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* In the ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'' novel ''[[Recap/AnimorphsVisser Visser]]'', it is revealed that the [[AlienInvasion Yeerk]] Visser One [[spoiler:has maternal emotions for two human children. She denies this when on trial for treason, and is told to prove it by killing one of them. She is able to stall for just long enough, that the Animorphs attack making this a moot test. Although, it's implied she really would have done it.]]

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* In the ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'' novel ''[[Recap/AnimorphsVisser Visser]]'', it is revealed that the [[AlienInvasion Yeerk]] Visser One [[spoiler:has maternal emotions for two human children. She denies this when on trial for treason, and is told to prove it by killing one of them. She is able to stall for just long enough, enough that the Animorphs attack attack, making this a moot test. Although, test, but it's implied that she really would have done it.]]it]].



* In ''Literature/HarryPotterAndTheHalfBloodPrince'', Snape decides with a horde of Death Eaters bearing witness to do what Draco Malfoy cannot bring himself to do: kill the helpless, wandless Dumbledore. Snape's response? [[spoiler:"[[OneHitKill Avada Kedavra!"]] Of course, it [[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheDeathlyHallows later]] turns out that Dumbledore was terminally ill and [[ThanatosGambit arranged for Snape to kill him so that he could gain Voldemort's complete trust]].]]

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* In ''Literature/HarryPotterAndTheHalfBloodPrince'', Snape decides with a horde of Death Eaters bearing witness to do what Draco Malfoy cannot bring himself to do: kill the helpless, wandless Dumbledore. Snape's response? [[spoiler:"[[OneHitKill Avada Kedavra!"]] Kedavra!]]" Of course, it [[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheDeathlyHallows later]] turns out that Dumbledore was terminally ill and [[ThanatosGambit arranged for Snape to kill him so that he could gain Voldemort's complete trust]].]]

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* In essence, a sword variant of this happens in ''Manga/{{Bleach}}''. [[spoiler:To truly convince Aizen that he's totally loyal ''and'' to make sure she stays out of the equation where Aizen can't kill her like anybody else who goes up against him, Gin Ichimaru stabs his OnlyFriend and MoralityPet Rangiku in the chest and leaves her bleeding on the roof of a building. However, he specifically gave her a wound shallow enough for her to survive and only told Aizen that he'd disposed of her. He double crosses Aizen not long afterward.]]
* [[spoiler:Rena Mizuhashi a.k.a. Kir]] from ''Manga/CaseClosed'' has such a lousy luck that she had to do this ''twice'' -- first to [[spoiler:her ''father'' and partner in their [[TheMole mole mission]] in the Black Organization, Ethan Hondou]], and later to [[spoiler:her fellow mole Shuichi Akai (though he is later revealed to have survived)]].
* In ''Manga/CeresCelestialLegend'', Aya Mikage's father is forced by her grandfather to shoot her to keep the family safe from the curse. He instead tries to shoot ''his'' own father, but the gun isn't loaded. [[spoiler:Both die anyway.]]
* One arc in ''Anime/DarkerThanBlack'' has the Syndicate ordering Huang to kill a Contractor he was once romantically involved with (and betrayed by) in order to test his loyalty while getting rid of a potential information leak -- with orders given to Hei and Mao to kill ''him'' if he doesn't follow through. [[spoiler:Neither party can bring themselves to do it, and the Contractor in question ends up pulling a HeroicSacrifice so Huang would be spared.]]



* In ''Anime/SailorMoon'', [[FakeDefector fake defectors]] Sailor Uranus and Neptune are asked by the BigBad Sailor Galaxia to kill Sailor Pluto and Saturn by removing their Star Seeds. Which, in a subversion, they ''do''. After that, when they try to attack Galaxia herself, it doesn't work because she doesn't ''have'' a Star Seed because she removed it long ago. Uranus and Neptune themselves get offed instead.
* ''Literature/FullMetalPanic''. When one of Gauron's mooks has Kurz Weber pinned down, he suggests Kurz surrender and let himself be taken to the BigBad. "If you shoot one of the crew in front of him, he'll let you join us." Kurz decides being a backstabbing mook wouldn't go with his cool image, and kills the mook instead.
* One arc in ''Anime/DarkerThanBlack'' has the Syndicate ordering Huang to kill a Contractor he was once romantically involved with (and betrayed by) in order to test his loyalty while getting rid of a potential information leak -- with orders given to Hei and Mao to kill ''him'' if he doesn't follow through. [[spoiler:Neither party can bring themselves to do it, and the Contractor in question ends up pulling a HeroicSacrifice so Huang would be spared.]]



* ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'':
** Uchiha Itachi, leaving aside the whole parricide thing, negotiates some of these rather smoothly in his first real-time appearance. Specifically, he beats the crap out of and tortures several people who he ''would'' have killed if he'd had to, but would rather not, and one who he definitely wouldn't have. He doesn't kill anybody and gets away with it, looking like a MagnificentBastard. Not giving a damn covereth a multitude of mercies. [[spoiler:Of course, Madara already knows that he's a FakeDefector.]]
** Earlier in the series, [[spoiler:he is asked to kill his entire family to prove that he is committed to ending the potential civil war. Unlike in most cases, he's not a fake defector and willingly goes through with it, in exchange for sparing Sasuke]].



* In ''Manga/CeresCelestialLegend'', Aya Mikage's father is forced by her grandfather to shoot her to keep the family safe from the curse. He instead tries to shoot ''his'' own father, but the gun isn't loaded. [[spoiler: Both die anyway.]]
* ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'':
** Uchiha Itachi, leaving aside the whole parricide thing, negotiates some of these rather smoothly in his first real-time appearance. Specifically, he beats the crap out of and tortures several people who he ''would'' have killed if he'd had to, but would rather not, and one who he definitely wouldn't have. Doesn't kill anybody. And gets away with it, looking like a MagnificentBastard. Not giving a damn covereth a multitude of mercies. [[spoiler: Of course, Madara already knows he's a FakeDefector.]]
** Earlier in the show [[spoiler: He is asked to kill his entire family to prove that he is committed to ending the potential civil war. Unlike in most cases, he's not a fake defector and willingly goes through with it, in exchange for sparing Sasuke]]
* Nicholas Wolfwood from ''Manga/{{Trigun}}'' is not British, so he just calls Vash his "buddy" and his "pal" [[spoiler:despite being TheMole]], and in the anime the beardless apple-fetishist version of Original Chapel turns up in the episode after he [[IDidWhatIHadToDo shoots Zazie the Beast]] and tells him [[spoiler: his orders to protect Vash are off; now he gets to join the parade of those assigned to kill him. And by the way, he's [[YourApprovalFillsMeWithShame been promoted]] to full Gung-Ho Gun.]] It doesn't work out. [[spoiler: But at least his [[DiedStandingUp death scene]] is cool!]]
* [[spoiler: Rena Mizuhashi a.k.a. Kir]] from ''Manga/CaseClosed'' has such a lousy luck that she had to do this ''twice''. First, to [[spoiler: her ''father'' and partner in their [[TheMole mole mission]] in the Black Organization, Ethan Hondou.]] And later, to [[spoiler: her fellow Mole Shuichi Akai. (Though Akai is revealed later to have survived).]]
* In essence, a sword variant of this happens in ''Manga/{{Bleach}}''. [[spoiler: To truly convince Aizen that he's totally loyal ''and'' to make sure she stays out of the equation where Aizen can't kill her like anybody else who goes up against him, Gin Ichimaru stabs his OnlyFriend and MoralityPet Rangiku in the chest and leaves her bleeding on the roof of a building. However, he specifically gave her a wound shallow enough for her to survive and only told Aizen that he'd disposed of her. He double crosses Aizen not long afterward.]]

to:

* In ''Manga/CeresCelestialLegend'', Aya Mikage's father is forced by her grandfather to shoot her to keep the family safe from the curse. He instead tries to shoot ''his'' own father, but the gun isn't loaded. [[spoiler: Both die anyway.]]
* ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'':
** Uchiha Itachi, leaving aside the whole parricide thing, negotiates some of these rather smoothly in his first real-time appearance. Specifically, he beats the crap out of
''Anime/SailorMoon'', {{Fake Defector}}s Sailor Uranus and tortures several people who he ''would'' have killed if he'd had to, but would rather not, and one who he definitely wouldn't have. Doesn't kill anybody. And gets away with it, looking like a MagnificentBastard. Not giving a damn covereth a multitude of mercies. [[spoiler: Of course, Madara already knows he's a FakeDefector.]]
** Earlier in the show [[spoiler: He is
Neptune are asked by the BigBad Sailor Galaxia to kill his entire family to prove that he is committed to ending the potential civil war. Unlike in most cases, he's not a fake defector Sailor Pluto and willingly goes through with it, Saturn by removing their Star Seeds. Which, in exchange for sparing Sasuke]]
a subversion, they ''do''. After that, when they try to attack Galaxia herself, it doesn't work because she doesn't ''have'' a Star Seed because she removed it long ago. Uranus and Neptune themselves get offed instead.
* Nicholas Wolfwood from ''Manga/{{Trigun}}'' is not British, so he just calls Vash his "buddy" and his "pal" [[spoiler:despite being TheMole]], and in the anime the beardless apple-fetishist version of Original Chapel turns up in the episode after he [[IDidWhatIHadToDo shoots Zazie the Beast]] and tells him [[spoiler: his [[spoiler:his orders to protect Vash are off; now he gets to join the parade of those assigned to kill him. And by the way, he's [[YourApprovalFillsMeWithShame been promoted]] to full Gung-Ho Gun.]] Gun]]. It doesn't work out. [[spoiler: But [[spoiler:But at least his [[DiedStandingUp death scene]] is cool!]]
* [[spoiler: Rena Mizuhashi a.k.a. Kir]] from ''Manga/CaseClosed'' has such a lousy luck that she had to do this ''twice''. First, to [[spoiler: her ''father'' and partner in their [[TheMole mole mission]] in the Black Organization, Ethan Hondou.]] And later, to [[spoiler: her fellow Mole Shuichi Akai. (Though Akai is revealed later to have survived).]]
* In essence, a sword variant of this happens in ''Manga/{{Bleach}}''. [[spoiler: To truly convince Aizen that he's totally loyal ''and'' to make sure she stays out of the equation where Aizen can't kill her like anybody else who goes up against him, Gin Ichimaru stabs his OnlyFriend and MoralityPet Rangiku in the chest and leaves her bleeding on the roof of a building. However, he specifically gave her a wound shallow enough for her to survive and only told Aizen that he'd disposed of her. He double crosses Aizen not long afterward.]]
cool!]]



