  • Unholy Matrimony: With the girlfriend in "Blind Love", as he is fully in love with her and happily kills students alongside her. Subverted in the other endings, as either she throws him under the bus or he kills her/has her arrested.
  • Unwitting Pawn: In most endings, he is being used by the girlfriend to commit the massacre, and the "Puppet" ending indicates that the reason she doesn’t just do it herself is so that she can use him as a Fall Guy. Subverted in the "Psychopath" ending, where he did it because he wanted to, and kills the girlfriend to show that he is not under her control.
  • Villain Protagonist: In three of the endings, he becomes a Spree Killer who kills the students at his school because his girlfriend told him to. Even more so in the "Psychopath" ending, where he did so because he wanted to, and kills the girlfriend afterwards.
  • Yandere: In "Puppet" and "Blind Love", he goes on a killing spree because his girlfriend told him to, and the latter has him express how much he loves her as he kills the students.
  • You Have Outlived Your Usefulness: In the "Psychopath" ending, he kills the girlfriend after he has killed the other students because he does not need her.

    The Girlfriend 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/img_3477.jpeg
The one who sent the protagonist on his journey.
  • Asshole Victim: She ends up being one of the many victims of her boyfriend in the "Psychopath" ending. But given how horrible she is and what she planned, killing her is probably the only good thing the protagonist did in that ending.
  • Ax-Crazy: She manipulates the boyfriend into killing their fellow students for her own amusement.
  • The Bad Guy Wins: She successfully perpetrates a massacre in her school, except in the "Awake" ending, where the protagonist stops the massacre before she can start it and the "Psychopath" ending, where the protagonist killed the students for his own amusement so he kills her afterwards and gets away with it.
  • Big Bad: She masterminds the school massacre with the boyfriend as her muscle.
  • The Blank: The girlfriend already has no eyes, but in the endings where you break out of her influence, her Psychotic Smirk completely vanishes, likely to show how nonexistent her humanity really is.
  • The Corrupter: To the protagonist, her boyfriend who she tries to manipulate into killing innocent students. In the "Blind Love" end, she has completely corrupted him into becoming Ax-Crazy like her. It is also suggested that the protagonist in the "Psychopath" ending, who murders the students because he wanted to, became the titular Psychopath because of her nudging.
  • Death by Irony: In the "Psychopath" ending, manipulating the protagonist into killing the students backfires on her when he turns on her and has become so addicted to killing that he makes her his next victim.
  • Didn't Think This Through: In the "Psychopath" ending, she evidently didn't consider that someone crazy enough to kill his classmates on a whim might just be crazy enough to kill her too.
  • Faux Affably Evil: Plays the part of a loving girlfriend while manipulating her boyfriend into massacring their classmates for her sadistic pleasure.
  • For the Evulz: The only motive she seems to have for masterminding the massacre of her fellow students is for her own sadistic pleasure, given how much enjoyment she is shown having doing it. In the "Innocent Love" ending, the protagonist even calls her "a person whose only goal is to see people suffer and die".
  • Informed Attractiveness: The player keeps harping on his girlfriend's "beautiful eyes", but she has none, because they're constantly hidden. This is likely a metaphor for how he, in his delusion, sees humanity where there is none.
  • Jerkass: Fitting for a sociopath trying to feign love, the girlfriend is a controlling bitch.
  • Karma Houdini: In the "Puppet" ending, the police mistake the girlfriend for another victim, and she gets away scot-free while the player is arrested. It's also never stated if she receives any comeuppance in "Blind Love" or "Innocent Love", though it's likely seeing how she's probably not gonna get away with a school shooting.
  • Love-Interest Traitor: The girlfriend betrays the player in the "Puppet" and "Innocent Love" endings, while the player betrays the girlfriend in the "Psychopath" ending.
  • Manipulative Bitch: She manipulates her boyfriend into helping her massacre other students, though how successful she is depends on the ending.
  • Psychotic Smirk: The girlfriend has one by default, yet ironically she looks even creepier without it.
  • Rose-Haired Sweetie: Subverted. The girlfriend and her pink hair makes her seem like a bubbly anime girl at first, but she's in fact a psychotic maniac.
  • The Sociopath: A manipulative and Ax-Crazy murderer who fakes love for her boyfriend while really just using him as a pawn to kill people for her.
  • Slashed Throat: In the "Psychopath" ending, the protagonist kills her this way.
  • Spree Killer: By proxy, as she manipulated her boyfriend into killing fifteen students in one day, and in two endings, she goes on to kill some herself with a gun. Averted in the "Awake" ending, but only because the protagonist turns her in to the police before she can carry out her plan.
  • Teens Are Monsters: She and her boyfriend, a couple of potential school shooters, are high-school age.
  • Unholy Matrimony: With the protagonist in "Blind Love", as he is fully in love with her and happily kills students alongside her. Subverted in the other endings, as either she throws him under the bus or he kills her/has her arrested.
  • Wounded Gazelle Gambit: In the "Puppet" ending, she yells "PLEASE, DON’T DO IT" when the police arrive to trick them into thinking she is about to be killed by the protagonist, getting him arrested for the massacre that she planned and tricked him into doing in the first place.
  • You Have Outlived Your Usefulness: In the "Puppet" ending, after having manipulated the protagonist into killing innocent students, she frames him for the massacre while making herself look like a victim, and in the "Innocent Love" ending, when he refuses but will not turn her in because he loves her, she kills him before going in to kill the students herself.

    The Wuffles/Wooffles 
Black, armless block monsters that the protagonist sets out to kill.
  • Cute Monster: The world is such a Sugar Bowl that even the "monsters" you're supposed to kill are adorable.
  • Disc-One Final Boss: They are initially the antagonists as the enemies that the protagonist must kill to win the love of his girlfriend, but it turns out that they are regular high-schoolers and the girlfriend is the real villain.
  • Hero Antagonist: They are the enemies of the game, as touching them kills the protagonist, but they are really ordinary high-school students who mean the protagonist no harm.
  • Inconsistent Spelling: The original version (showcased in a screenshot on the game page) calls them Wuffles, but in the updated version, they are called Wooffles.

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