* ''ComicBook/{{Robin|1993}}'': Subverted when Robin and ComicBook/{{Batgirl|2000}} start watching over Bludhaven, they attempt to take out the seeds of the Penguin's organization, and they end up faking a fight; Batgirl lets him win in such a way that makes it look like she's dead. The Penguin isn't convinced, and tells Robin to shoot her "corpse". He does. She doesn't react. The Penguin lets down his guard, and Batgirl [[WaifFu springs into motion]]. Later, when Batgirl and Robin have escaped:

to:

* ''ComicBook/{{Robin|1993}}'': ''ComicBook/GIJoeIDW'': In the ''G.I. Joe: COBRA'' series, Chuckles is asked to kill his lover Jinx, while undercover. [[spoiler:He actually does it. The series goes out of the way to paint G.I. Joe as almost as vicious as Cobra, at times.]]
* ''ComicBook/GreenArrow'': When Emiko Queen is seemingly forced to betray Green Arrow at her mother's behest, she's asked to disfigure a BoundAndGagged ComicBook/BlackCanary to prove that she's no longer loyal to the heroes. This proves to be too much for Emiko, which leads her to reveal that [[FakeDefector her defection was a ruse]].
* Subverted in ''ComicBook/LesInnommables'': An American scientist claims he has reversed Chinese brainwashing techniques and proposes to demonstrate in front of high-ranking officers. He gives one of the two Chinese prisoners a gun, and tells him to shoot the other. The man immediately perks up and empties the gun... into the generals. It turns out that [[RacialFaceBlindness the gun had been given to the wrong man]].
* ''ComicBook/ThePunisher'': In one story, the Punisher is attempting to infiltrate a South American drug cartel. He is handed a rifle and told to shoot a captured DEA agent. The Punisher instead tries to turn the gun on the drug boss, only to find that it has been rigged not to fire.
* ''ComicBook/Robin1993'':
Subverted when Robin and ComicBook/{{Batgirl|2000}} start watching over Bludhaven, they attempt to take out the seeds of the Penguin's organization, and they end up faking a fight; Batgirl lets him win in such a way that makes it look like she's dead. The Penguin isn't convinced, and tells Robin to shoot her "corpse". He does. She doesn't react. The Penguin lets down his guard, and Batgirl [[WaifFu springs into motion]]. Later, when Batgirl and Robin have escaped:



'''Batgirl''': [[TrainingFromHell My... dad and I played something like that.]]
* In IDW's ''[[ComicBook/GIJoeIDW G.I. Joe: COBRA]]'' series, Chuckles is asked to kill his lover Jinx, while undercover. [[spoiler:He actually does it. The series goes out of the way to paint G.I. Joe as almost as vicious as Cobra, at times.]]
* In one story, ComicBook/ThePunisher is attempting to infiltrate a South American drug cartel. He is handed a rifle and told to shoot a captured DEA agent. The Punisher instead tries to turn the gun on the drug boss, only to find it has been rigged not to fire.
* Subverted in ''ComicBook/LesInnommables'': An American scientist claims he has reversed Chinese brainwashing techniques and proposes to demonstrate in front of high-ranking officers. He gives one of the two Chinese prisoners a gun, and tells him to shoot the other. The man immediately perks up and empties the gun... into the generals. [[RacialFaceBlindness Turns out the gun had been given to the wrong man.]]
* When Emiko Queen is seemingly forced to betray Comicbook/GreenArrow at her mother's behest, she's asked to disfigure a BoundAndGagged Comicbook/BlackCanary to prove that she's no longer loyal to the heroes. This proves to be too much for Emiko, which leads her to reveal that [[FakeDefector her defection was a ruse]].

to:

'''Batgirl''': '''Batgirl:''' [[TrainingFromHell My... dad and I played something like that.]]
* In IDW's ''[[ComicBook/GIJoeIDW G.I. Joe: COBRA]]'' series, Chuckles is asked to kill his lover Jinx, while undercover. [[spoiler:He actually does it. The series goes out of the way to paint G.I. Joe as almost as vicious as Cobra, at times.]]
* In one story, ComicBook/ThePunisher is attempting to infiltrate a South American drug cartel. He is handed a rifle and told to shoot a captured DEA agent. The Punisher instead tries to turn the gun on the drug boss, only to find it has been rigged not to fire.
* Subverted in ''ComicBook/LesInnommables'': An American scientist claims he has reversed Chinese brainwashing techniques and proposes to demonstrate in front of high-ranking officers. He gives one of the two Chinese prisoners a gun, and tells him to shoot the other. The man immediately perks up and empties the gun... into the generals. [[RacialFaceBlindness Turns out the gun had been given to the wrong man.]]
* When Emiko Queen is seemingly forced to betray Comicbook/GreenArrow at her mother's behest, she's asked to disfigure a BoundAndGagged Comicbook/BlackCanary to prove that she's no longer loyal to the heroes. This proves to be too much for Emiko, which leads her to reveal that [[FakeDefector her defection was a ruse]].
]]



* ''Fanfic/TheSecretReturnOfAlexMack'': Double agent [[spoiler: Jo Lupo]] proves her loyalty to the Collective by stabbing Riley Finn in the back. [[spoiler: Or so they think. Jo knows that exposure to the T-virus has given Finn a decent HealingFactor, and being LeftForDead gives him more freedom of action.]]

to:

* ''Fanfic/TheSecretReturnOfAlexMack'': Double agent [[spoiler: Jo [[spoiler:Jo Lupo]] proves her loyalty to the Collective by stabbing Riley Finn in the back. [[spoiler: Or [[spoiler:Or so they think. Jo knows that exposure to the T-virus has given Finn a decent HealingFactor, and being LeftForDead gives him more freedom of action.]]



[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
* Near the end of ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyondReturnOfTheJoker'''s infamous [[WhamEpisode Wham Flashback]], the Joker manages to smash Batman up, even so far as to shank him in the leg and send him plummeting to the ground, where he picks ol' Bruce up and tosses a BangFlagGun to Robin so he can "deliver the punchline". An interesting twist is that Robin ''isn't'' actually trying to infiltrate the Joker's organization; the Joker has kidnapped Robin, and spent weeks [[ColdBloodedTorture torturing]] him, and wants to prove that [[BeingTorturedMakesYouEvil he has broken Robin's mind]].
[[/folder]]



* In ''Film/BlueStreak'', Martin Lawrence's character, Miles Logan, is told to shoot his murderous ex-partner by a group of drug traffics, in order to prove he's not a cop. Since he hates the guy, Miles just says "no problem" and shoots him in the arm. When told that he was supposed to kill him, Miles replies "Well you didn't say kill him, you just 'shoot him'!". When told to kill instead, the real cops break in to protect him (as they think he's an undercover cop working with them).
* The opening of ''Film/InTheLineOfFire'' uses this. Creator/ClintEastwood's character is ordered by a gang of counterfeiters to kill his young partner. Naturally, the gun is unloaded. Later his partner nervously says, "You knew the gun was unloaded, right? You could tell from the weight of the gun?" Eastwood responds, "Well, there may have been one bullet (in the chamber)."
* At the end of ''Film/{{Cthulhu}}'', the protagonist is told by his father [[spoiler:to kill his gay lover ("The man you love; what greater sacrifice!") to appease the Old Ones and become the leader of his father's cult. The movie ends [[NoEnding without us knowing whether or not he does so]].]]
* In the original ''Film/{{Stargate}}'' film, Daniel Jackson is ordered by Ra to kill his companions in order to prove his loyalty to the sun god, so that the workers won't question his authority. Although Daniel did not board Ra's ship as a spy in the first place, when the time comes he acts for a few moments as if he is really going to obey the order. [[LetsGetDangerous Then he turns around and shoots at Ra instead]].
* ''Film/TheBourneUltimatum'' reveals that the final test of Jason Bourne's training was to kill someone. The person wasn't any one that Bourne knew, but neither was Bourne given any reason to justify killing him, other than that it was his orders. It was quite a moral struggle for him to decide whether to obey.
* ''Film/{{Solo}}''. Qi'ra herself suggests this as the only way to prove her loyalty; after being caught lying about Han's intentions, she says the only way to prove she has greater loyalty to the BigBad is to kill the man she loves. [[spoiler:Fortunately we never see how far she's willing to go to survive, as other events intercede and she kills the BigBad instead.]]
* Played with in ''Film/TheSoldier'', where a terrorist informer must denounce a fellow terrorist, who is executed on the spot by a Mossad agent. Turns out the executed man was actually a Mossad DeepCoverAgent who was FakingTheDead.
* ''Film/Red2010'': Victoria recounts at one point how she was in love with a Russian agent. She was assigned to kill him, and sums it up with "I shot him three times in the chest." [[spoiler:That agent was Ivan, who realized she didn't ''want'' to kill him - else she would have shot him in the ''head'' - and loves her to this day.]]

to:

* In ''Film/BlueStreak'', Martin Lawrence's character, Miles Logan, Logan is told to shoot his murderous ex-partner by a group of drug traffics, in order to prove he's not a cop. Since he hates the guy, Miles just says "no problem" and shoots him in the arm. When told that he was supposed to kill him, Miles replies "Well "Well, you didn't say kill him, 'kill him', you just 'shoot him'!". When told to kill instead, the real cops break in to protect him (as they think he's an undercover cop working with them).
* The opening of ''Film/InTheLineOfFire'' uses this. Creator/ClintEastwood's character is ordered by a gang of counterfeiters to kill his young partner. Naturally, the gun is unloaded. Later his partner nervously says, "You knew the gun was unloaded, right? You could tell from the weight of the gun?" Eastwood responds, "Well, there may have been one bullet (in the chamber)."
* At the end of ''Film/{{Cthulhu}}'', the protagonist is told by his father [[spoiler:to kill his gay lover ("The man you love; what greater sacrifice!") to appease the Old Ones and become the leader of his father's cult. The movie ends [[NoEnding without us knowing whether or not he does so]].]]
* In the original ''Film/{{Stargate}}'' film, Daniel Jackson is ordered by Ra to kill his companions in order to prove his loyalty to the sun god, so that the workers won't question his authority. Although Daniel did not board Ra's ship as a spy in the first place, when the time comes he acts for a few moments as if he is really going to obey the order. [[LetsGetDangerous Then he turns around and shoots at Ra instead]].
* ''Film/TheBourneUltimatum'' reveals that the final test of Jason Bourne's training was to kill someone. The person wasn't any one that anyone who Bourne knew, but neither was Bourne given any reason to justify killing him, other than that it was his orders. It was quite a moral struggle for him to decide whether to obey.
* ''Film/{{Solo}}''. Qi'ra herself suggests this as At the only way to prove her loyalty; after being caught lying about Han's intentions, she says end of ''Film/{{Cthulhu}}'', the only way to prove she has protagonist is told by his father [[spoiler:to kill his gay lover ("The man you love; what greater loyalty sacrifice?") to appease the BigBad Old Ones and become the leader of his father's cult. The movie ends [[NoEnding without us knowing whether or not he does so]]]].
* The opening of ''Film/InTheLineOfFire'' uses this. Frank Horrigan
is ordered by a gang of counterfeiters to kill his young partner. Naturally, the man she loves. [[spoiler:Fortunately we never see how far she's willing to go to survive, as other events intercede and she kills gun is unloaded. Later, his partner nervously says, "You knew the BigBad instead.]]
* Played with in ''Film/TheSoldier'', where a terrorist informer must denounce a fellow terrorist, who is executed on
gun was unloaded, right? You could tell from the spot by a Mossad agent. Turns out weight of the executed man was actually a Mossad DeepCoverAgent who was FakingTheDead.
gun?" Horrigan responds, "Well, there may have been one bullet (in the chamber)."
* ''Film/Red2010'': Victoria recounts at one point how she was in love with a Russian agent. She was assigned to kill him, and sums it up with "I shot him three times in the chest." [[spoiler:That agent was Ivan, who realized she didn't ''want'' to kill him - -- else she would have shot him in the ''head'' - -- and loves her to this day.]]]]
* Played with in ''Film/TheSoldier'' when a terrorist informer must denounce a fellow terrorist, who is executed on the spot by a Mossad agent. It turns out that the executed man was actually a Mossad DeepCoverAgent who was FakingTheDead.
* ''Film/{{Solo}}'': Qi'ra herself suggests this as the only way to prove her loyalty; after being caught lying about Han's intentions, she says the only way to prove she has greater loyalty to the BigBad is to kill the man she loves. [[spoiler:Fortunately, we never see how far she's willing to go to survive, as other events intercede and she kills the BigBad instead.]]
* In ''Film/{{Stargate}}'', Daniel Jackson is ordered by Ra to kill his companions in order to prove his loyalty to the sun god, so that the workers won't question his authority. Although Daniel did not board Ra's ship as a spy in the first place, when the time comes, he acts for a few moments as if he is really going to obey the order. [[LetsGetDangerous Then he turns around and shoots at Ra instead]].



* In ''Visser'', a novel set in the ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'' universe, it is revealed that the [[AlienInvasion Yeerk]] Visser One [[spoiler:has maternal emotions for two human children. She denies this when on trial for treason, and is told to prove it by killing one of them. She is able to stall for just long enough, that the Animorphs attack making this a moot test. Although, it's implied she really would have done it.]]
* ''The Dead Can Wait'' by Robert Ryan. A German FemmeFataleSpy says that for the passing out test at the ''Sie Wolfe'' SpySchool they had to [[DeadlyGraduation hunt down live targets]], and in her case the target was her roommate who hadn't come up to scratch, [[YouKnowTooMuch but couldn't be released because the camp was top secret.]] It might have [[GoneHorriblyWrong made her overly paranoid]], as her behaviour verges on the psychopathic and at one point she murders a dentist in their UndergroundRailroad, thinking [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness he's planning to kill her after her mission fails]], only to wonder afterwards if she just imagined it.
* Franchise/StarWarsExpandedUniverse :
** In one of the novels, members of the X-wing/commando group [[Literature/XWingSeries Wraith Squadron]] are [[TheInfiltration disguised as pirates]], having a job interview with the BigBad, when he asks them to shoot another squadron member, who had infiltrated the ship without their knowledge. One of them does it, because she realizes he was [[DeadAllAlong already dead]], despite the bad guys' attempts to cover it up. It's an interesting variation on the trope. The reader doesn't know and neither do the other Wraiths -- Dia tells them that he was dead, and it's implied by the bad guy's dialogue, but the last time we'd seen the dead character alive he was about to be captured and had used his last shot to destroy a datapad with his ID. Plus, after explaining her reasoning Dia went into a HeroicBSOD, crying that the girl she used to be never would have shot him. It's very ambiguous.
** Later in that novel, two scientists who were in charge of a facility from which something had escaped were [[YouHaveFailedMe brought before]] the BigBad Zsinj, who handed each of the two a blaster. The superior [[EvenEvilHasStandards balked]]; the other [[KickTheDog shot her superior]] and gave the blaster back. Zsinj asked her why she did that. She told him that she thought that had been the unspoken order - if she'd fired at ''Zsinj'' it would not have worked, and she is valuable enough that if she had committed suicide it would have been a waste. Amused (and having determined that the superior was the one at fault), Zsinj promotes her.
* ''Literature/WarriorCats'':
** In ''Warriors: The Darkest Hour'', [[spoiler:Stonefur, a half-Clan cat]] is told to kill [[spoiler:two half-Clan apprentices]] to prove his loyalty. [[spoiler:He refuses, sacrificing his life to save the apprentices.]]
** Later on, when [[spoiler:Ivypool]] is acting as a spy for the Clans in the Dark Forest, the Dark Forest cats, suspicious of her loyalty, order her to "kill" [[spoiler:Flametail]], a [=StarClan=] spirit that got lost and found his way to the Dark Forest. She attacks him, but is stopped by the cat's brother. Even though she didn't actually wipe out his spirit, this still secures the Dark Forest's trust in her.
*** Later on, [[spoiler:Ivypool]] is ordered to kill [[DeaderThanDead (later eradicate)]] [[spoiler:Antpelt.]] This time, she actually kills him.
** In a subversion of ForcedToWatch, Darktail tells a dying [[spoiler:Needletail]] that he would spare her life if she killed her friend [[spoiler:Violetpaw]] for him, or be drowned as punishment for the latter's failed attempt to [[TheInfiltration infiltrate]] the Kin. [[spoiler:Needletail]] actually subverts this trope by [[spoiler:feigning an attack against Violetpaw, before turning against the Kin and attacking ''them'', allowing Violetpaw a chance to escape to the remaining Clans. She is brutally killed as a result of this.]] Bonus points for one of said killers being her ''former best friend'', who happily instigated her death.
* In Creator/TerryPratchett's ''Literature/{{Pyramids}}'', Teppic goes up for his Assassin final, the last step of which is shooting what may be a dummy and may be one of his friends, who failed the final. He decides to not do it -- and not do it ''with style'', by firing off his crossbow at something else. The bolt hits something metal, ricochets, and hits the dummy (or person) neatly. He passes, though not without criticism for his unnecessary use of ImprobableAimingSkills. Earlier in the book, the same tutor had mentioned the trope by lecturing his class that a "client" might well hire Assassins of his own for protection, even the students with whom they now shared a desk, and this was perfectly right and proper.

to:

* Played with in [[http://www.yaplakal.com/forum6/topic104854.html a Russian short story]] (no translation available). The undercover cop is ordered to kill his childhood friend, and he promptly pulls the trigger. It turns out that [[spoiler:he had secretly been training himself to count the number of rounds in a magazine, judging by the weight of the gun, so he was ''almost'' sure that nothing would happen. His friend didn't know that, and was genuinely pissed, so they parted.]]
* In ''Visser'', a novel set in the ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'' universe, novel ''[[Recap/AnimorphsVisser Visser]]'', it is revealed that the [[AlienInvasion Yeerk]] Visser One [[spoiler:has maternal emotions for two human children. She denies this when on trial for treason, and is told to prove it by killing one of them. She is able to stall for just long enough, that the Animorphs attack making this a moot test. Although, it's implied she really would have done it.]]
* In ''The Dead Can Wait'' by Robert Ryan. A Ryan, a German FemmeFataleSpy says that for the passing out test at the ''Sie Wolfe'' SpySchool they had to [[DeadlyGraduation hunt down live targets]], and in her case the target was her roommate who hadn't come up to scratch, [[YouKnowTooMuch but couldn't be released because the camp was top secret.]] It might have [[GoneHorriblyWrong made her overly paranoid]], as her behaviour verges on the psychopathic and at one point she murders a dentist in their UndergroundRailroad, thinking [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness he's planning to kill her after her mission fails]], only to wonder afterwards if she just imagined it.
* Franchise/StarWarsExpandedUniverse :
**
''Literature/DiogenesClub'': In "You Don't Have to be Mad...", Vanessa is given a pistol and instructed to shoot one of the novels, members staff who is kneeling in front of her. Because of the X-wing/commando group [[Literature/XWingSeries Wraith Squadron]] are [[TheInfiltration disguised as pirates]], having conditioning she has been undergoing, Vanessa knows that this is a job interview with test, but is unsure if the BigBad, when he asks them correct response is to shoot another squadron member, who had infiltrated the ship without their knowledge. One of them does it, because she realizes he was [[DeadAllAlong already dead]], despite woman or to refuse to shoot her. She splits the bad guys' attempts to cover it up. It's an interesting variation on difference, and fires past the trope. The reader doesn't know woman's head, [[EarAche shooting her ear off in the process]].
* ''Literature/FullMetalPanic'': When one of Gauron's {{mooks}} has Kurz Weber pinned down, he suggests Kurz surrender
and neither do let himself be taken to the other Wraiths -- Dia tells them that he was dead, and it's implied by BigBad. "If you shoot one of the bad guy's dialogue, but the last time we'd seen the dead character alive he was about to be captured and had used his last shot to destroy crew in front of him, he'll let you join us." Kurz decides being a datapad backstabbing mook wouldn't go with his ID. Plus, after explaining her reasoning Dia went into cool image, and kills the mook instead.
* In ''Literature/HarryPotterAndTheHalfBloodPrince'', Snape decides with
a HeroicBSOD, crying horde of Death Eaters bearing witness to do what Draco Malfoy cannot bring himself to do: kill the helpless, wandless Dumbledore. Snape's response? [[spoiler:"[[OneHitKill Avada Kedavra!"]] Of course, it [[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheDeathlyHallows later]] turns out that the girl she used to be never would have shot him. It's very ambiguous.
** Later in that novel, two scientists who were in charge of a facility from which something had escaped were [[YouHaveFailedMe brought before]] the BigBad Zsinj, who handed each of the two a blaster. The superior [[EvenEvilHasStandards balked]]; the other [[KickTheDog shot her superior]]
Dumbledore was terminally ill and gave the blaster back. Zsinj asked her why she did that. She told him that she thought that had been the unspoken order - if she'd fired at ''Zsinj'' it would not have worked, and she is valuable enough that if she had committed suicide it would have been a waste. Amused (and having determined that the superior was the one at fault), Zsinj promotes her.
* ''Literature/WarriorCats'':
** In ''Warriors: The Darkest Hour'', [[spoiler:Stonefur, a half-Clan cat]] is told
[[ThanatosGambit arranged for Snape to kill [[spoiler:two half-Clan apprentices]] to prove his loyalty. [[spoiler:He refuses, sacrificing his life to save the apprentices.him so that he could gain Voldemort's complete trust]].]]
** Later on, when [[spoiler:Ivypool]] is acting as a spy for * ''Literature/ParadoxTrilogy'': In the Clans in the Dark Forest, the Dark Forest cats, suspicious of her loyalty, order her second book, ''Honor's Knight'', Caldswell tests Rupert's loyalty by asking him to "kill" [[spoiler:Flametail]], a [=StarClan=] spirit that got lost and found shoot his way to the Dark Forest. She attacks him, but is stopped by the cat's brother. Even though she didn't actually wipe love interest, Devi. [[spoiler:He does. It turns out his spirit, this still secures the Dark Forest's trust in her.
*** Later on, [[spoiler:Ivypool]] is ordered
to kill [[DeaderThanDead (later eradicate)]] [[spoiler:Antpelt.]] This time, she actually kills him.
** In a subversion of ForcedToWatch, Darktail tells a dying [[spoiler:Needletail]] that he would spare her life if she killed her friend [[spoiler:Violetpaw]] for him, or
be drowned as punishment for the latter's failed attempt to [[TheInfiltration infiltrate]] the Kin. [[spoiler:Needletail]] actually subverts this trope by [[spoiler:feigning an attack against Violetpaw, before turning against the Kin and attacking ''them'', allowing Violetpaw a chance to escape to the remaining Clans. She is brutally killed as a result of this.]] Bonus points for one of said killers being her ''former best friend'', who happily instigated her death.
illusion]].
* In Creator/TerryPratchett's ''Literature/{{Pyramids}}'', Teppic goes up for his Assassin final, the last step of which is shooting what may be a dummy and may be one of his friends, who failed the final. He decides to not do it -- and not do it ''with style'', by firing off his crossbow at something else. The bolt hits something metal, ricochets, and hits the dummy (or person) neatly. He passes, though not without criticism for his unnecessary use of ImprobableAimingSkills. Earlier in the book, the same tutor had mentioned the trope by lecturing his class that a "client" might well hire Assassins of his own for protection, even the students with whom they now shared a desk, and this was perfectly right and proper.



** Anti-hero protagonist Richard Sharpe and his ally William Lawford are sent by the British Army to infiltrate the rebel stronghold of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Seringapatam Serignapatham]] and rescue intelligence agent Colonel [=McCandless=]. To prove his loyalty to the Sultan of Tippo, Sharpe is given a loaded musket and told to kill [=McCandless=]. Naturally, the musket doesn't fire properly. Sharpe later tells Lawford that he knew the gunpowder used to prime the musket was bad before he fired. However, he makes it perfectly clear later, that if the powder had been good he would have shot [=McCandless=] anyways to keep his cover.
** Subverted later in the novel: when British scouts are seen outside the fortress walls, Sharpe and Lawford are given rifles and told to shoot the scouts. Sharpe tries in earnest to kill one of the scouts but his shot goes wide; Lawford tries to shoot wide of his target but ends up killing the soldier by mistake.
** Played extremely straight in ''Sharpe's Challenge'', the TV episode adapted in part from ''Sharpe's Tiger''. Sharpe and his Lancer, Sergeant Harper, are the Fake Defectors. Sharpe is ordered to kill Harper using a musket he just loaded, but at the last moment he realises (from the smell) that the powder is bad and the shot won't fire, so he goes along with it.
* ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'' novels:
** In Creator/DanAbnett's ''Literature/GauntsGhosts'' novel ''Traitor General'', when Uexkull [[OffWithHisHead executes]] a commander for [[YouHaveFailedMe failure]], he also disables the second in command for not answering promptly. The [[YouAreInCommandNow third-in-command]] is ordered to shoot him.
** In Creator/BenCounter's ''Literature/HorusHeresy'' novel ''Galaxy in Flames'', when some [[spoiler:loyalist Space Marines survive Horus's treacherous attack, Horus sends in troops. He explains afterward that fighting their former [[FireForgedFriends battle-brothers]] ensured their commitment.]]
** In Creator/JamesSwallow's ''[[Literature/BloodAngels Deus Sanguinius]]'', Inquisitor Stele rejoices when Arkio and Rafen fight in [[CombatByChampion single combat]]: [[CainAndAbel killing his own brother]] will seal Arkio's fate.

to:

** Anti-hero protagonist Richard Sharpe and his ally William Lawford are sent by the British Army to infiltrate the rebel stronghold of [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Seringapatam Serignapatham]] and rescue intelligence agent Colonel [=McCandless=]. To prove his loyalty to the Sultan of Tippo, Sharpe is given a loaded musket and told to kill [=McCandless=]. Naturally, the musket doesn't fire properly. Sharpe later tells Lawford that he knew the gunpowder used to prime the musket was bad before he fired. However, he later makes it perfectly clear later, that if the powder had been good good, he would have shot [=McCandless=] anyways to keep his cover.
** Subverted later in the novel: when British scouts are seen outside the fortress walls, Sharpe and Lawford are given rifles and told to shoot the scouts. Sharpe tries in earnest to kill one of the scouts scouts, but his shot goes wide; Lawford tries to shoot wide of his target but ends up killing the soldier by mistake.
** Played extremely straight in ''Sharpe's Challenge'', the [[Series/{{Sharpe}} TV episode episode]] adapted in part from ''Sharpe's Tiger''. Sharpe and his Lancer, Sergeant Harper, are the Fake Defectors. Sharpe is ordered to kill Harper using a musket he just loaded, but at the last moment he realises (from the smell) that the powder is bad and the shot won't fire, so he goes along with it.
* ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'' novels:
** In Creator/DanAbnett's ''Literature/GauntsGhosts'' novel ''Traitor General'', when Uexkull [[OffWithHisHead executes]] a commander for [[YouHaveFailedMe failure]], he also disables the second in command for not answering promptly. The [[YouAreInCommandNow third-in-command]] is ordered to shoot him.
** In Creator/BenCounter's ''Literature/HorusHeresy'' novel ''Galaxy in Flames'', when some [[spoiler:loyalist Space Marines survive Horus's treacherous attack, Horus sends in troops. He explains afterward that fighting their former [[FireForgedFriends battle-brothers]] ensured their commitment.]]
** In Creator/JamesSwallow's ''[[Literature/BloodAngels Deus Sanguinius]]'', Inquisitor Stele rejoices when Arkio and Rafen fight in [[CombatByChampion single combat]]: [[CainAndAbel killing his own brother]] will seal Arkio's fate.
it.



* Subverted in ''Literature/HarryPotterAndTheHalfBloodPrince''. Snape decides with a horde of Death Eaters bearing witness to do what Draco Malfoy cannot bring himself to do: kill the helpless, wandless Dumbledore. Snape's response? [[spoiler:"[[OneHitKill Avada Kedavra!"]] Of course, it later turns out that Dumbledore was terminally ill and [[TheChessmaster arranged for Snape]] [[ThanatosGambit to kill him]] [[MagnificentBastard so that he could gain Voldemort's complete trust.]]]]
* At least two examples in Terry Goodkind's ''Literature/SwordOfTruth'' series:

to:

* Subverted in ''Literature/HarryPotterAndTheHalfBloodPrince''. Snape decides with a horde of Death Eaters bearing witness to do what Draco Malfoy cannot bring himself to do: kill the helpless, wandless Dumbledore. Snape's response? [[spoiler:"[[OneHitKill Avada Kedavra!"]] Of course, it later turns out that Dumbledore was terminally ill and [[TheChessmaster arranged for Snape]] [[ThanatosGambit to kill him]] [[MagnificentBastard so that he could gain Voldemort's complete trust.]]]]
* At least two examples in Terry Goodkind's the ''Literature/SwordOfTruth'' series:



* Played with in [[http://www.yaplakal.com/forum6/topic104854.html a Russian short story]] (no translation available). The undercover cop is ordered to kill his childhood friend, and he promptly pulls the trigger. It turns out that [[spoiler:he had secretly been training himself to count the number of rounds in a magazine, judging by the weight of the gun, so he was ''almost'' sure that nothing would happen. His friend didn't know that, and was genuinely pissed, so they parted.]]
* In ''Honor's Knight'', second book of the ''Literature/ParadoxTrilogy'', Caldswell tests Rupert's loyalty by asking him to shoot his love interest, Devi. [[spoiler:He does. It turns out to be an illusion]].
* ''Literature/DiogenesClub'': "In You Don't Have to be Mad...", Vanessa is given a pistol and instructed to shoot one of the staff who is kneeling in front of her. Because of the conditioning she has been undergoing, Vanessa knows that this is a test, but is unsure if the correct response is to shoot the woman or to refuse to shoot her. She splits the difference, and fires past the woman's head, [[EarAche shooting her ear off in the process]].

to:

* Played with ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'' novels:
** In the ''Literature/GauntsGhosts'' novel ''Traitor General'', when Uexkull [[OffWithHisHead executes]] a commander for [[YouHaveFailedMe failure]], he also disables the second
in [[http://www.yaplakal.com/forum6/topic104854.html a Russian short story]] (no translation available). command for not answering promptly. The undercover cop [[YouAreInCommandNow third-in-command]] is ordered to kill his childhood friend, and he promptly pulls shoot him.
** In
the trigger. It turns out ''Literature/HorusHeresy'' novel ''Galaxy in Flames'', when some [[spoiler:loyalist Space Marines survive Horus's treacherous attack, Horus sends in troops. He explains afterward that [[spoiler:he had secretly been training himself to count the number of rounds in a magazine, judging by the weight of the gun, so he was ''almost'' sure that nothing would happen. His friend didn't know that, and was genuinely pissed, so they parted.fighting their former [[FireForgedFriends battle-brothers]] ensured their commitment.]]
* ** In ''Honor's Knight'', second book of the ''Literature/ParadoxTrilogy'', Caldswell tests Rupert's loyalty by asking him to shoot ''Literature/BloodAngels'' novel ''Deus Sanguinius'', Inquisitor Stele rejoices when Arkio and Rafen fight in [[CombatByChampion single combat]]: [[CainAndAbel killing his love interest, Devi. own brother]] will seal Arkio's fate.
* ''Literature/WarriorCats'':
** In ''[[Recap/WarriorCatsTheDarkestHour Warriors: The Darkest Hour]]'', [[spoiler:Stonefur, a half-Clan cat]] is told to kill [[spoiler:two half-Clan apprentices]] to prove his loyalty.
[[spoiler:He does. It turns refuses, sacrificing his life to save the apprentices.]]
** When [[spoiler:Ivypool]] is acting as a spy for the Clans in the Dark Forest, the Dark Forest cats, suspicious of her loyalty, order her to "kill" [[spoiler:Flametail]], a [=StarClan=] spirit that got lost and found his way to the Dark Forest. She attacks him, but is stopped by the cat's brother. Even though she didn't actually wipe
out his spirit, this still secures the Dark Forest's trust in her.
** Later on, [[spoiler:Ivypool]] is ordered
to kill [[DeaderThanDead (later eradicate)]] [[spoiler:Antpelt]]. This time, she actually kills him.
** In a subversion of ForcedToWatch, Darktail tells a dying [[spoiler:Needletail]] that he would spare her life if she killed her friend [[spoiler:Violetpaw]] for him, or
be drowned as punishment for the latter's failed attempt to [[TheInfiltration infiltrate]] the Kin. [[spoiler:Needletail]] actually subverts this trope by [[spoiler:feigning an illusion]].
* ''Literature/DiogenesClub'': "In You Don't Have to be Mad...", Vanessa is given a pistol
attack against Violetpaw, before turning against the Kin and instructed attacking ''them'', allowing Violetpaw a chance to shoot escape to the remaining Clans. She is brutally killed as a result of this.]] Bonus points for one of said killers being her ''former best friend'', who happily instigated her death.
* ''Literature/XWingSeries'':
** In
one of the staff who is kneeling in front of her. Because novels, members of the conditioning she has been undergoing, Vanessa knows that this is X-wing/commando group Wraith Squadron are [[TheInfiltration disguised as pirates]], having a test, but is unsure if job interview with the correct response is BigBad, when he asks them to shoot another squadron member, who had infiltrated the woman or ship without their knowledge. One of them does it, because she realizes he was [[DeadAllAlong already dead]], despite the bad guys' attempts to refuse cover it up. It's an interesting variation on the trope. The reader doesn't know and neither do the other Wraiths -- Dia tells them that he was dead, and it's implied by the bad guy's dialogue, but the last time we'd seen the dead character alive he was about to shoot her. be captured and had used his last shot to destroy a datapad with his ID. Plus, after explaining her reasoning Dia went into a HeroicBSOD, crying that the girl she used to be never would have shot him. It's very ambiguous.
** Later in that novel, two scientists who were in charge of a facility from which something had escaped were [[YouHaveFailedMe brought before]] the BigBad Zsinj, who handed each of the two a blaster. The superior [[EvenEvilHasStandards balked]]; the other [[KickTheDog shot her superior]] and gave the blaster back. Zsinj asked her why she did that.
She splits told him that she thought that had been the difference, unspoken order -- if she'd fired at ''Zsinj'' it would not have worked, and fires past she is valuable enough that if she had committed suicide, it would have been a waste. Amused (and having determined that the woman's head, [[EarAche shooting her ear off in superior was the process]].one at fault), Zsinj promotes her.



* ''Series/TwentyFour'' has done it on four occasions:

to:

* ''Series/TwentyFour'' has done it this on four occasions:



** Season 3: Jack on Chase (gun empty)
** Season 4: Dina Araz on Jack (tries to shoot the BigBad, but the gun is empty)
** Season 7: [[spoiler: Jack on Renee (shoots past her shoulder to give her a suitably bloody looking wound- then Jack and Tony are told to bury her... Fortunately, Bill Buchanan is near enough to rescue her)]]
* ''Series/GameOfThrones'': Jon has to kill Qhorin Halfhand (with Qhorin's consent) to convince the Wildlings he's defecting to their side.
* ''Series/MiamiVice'' did this one effectively. Tubbs was deep undercover and ordered to kill Sonny to prove his loyalty, so he walks up to Sonny and, without a word or hesitation, shoots him point-blank. Awesome scene. (Naturally, Sonny was wearing a BulletproofVest.)
* A similar scene happens in the first episode of ''Series/{{Wiseguy}}''. In that case the target is a District Attorney, with Vinnie Terranova shooting him. Though what DA would effectively end his career by remaining out of sight for the years Vinnie was undercover [[MST3KMantra is another question]].
* ''Franchise/StarTrek'':
** ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'': In the episode "[[Recap/StarTrekVoyagerS7E4Repression Repression]]", Chakotay tells Tuvok to phaser Janeway to prove his loyalty to Chakotay's mutiny. Tuvok pulls the trigger. Later, he explains to Janeway that he logically deduced that if Chakotay doubted Tuvok's loyalty, he would not have given Tuvok a working phaser. She finds this logic to be less than ironclad.
*** Especially given "[[Recap/StarTrekVoyagerS2E2Initiations Initiations]]". Chakotay is given a phaser and told to kill Kar, a Kazon {{Child Soldier|s}} that Chakotay took prisoner, disgracing him in the eyes of the other Kazon. Chakotay is told he'll be released if he kills Kar, but he uses the weapon to escape with Kar instead. Their leader was trying to demonstrate that an enemy you don't kill will kill you instead, so it makes sense he'd have to give Chakotay a working phaser.
** A variation appears in the ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'' episode "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS03E21TheDieIsCast The Die Is Cast]]". Garak takes the role of a FakeDefector (though he seemed to have convinced himself it's genuine) for reasons which are complicated, and is ordered to torture Odo, both to get information and test Garak's commitment to his defection. Garak goes through with it despite some reluctance, since someone else would have done so if Garak hadn't, and he couldn't refuse without losing the trust of the bad guys. Odo has nothing useful to reveal but in the end admits that despite his people's evil actions, he does have a desire to return to the Great Link. The shock of how far he would go torturing Odo, the complete uselessness of the information he finally obtained (other than to drive home how similar the two men are in their desire to go "home" and be with their own kind), and the magnitude of how all this affected him, make Garak realize he really is a ''fake'' defector and he can't just go back to his old life anymore. When his superiors ask what results he obtained in his session, Garak lies on Odo's behalf and says he never broke. The two of them end up becoming something like friends afterwards, commiserating their isolation and sharing a mutual respect.
** ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'':
*** In "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS4E24TheMindsEye The Mind's Eye]]", Geordi is brainwashed into a ManchurianAgent assassin by the Romulans, and is tested by being ordered to kill a holographic Chief O'Brien. He briefly hesitates before finally doing it, prompting the lead Romulan to order another brainwashing session.
*** A form of this is used at the end of the two-part episode "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS6E24S7E1Descent Descent]]". Lore orders Data to kill Captain Picard in order to prove his loyalty. Data actually had defected at one point. However, by now, Picard and the others have managed to reboot Data's ethical program and so Data simply refuses to shoot Picard.
*** It's not set up by the bad guys, but in "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS7E4Gambit Gambit]]", Riker has fallen into the role of FakeDefector on a mercenary ship, and when the ''Enterprise'' shows up he cements his cover by firing on them after ostensibly taking down their shields with his command codes. (What actually happens is that Data lowers the shields himself, trusting that Riker must have a good reason for wanting them down, Riker sets the weapons to almost zero power, and Data fakes taking damage.)

to:

** Season 3: Jack on Chase (gun empty)
(the gun is empty).
** Season 4: Dina Araz on Jack (tries to shoot the BigBad, but the gun is empty)
empty).
** Season 7: [[spoiler: Jack [[spoiler:Jack on Renee (shoots past her shoulder to give her a suitably bloody looking wound- wound, then Jack and Tony are told to bury her... Fortunately, her; fortunately, Bill Buchanan is near enough to rescue her)]]
* ''Series/GameOfThrones'': Jon has to kill Qhorin Halfhand (with Qhorin's consent) to convince the Wildlings he's defecting to their side.
* ''Series/MiamiVice'' did this one effectively. Tubbs was deep undercover and ordered to kill Sonny to prove his loyalty, so he walks up to Sonny and, without a word or hesitation, shoots him point-blank. Awesome scene. (Naturally, Sonny was wearing a BulletproofVest.)
* A similar scene happens in the first episode of ''Series/{{Wiseguy}}''. In that case the target is a District Attorney, with Vinnie Terranova shooting him. Though what DA would effectively end his career by remaining out of sight for the years Vinnie was undercover [[MST3KMantra is another question]].
* ''Franchise/StarTrek'':
** ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'': In the episode "[[Recap/StarTrekVoyagerS7E4Repression Repression]]", Chakotay tells Tuvok to phaser Janeway to prove his loyalty to Chakotay's mutiny. Tuvok pulls the trigger. Later, he explains to Janeway that he logically deduced that if Chakotay doubted Tuvok's loyalty, he would not have given Tuvok a working phaser. She finds this logic to be less than ironclad.
*** Especially given "[[Recap/StarTrekVoyagerS2E2Initiations Initiations]]". Chakotay is given a phaser and told to kill Kar, a Kazon {{Child Soldier|s}} that Chakotay took prisoner, disgracing him in the eyes of the other Kazon. Chakotay is told he'll be released if he kills Kar, but he uses the weapon to escape with Kar instead. Their leader was trying to demonstrate that an enemy you don't kill will kill you instead, so it makes sense he'd have to give Chakotay a working phaser.
** A variation appears in the ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'' episode "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS03E21TheDieIsCast The Die Is Cast]]". Garak takes the role of a FakeDefector (though he seemed to have convinced himself it's genuine) for reasons which are complicated, and is ordered to torture Odo, both to get information and test Garak's commitment to his defection. Garak goes through with it despite some reluctance, since someone else would have done so if Garak hadn't, and he couldn't refuse without losing the trust of the bad guys. Odo has nothing useful to reveal but in the end admits that despite his people's evil actions, he does have a desire to return to the Great Link. The shock of how far he would go torturing Odo, the complete uselessness of the information he finally obtained (other than to drive home how similar the two men are in their desire to go "home" and be with their own kind), and the magnitude of how all this affected him, make Garak realize he really is a ''fake'' defector and he can't just go back to his old life anymore. When his superiors ask what results he obtained in his session, Garak lies on Odo's behalf and says he never broke. The two of them end up becoming something like friends afterwards, commiserating their isolation and sharing a mutual respect.
** ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'':
*** In "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS4E24TheMindsEye The Mind's Eye]]", Geordi is brainwashed into a ManchurianAgent assassin by the Romulans, and is tested by being ordered to kill a holographic Chief O'Brien. He briefly hesitates before finally doing it, prompting the lead Romulan to order another brainwashing session.
*** A form of this is used at the end of the two-part episode "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS6E24S7E1Descent Descent]]". Lore orders Data to kill Captain Picard in order to prove his loyalty. Data actually had defected at one point. However, by now, Picard and the others have managed to reboot Data's ethical program and so Data simply refuses to shoot Picard.
*** It's not set up by the bad guys, but in "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS7E4Gambit Gambit]]", Riker has fallen into the role of FakeDefector on a mercenary ship, and when the ''Enterprise'' shows up he cements his cover by firing on them after ostensibly taking down their shields with his command codes. (What actually happens is that Data lowers the shields himself, trusting that Riker must have a good reason for wanting them down, Riker sets the weapons to almost zero power, and Data fakes taking damage.)
her)]].



* An episode of the 1950s TV show ''Tom Corbett: Space Cadet'' had the leader of some SpacePirates pull the unloaded-gun trick on member of the Space Patrol who was contemplating a FaceHeelTurn. He falls for it, but then he wasn't very bright in the first place.
* An episode of ''Series/{{Sharpe}}'' has Sharpe being ordered by the enemy commander to shoot Harper while they're masquerading as turncoats. It's more a test of Sharpe's skill than loyalty though, since the commander wants to see if he knows that the powder is too damp to fire.
* Inverted beautifully in ''Series/{{Leverage}}'', when [[spoiler: Nate is undercover with the mob, trying to manipulate a banker they're associated with into snitching on them. Just when he discovers that it's the banker who's running the orginization, and not the mobster, Eliot gets nabbed snooping around and gets hauled over to them. Nate makes it look like Eliot is an undercover cop who is dealing with mobster. Big boss orders Mobster to Shoot His Mate. Although Mobster has never seen Eliot before, he is hesitant because he doesn't want to be a cop killer, which is seen as a sign of guilt. Things are getting heated when Eliot is suddenly shot multiple times and killed. Everyone turns to see Sophie holding a smoking gun.]] So, basically, Nate avoids getting himself in a Shoot Your Mate situation by conning the BigBad into thinking a random Minor Bad is the defector, and forcing HIM to Shoot His (supposed) Mate. Then Sophie shows up and Shoots Her Mate. Sort of. It makes sense, really.
** Another variation from ''Series/{{Leverage}}'': In The Big Bang Job, Eliot reveals that he has a long history with arc villain Damien Moreau and unexpectedly takes the lead on TheCon he's pulling with Hardison. Moreau has Hardison handcuffed to a chair and then kicks the chair into a swimming pool. Eliot is forced to calmly continue negotiations as Hardison struggles to free himself, or risk Moreau realizing his HeelFaceTurn. Very luckily indeed, Hardison not only manages to escape on his own with a brilliant bit of MacGyvering, but he too stays in character, further selling their commitment to the deal.
* ''Series/{{Heroes}}'':
** In season 1, future Nathan tells future Suresh to kill the helpless present Hiro.
** In season 3, Hiro tries to infiltrate a mercenary group and is challenged to kill his non-powered sidekick to prove he's badass enough. In this instance, Hiro TakesAThirdOption by freezing time, teleporting to a prop store, stealing a fake, collapsable sword, and using that one on his sidekick. It resembles Hiro's real sword enough that the two villains fell for it

to:

* An episode of ''Series/{{Arrow}}'':
** Oliver Queen's first assignment for Amanda Waller is to kill his friend Tommy Merlyn, who suspects Oliver is alive in Hong Kong and has come looking for him. If he doesn't, someone else will do
the 1950s TV show ''Tom Corbett: Space Cadet'' had the leader of some SpacePirates pull the unloaded-gun trick on job anyway, so Oliver is able to TakeAThirdOption by staging a fake kidnapping for ransom to convince Tommy it was all a plot by criminals to lure him there.
** When Oliver becomes a
member of the Space Patrol who was contemplating a FaceHeelTurn. He falls for it, but then he wasn't very bright in the first place.
* An episode
League of ''Series/{{Sharpe}}'' has Sharpe being ordered by the enemy commander to shoot Harper while they're masquerading as turncoats. It's more a test of Sharpe's skill than loyalty though, since the commander wants to see if he knows that the powder is too damp to fire.
* Inverted beautifully in ''Series/{{Leverage}}'', when [[spoiler: Nate is undercover with the mob, trying to manipulate a banker they're associated with into snitching on them. Just when he discovers that it's the banker who's running the orginization, and not the mobster, Eliot gets nabbed snooping around and gets hauled over to them. Nate makes it look like Eliot is an undercover cop who is dealing with mobster. Big boss orders Mobster to Shoot His Mate. Although Mobster has never seen Eliot before,
Assassins, he is hesitant because he doesn't want subject to be a cop killer, which weeks of brainwashing. John Diggle is seen as a sign of guilt. Things are getting heated when Eliot is suddenly shot multiple times then brought before him and killed. Everyone turns Oliver is required to see Sophie holding a smoking gun.]] So, basically, Nate avoids getting himself in a Shoot Your Mate situation by conning the BigBad into thinking a random Minor Bad is the defector, and forcing HIM to Shoot His (supposed) Mate. Then Sophie shows up and Shoots Her Mate. Sort of. It makes sense, really.
** Another variation from ''Series/{{Leverage}}'': In The Big Bang Job, Eliot reveals
kill him as proof that he has a long history with arc villain Damien Moreau and unexpectedly takes the lead on TheCon he's pulling with Hardison. Moreau has Hardison handcuffed to a chair and left his past self behind, which he does. It's then kicks the chair into a swimming pool. Eliot is forced to calmly continue negotiations revealed he was drugged and actually killed another Assassin as Hardison struggles to free himself, or risk Moreau realizing part of his HeelFaceTurn. Very luckily indeed, Hardison not only manages to escape on brainwashing. The scenario gets played out for real later, in a {{Cliffhanger}} where Oliver locks his own friends in a room with a brilliant bit of MacGyvering, but he too stays DeadlyGas.
** A variation happens
in character, further selling their commitment to the deal.
* ''Series/{{Heroes}}'':
** In season 1, future Nathan tells future Suresh to kill the helpless present Hiro.
** In season 3, Hiro tries to infiltrate
Season 4 flashbacks when Oliver Queen has infiltrated a mercenary group on Lian Yu. He tries to assure the slave workers that he is on their side, but as they've already witnessed Oliver killing one of their own (in self-defense) they are skeptical and insist that Oliver kill one of the other mercenaries as proof. As this is challenged well before Oliver has a ThouShaltNotKill rule, and the mercenary concerned is a personal enemy of Oliver, he does.
* ''Series/TheBoys2019'': In "[[Recap/TheBoysS0203OverTheHillWithTheSwordsOfAThousandMen Over the Hill with the Swords of a Thousand Men]]", Homelander orders Starlight
to kill Hughie Campbell, suspecting (accurately) that she is in league with him. When she hesitates, he threatens to kill both of them. Being something of a DeathSeeker by that point, Hughie quietly gives her the nod, but fortunately, the rest of the Boys pull a BigDamnHeroes. In [[Recap/TheBoysS0204NothingLikeItInTheWorld the next episode]], Homelander is ready to kill Starlight, assuming from her hesitation that his non-powered sidekick suspicions are correct, but Starlight convinces him that she just didn't want to prove he's badass enough. In carry out a VigilanteExecution.
* ''Series/BurnNotice'' does
this instance, Hiro TakesAThirdOption by freezing time, teleporting from time to a prop store, stealing a fake, collapsable sword, and using that one on his sidekick. It resembles Hiro's real sword enough that time; in the two villains fell instance the page quote is referring to, Sam (posing as a DirtyCop) is being asked to help kill Michael (posing as a junkie snitch). [[spoiler:They manage to arrange for itMichael to escape without it looking like Sam's fault.]]



** While Zoe-A is still pretending to simply be the Cylon prototype, Daniel (who suspects she's in there, but isn't sure, and wants to find out the truth), gives her a gun and orders the robot to shoot his dog. He knows that Zoe loves the dog and would obviously have trouble shooting it, whereas the robot itself would do so without hesitating. [[spoiler: She shoots, but it turns out that the gun was full of blanks anyway. Also, Zoe-A sensed that there were blanks in the gun since apparently "the weight wasn't right", so fired. She later tells her friend that if the gun ''had'' been loaded, she might have shot her father instead.]]
* In ''Series/{{Nikita}}'' Michael is ordered by Percy to shoot Alex since they just discovered that Alex was TheMole working with Nikita. Michael [[spoiler: instead tries to shoot Percy but the gun is booby trapped to stun the person who presses the trigger. Percy was just messing with Michael since he already knew that Michael was also working with Nikita.]]
* ''Series/WildBoys'': Jack attempts to infiltrate the Butler Gang only to find that Mick has been captured by them. Frank Butler thinks Jack might be there to free him, but Jack instead claims he followed Mick there in order to kill him. Butler gives Jack a gun with one bullet and tells him to shoot Mick. Jack does so, shooting Mick through the shoulder and Mick has enough nous to play dead.
* ''Series/BurnNotice'' does this from time to time; in the instance the page quote is referring to, Sam (posing as a CorruptCop) is being asked to help kill Michael (posing as a junkie snitch). [[spoiler:They manage to arrange for Michael to escape without it looking like Sam's fault.]]
* ''Series/TheMentalist'': In "The Crimson Hat", Jane is instructed by one of Red John's lackeys to kill his trusty friend and partner Lisbon to prove he's had a change of heart.
* ''Series/LostGirl'': The Lich demands that Bo feed from Lauren, so that he can finally experience passion. When Lauren urges Bo to take a small amount, the Lich clarifies he wants Bo to drain her. When she refuses, the Lich shoots Bo and prepares to kill and eat Lauren himself. It does not end well for him.
* ''Series/TheInvisibleMan'' has a similar case, when Darien is pretending to have defected to the villain's side. Accordingly, they ask him to take out one of their other bio-enhanced agents, one who Darien has romantic feelings for. Darien, not being an idiot, realizes that it's a test of loyalty when he shows up to dinner with his date looking awfully chunky thanks to the bulletproof vest under her sweater.
* In an episode of ''Series/{{Castle|2009}}'', Ryan goes undercover as a member of the Irish mob. His boss finds out his ex-girlfriend was a snitch, brings her to him, hands him a gun, says kill her or you're both dead. Exactly as described above, he threatens to kill his boss instead, and discovers the gun was messed with and won't fire. (Too bad for the mob boss, [[TheCavalry Esposito's and Beckett's guns work much better.]])
* Subverted in ''Series/{{Farscape}}''. Villains force Rygel to ShootYourMate, but as it's BigBad-[[HazyFeelTurn turned-ally]] Scorpius, this doesn't bother him much.

to:

** While Zoe-A is still pretending to simply be the Cylon prototype, Daniel (who suspects she's in there, but isn't sure, and wants to find out the truth), gives her a gun and orders the robot to shoot his dog. He knows that Zoe loves the dog and would obviously have trouble shooting it, whereas the robot itself would do so without hesitating. [[spoiler: She [[spoiler:She shoots, but it turns out that the gun was full of blanks anyway. Also, Zoe-A sensed that there were blanks in the gun since apparently "the weight wasn't right", so fired. She later tells her friend that if the gun ''had'' been loaded, she might have shot her father instead.]]
* In ''Series/{{Nikita}}'' Michael is ordered by Percy to shoot Alex since they just discovered that Alex was TheMole working with Nikita. Michael [[spoiler: instead tries to shoot Percy but the gun is booby trapped to stun the person who presses the trigger. Percy was just messing with Michael since he already knew that Michael was also working with Nikita.]]
* ''Series/WildBoys'': Jack attempts to infiltrate the Butler Gang only to find that Mick has been captured by them. Frank Butler thinks Jack might be there to free him, but Jack instead claims he followed Mick there in order to kill him. Butler gives Jack a gun with one bullet and tells him to shoot Mick. Jack does so, shooting Mick through the shoulder and Mick has enough nous to play dead.
* ''Series/BurnNotice'' does this from time to time; in the instance the page quote is referring to, Sam (posing as a CorruptCop) is being asked to help kill Michael (posing as a junkie snitch). [[spoiler:They manage to arrange for Michael to escape without it looking like Sam's fault.]]
* ''Series/TheMentalist'': In "The Crimson Hat", Jane is instructed by one of Red John's lackeys to kill his trusty friend and partner Lisbon to prove he's had a change of heart.
* ''Series/LostGirl'': The Lich demands that Bo feed from Lauren, so that he can finally experience passion. When Lauren urges Bo to take a small amount, the Lich clarifies he wants Bo to drain her. When she refuses, the Lich shoots Bo and prepares to kill and eat Lauren himself. It does not end well for him.
* ''Series/TheInvisibleMan'' has a similar case, when Darien is pretending to have defected to the villain's side. Accordingly, they ask him to take out one of their other bio-enhanced agents, one who Darien has romantic feelings for. Darien, not being an idiot, realizes that it's a test of loyalty when he shows up to dinner with his date looking awfully chunky thanks to the bulletproof vest under her sweater.
* In an episode of ''Series/{{Castle|2009}}'', ''Series/Castle2009'', Ryan goes undercover as a member of the Irish mob. His boss finds out his ex-girlfriend was a snitch, brings her to him, hands him a gun, says kill her or you're both dead. Exactly as described above, he threatens to kill his boss instead, and discovers the gun was messed with and won't fire. (Too bad for the mob boss, [[TheCavalry Esposito's and Beckett's guns work much better.]])
better]].)
* Subverted in ''Series/{{Farscape}}''. Villains force Rygel to ShootYourMate, do this, but as it's BigBad-[[HazyFeelTurn turned-ally]] Scorpius, this doesn't bother him much.



'''Rygel:''' I wasn't sure, but... Not so bad for me either way.
* ''Series/NCISLosAngeles'': One episode villain does this to Sam Hanna, telling him to kill the kidnapped Saudi prince Sam's been sent undercover to retrieve. Sam hands the gun back, telling the villain he should trust him and [[ItWorksBetterWithBullets give him a gun that's loaded]].
* ''Series/PersonOfInterest'': In "Blue Code", an undercover cop shoots Reese, but [[OnlyAFleshWound just grazes him so he'll bleed]].
* In the ''Series/StarskyAndHutch'' episode "Ninety Pounds of Trouble," Starsky's cover is blown, and Hutch is ordered to kill him. As Starsky's walking down the street, Hutch shoots him in the stomach with a blank, then walks away while Starsky plays dead.
* ''Series/TheBoys2019'': In "Over the Hill with the Swords of a Thousand Men", Homelander orders Starlight to kill Hughie Campbell, suspecting (accurately) that she is in league with him. When she hesitates, he threatens to kill both of them. Being something of a DeathSeeker by that point, Hughie quietly gives her the nod, but fortunately the rest of The Boys pull a BigDamnHeroes. In the next episode Homelander is ready to kill Starlight, assuming from her hesitation that his suspicions are correct, but Starlight convinces him she just didn't want to carry out a VigilanteExecution.

to:

'''Rygel:''' I wasn't sure, but... Not not so bad for me either way.
* ''Series/GameOfThrones'': Jon has to kill Qhorin Halfhand (with Qhorin's consent) to convince the Wildlings he's defecting to their side.
* ''Series/{{Heroes}}'':
** In season 1, future Nathan tells future Suresh to kill the helpless present Hiro.
** In season 3, Hiro tries to infiltrate a mercenary group and is challenged to kill his non-powered sidekick to prove he's badass enough. In this instance, Hiro TakesAThirdOption by freezing time, teleporting to a prop store, stealing a fake, collapsable sword, and using that one on his sidekick. It resembles Hiro's real sword enough that the two villains fell for it.
* In one episode of ''Series/TheInvisibleMan'', when Darien is pretending to have defected to the villain's side. Accordingly, they ask him to take out one of their other bio-enhanced agents, one who Darien has romantic feelings for. Darien, not being an idiot, realizes that it's a test of loyalty when he shows up to dinner with his date looking awfully chunky thanks to the bulletproof vest under her sweater.
* ''Series/{{Leverage}}'':
** Inverted beautifully when [[spoiler:Nate is undercover with the mob, trying to manipulate a banker they're associated with into snitching on them. Just when he discovers that it's the banker who's running the organization, and not the mobster, Eliot gets nabbed snooping around and gets hauled over to them. Nate makes it look like Eliot is an undercover cop who is dealing with mobster. Big boss orders Mobster to Shoot His Mate. Although Mobster has never seen Eliot before, he is hesitant because he doesn't want to be a cop killer, which is seen as a sign of guilt. Things are getting heated when Eliot is suddenly shot multiple times and killed. Everyone turns to see Sophie holding a smoking gun]]. So, basically, Nate avoids getting himself in a Shoot Your Mate situation by conning the BigBad into thinking a random Minor Bad is the defector, and forcing ''him'' to Shoot His (supposed) Mate. Then Sophie shows up and Shoots Her Mate. Sort of. It makes sense, really.
** Another variation: In "[[Recap/LeverageS03E15TheBigBangJob The Big Bang Job]]", Eliot reveals that he has a long history with arc villain Damien Moreau and unexpectedly takes the lead on TheCon he's pulling with Hardison. Moreau has Hardison handcuffed to a chair and then kicks the chair into a swimming pool. Eliot is forced to calmly continue negotiations as Hardison struggles to free himself, or risk Moreau realizing his HeelFaceTurn. Very luckily indeed, Hardison not only manages to escape on his own with a brilliant bit of MacGyvering, but he too stays in character, further selling their commitment to the deal.
* ''Series/LostGirl'': The Lich demands that Bo feed from Lauren, so that he can finally experience passion. When Lauren urges Bo to take a small amount, the Lich clarifies he wants Bo to drain her. When she refuses, the Lich shoots Bo and prepares to kill and eat Lauren himself. It does not end well for him.
* ''Series/TheMentalist'': In "The Crimson Hat", Jane is instructed by one of Red John's lackeys to kill his trusty friend and partner Lisbon to prove that he's had a change of heart.
* ''Series/MiamiVice'' does this one effectively. Tubbs is deep undercover and ordered to kill Sonny to prove his loyalty, so he walks up to Sonny and, without a word or hesitation, shoots him point-blank. (Naturally, Sonny is wearing a BulletproofVest.)
* ''Series/NCISLosAngeles'': One episode episode's villain does this to Sam Hanna, telling him to kill the kidnapped Saudi prince Sam's been sent undercover to retrieve. Sam hands the gun back, telling the villain he should trust him and [[ItWorksBetterWithBullets give him a gun that's loaded]].
* In ''Series/{{Nikita}}'', Michael is ordered by Percy to shoot Alex since they just discovered that Alex was TheMole working with Nikita. Michael [[spoiler:instead tries to shoot Percy but the gun is booby trapped to stun the person who presses the trigger. Percy was just messing with Michael since he already knew that Michael was also working with Nikita]].
* ''Series/PersonOfInterest'': In "Blue Code", "[[Recap/PersonOfInterestS01E15 Blue Code]]", an undercover cop shoots Reese, but [[OnlyAFleshWound just grazes him so he'll bleed]].
* An episode of ''Series/{{Sharpe}}'' has Sharpe being ordered by the enemy commander to shoot Harper while they're masquerading as turncoats. It's more a test of Sharpe's skill than loyalty, though, since the commander wants to see if he knows that the powder is too damp to fire.
*
In the ''Series/StarskyAndHutch'' episode "Ninety Pounds of Trouble," Trouble", Starsky's cover is blown, and Hutch is ordered to kill him. As Starsky's walking down the street, Hutch shoots him in the stomach with a blank, then walks away while Starsky plays dead.
* ''Series/TheBoys2019'': ''Franchise/StarTrek'':
** ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'':
***
In "Over "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS4E24TheMindsEye The Mind's Eye]]", Geordi is brainwashed into a ManchurianAgent assassin by the Hill with the Swords of a Thousand Men", Homelander orders Starlight Romulans, and is tested by being ordered to kill Hughie Campbell, suspecting (accurately) that she a holographic Chief O'Brien. He briefly hesitates before finally doing it, prompting the lead Romulan to order another brainwashing session.
*** A form of this
is in league with him. When she hesitates, he threatens used at the end of the two-part episode "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS6E24S7E1Descent Descent]]". Lore orders Data to kill Captain Picard in order to prove his loyalty. Data actually had defected at one point. However, by now, Picard and the others have managed to reboot Data's ethical program and so Data simply refuses to shoot Picard.
*** It's not set up by the bad guys, but in "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS7E4Gambit Gambit]]", Riker has fallen into the role of FakeDefector on a mercenary ship, and when the ''Enterprise'' shows up he cements his cover by firing on them after ostensibly taking down their shields with his command codes. (What actually happens is that Data lowers the shields himself, trusting that Riker must have a good reason for wanting them down, Riker sets the weapons to almost zero power, and Data fakes taking damage.)
** A variation appears in the ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'' episode "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS03E21TheDieIsCast The Die Is Cast]]". Garak takes the role of a FakeDefector (though he seemed to have convinced himself it's genuine) for reasons which are complicated, and is ordered to torture Odo,
both to get information and test Garak's commitment to his defection. Garak goes through with it despite some reluctance, since someone else would have done so if Garak hadn't, and he couldn't refuse without losing the trust of them. Being the bad guys. Odo has nothing useful to reveal but in the end admits that despite his people's evil actions, he does have a desire to return to the Great Link. The shock of how far he would go torturing Odo, the complete uselessness of the information he finally obtained (other than to drive home how similar the two men are in their desire to go "home" and be with their own kind), and the magnitude of how all this affected him, make Garak realize he really is a ''fake'' defector and he can't just go back to his old life anymore. When his superiors ask what results he obtained in his session, Garak lies on Odo's behalf and says he never broke. The two of them end up becoming something of like friends afterwards, commiserating their isolation and sharing a DeathSeeker by mutual respect.
** ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'':
*** In "[[Recap/StarTrekVoyagerS2E2Initiations Initiations]]", Chakotay is given a phaser and told to kill Kar, a Kazon {{Child Soldier|s}}
that point, Hughie quietly gives her Chakotay took prisoner, disgracing him in the nod, eyes of the other Kazon. Chakotay is told he'll be released if he kills Kar, but fortunately he uses the rest of The Boys pull weapon to escape with Kar instead. Their leader was trying to demonstrate that an enemy you don't kill will kill you instead, so it makes sense he'd have to give Chakotay a BigDamnHeroes. working phaser.
***
In "[[Recap/StarTrekVoyagerS7E4Repression Repression]]", Chakotay tells Tuvok to phaser Janeway to prove his loyalty to Chakotay's mutiny. Tuvok pulls the next trigger. Later, he explains to Janeway that he logically deduced that if Chakotay doubted Tuvok's loyalty, he would not have given Tuvok a working phaser. She finds this logic to be less than ironclad.
* In an
episode Homelander is ready to kill Starlight, assuming from her hesitation that his suspicions are correct, of the 1950s TV show ''Tom Corbett: Space Cadet'', the leader of some SpacePirates pulls the unloaded-gun trick on a member of the Space Patrol who's contemplating a FaceHeelTurn. He falls for it, but Starlight convinces him she just didn't want to carry out a VigilanteExecution.he wasn't very bright in the first place.



* ''Series/{{Arrow}}'':
** Oliver Queen's first assignment for Amanda Waller is to kill his friend Tommy Merlyn, who suspects Oliver is alive in Hong Kong and has come looking for him. If he doesn't, someone else will do the job anyway, so Oliver is able to TakeAThirdOption by staging a fake kidnapping for ransom to convince Tommy it was all a plot by criminals to lure him there.
** When Oliver becomes a member of the League of Assassins he is subject to weeks of brainwashing. John Diggle is then brought before him and Oliver is required to kill him as proof that he has left his past self behind, which he does. It's then revealed he was drugged and actually killed another Assassin as part of his brainwashing. The scenario gets played out for real later, in a {{cliffhanger}} where Oliver locks his friends in a room with a DeadlyGas.
** A variation happens in the Season 4 flashbacks when Oliver Queen has infiltrated a mercenary group on Lian Yu. He tries to assure the slave workers that he is on their side, but as they've already witnessed Oliver killing one of their own (in self-defense) they are skeptical and insist that Oliver kill one of the other mercenaries as proof. As this is well before Oliver has a ThouShaltNotKill rule, and the mercenary concerned is a personal enemy of Oliver, he does.

to:

* ''Series/{{Arrow}}'':
** Oliver Queen's first assignment for Amanda Waller is
''Series/WildBoys'': Jack attempts to infiltrate the Butler Gang only to find that Mick has been captured by them. Frank Butler thinks Jack might be there to free him, but Jack instead claims he followed Mick there in order to kill his friend Tommy Merlyn, who suspects Oliver is alive in Hong Kong and has come looking for him. If he doesn't, someone else will do Butler gives Jack a gun with one bullet and tells him to shoot Mick. Jack does so, shooting Mick through the job anyway, so Oliver shoulder and Mick has enough nous to play dead.
* In the first episode of ''Series/{{Wiseguy}}'', the target
is able to TakeAThirdOption a District Attorney, with Vinnie Terranova shooting him -- though what DA would effectively end his career by staging a fake kidnapping remaining out of sight for ransom to convince Tommy it the years Vinnie was all a plot by criminals to lure him there.
** When Oliver becomes a member of the League of Assassins he
undercover [[MST3KMantra is subject to weeks of brainwashing. John Diggle is then brought before him and Oliver is required to kill him as proof that he has left his past self behind, which he does. It's then revealed he was drugged and actually killed another Assassin as part of his brainwashing. The scenario gets played out for real later, in a {{cliffhanger}} where Oliver locks his friends in a room with a DeadlyGas.
** A variation happens in the Season 4 flashbacks when Oliver Queen has infiltrated a mercenary group on Lian Yu. He tries to assure the slave workers that he is on their side, but as they've already witnessed Oliver killing one of their own (in self-defense) they are skeptical and insist that Oliver kill one of the other mercenaries as proof. As this is well before Oliver has a ThouShaltNotKill rule, and the mercenary concerned is a personal enemy of Oliver, he does.
question]].



* In "Two Friends" by Russian horror punk rock group ''King and Jester'', the eponymous friends are intercepted by a bunch of brigands. As one of them starts pleading for his life and says he would do anything, the leader hands him a knife and tells him to kill his friend. [[spoiler:He obliges immediately, but it was a SecretTestOfCharacter and the murderer is promptly tied face-to-face with the corpse and BuriedAlive.]]

to:

* In "Two Friends" by Russian horror punk rock group ''King King and Jester'', Jester, the eponymous friends are intercepted by a bunch of brigands. As one of them starts pleading for his life and says he would do anything, the leader hands him a knife and tells him to kill his friend. [[spoiler:He obliges immediately, but it was a SecretTestOfCharacter and the murderer is promptly tied face-to-face with the corpse and BuriedAlive.]]



* This scenario crops up in the climax of the next-gen version of ''VideoGame/SplinterCellDoubleAgent'', where undercover agent Sam is ordered to kill his boss, Irving Lambert, who has been captured by the terrorists. The gun you're given is loaded with 1 bullet, and you're given the choice of either shooting Lambert to maintain your cover, or turning the gun on the terrorist in the room who was left behind with orders to kill you if you hesitated. The canonical ending to the game is that he shoots his boss. A CG trailer revises the scene by showing a stoic Lambert looking down the barrel of Sam's gun and simply stating "[[DyingMomentOfAwesome Finish your mission]]".
* ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid3SnakeEater''. Not the Hero of the game, but [[FakeDefector The Boss]] was ordered by Volgin to gouge out [[TheHero Snake's]] [[EyeScream eyes]] in order to prove her loyalty. Somehow she managed to avoid doing this without blowing her cover (it doesn't hurt that [[StalkerWithACrush Ocelot]] and [[DoubleAgent EVA]] managed to be distracting) - unfortunately, it didn't stop Snake from losing one of his eyes for other reasons.
* Used in the ''Franchise/SamAndMax'' episode ''The Mole, The Mob and The Meatball''. Sam and Max pretend to have been hypnotised by the villain, but he's not convinced. As a test, he orders Sam to shoot Max. Sam has a gun of his own, [[spoiler:but he also has a harmless cap gun, which he uses to shoot Max.]]



* In ''VideoGame/FreeSpace2'', one set of missions tasks you to infiltrate the radical the Neo-Terran Front. In the final mission, a civilian transport carrying refugees enters the combat area and your wingmen demand that you destroy it to prove your loyalty to the NTF. [[spoiler: If you refuse to destroy the transport your wingmen label you a traitor, but if you do destroy it they say they already knew you were a traitor and commend you on so cold-bloodedly maintaing your cover. They turn on you either way.]]
* In the final case of ''VideoGame/CriminalCaseMysteriesOfThePast'', Justin Lawson orders [[spoiler:Eddie Lebold/Diego del Lobo]], who has been working his way to infiltrate Lawson's inner circle, to shoot his ally [[spoiler:Charles Dupont]], whom he is working with to take down Lawson.

to:

* In ''VideoGame/FreeSpace2'', the final case of ''VideoGame/CriminalCaseMysteriesOfThePast'', Justin Lawson orders [[spoiler:Eddie Lebold/Diego del Lobo]], who has been working his way to infiltrate Lawson's inner circle, to shoot his ally [[spoiler:Charles Dupont]], whom he is working with to take down Lawson.
* In ''VideoGame/FreeSpace 2'',
one set of missions tasks you to infiltrate the radical the Neo-Terran Front. In the final mission, a civilian transport carrying refugees enters the combat area area, and your wingmen demand that you destroy it to prove your loyalty to the NTF. [[spoiler: If [[spoiler:If you refuse to destroy the transport transport, your wingmen label you a traitor, but if you do destroy it it, they say that they already knew you were a traitor and commend you on so cold-bloodedly maintaing maintaining your cover. They turn on you either way.]]
* In ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid3SnakeEater'': Not the final case hero of ''VideoGame/CriminalCaseMysteriesOfThePast'', Justin Lawson the game, but [[FakeDefector the Boss]] is ordered by Volgin to gouge out [[TheHero Snake]]'s [[EyeScream eyes]] in order to prove her loyalty. Somehow, she manages to avoid doing this without blowing her cover (it doesn't hurt that [[StalkerWithACrush Ocelot]] and [[DoubleAgent EVA]] manage to be distracting) -- unfortunately, it doesn't stop Snake from losing one of his eyes for other reasons.
* Used in the ''VideoGame/SamAndMaxFreelancePolice'' episode ''The Mole, The Mob and The Meatball''. Sam and Max pretend to have been hypnotised by the villain, but he's not convinced. As a test, he
orders [[spoiler:Eddie Lebold/Diego del Lobo]], Sam to shoot Max. Sam has a gun of his own, [[spoiler:but he also has a harmless cap gun, which he uses to shoot Max]].
* This scenario crops up in the climax of the next-gen version of ''VideoGame/SplinterCellDoubleAgent'' when undercover agent Sam is ordered to kill his boss, Irving Lambert,
who has been working his way to infiltrate Lawson's inner circle, to shoot his ally [[spoiler:Charles Dupont]], whom he captured by the terrorists. The gun you're given is working loaded with 1 bullet, and you're given the choice of either shooting Lambert to take maintain your cover, or turning the gun on the terrorist in the room who was left behind with orders to kill you if you hesitated. The canonical ending to the game is that he shoots his boss. A CG trailer revises the scene by showing a stoic Lambert looking down Lawson. the barrel of Sam's gun and simply stating "[[DyingMomentOfAwesome Finish your mission]]".



* ''WesternAnimation/{{Arcane}}'': [[spoiler: A rather [[CrazyJealousGirl jealous Jinx]] demands Vi shoot [[ImpliedLoveInterest Caitlyn]] in return for Powder coming back and being siblings again. Vi of course can't accept that trade off.]]
* In ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague'', exposed agent Hawkgirl was asked by fellow Thanagarian soldier Kragger to kill the captured Justice Leaguers. She took the pistol, but explained that killing the superheroes will only anger and ignite the Earth's population to retaliate. While her explanation is reasonable, it only strengthens his suspicion against her loyalty.
* ''Franchise/{{Transformers}}: WesternAnimation/BeastWars'':
** Dinobot genuinely did want to change sides and become a Predacon again, but when Megatron told him to kill Rattrap as proof of his loyalty, Dinobot ultimately couldn't go through with it. [[spoiler: Which was good because Megatron was going to stab him in the back anyway.]]
** The opposite occured as well a season earlier. Rattrap was pretending to have betrayed the Maximals for the Predacons, and Megatron demanded he shoot Dinobot as proof of his loyalty. He didn't.
*** Although subverted in that same episode when Rattrap was ordered to attack Optimus who was flying overhead attacking them. While he at first fires intentional misses, when Terrorsaur gets suspicious he does actually land a glancing shot causes him to crash. Optimus later laments that he didn't have to "look that convincing" but Rattrap figured Optimus was tough enough to take the hit and used it to preserve his cover.

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* In one episode of the ''WesternAnimation/AllDogsGoToHeaven'' TV series adaptation, Charlie tries to FaceHeelTurn and is asked to kill Itchy... [[FridgeLogic which is no biggie since, y'know]], All Dogs Go to Heaven.
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Arcane}}'': [[spoiler: A [[spoiler:A rather [[CrazyJealousGirl jealous Jinx]] demands Vi shoot [[ImpliedLoveInterest Caitlyn]] in return for Powder coming back and being siblings again. Vi of course can't accept that trade off.trade-off.]]
* ''WesternAnimation/BeastWars'':
** When Rattrap pretends to have betrayed the Maximals for the Predacons, Megatron demands that he shoot Dinobot as proof of his loyalty. He doesn't. Also subverted in that same episode when Rattrap is ordered to attack Optimus, who is flying overhead attacking them. While he at first fires and intentionally misses, when Terrorsaur gets suspicious, he does actually land a glancing shot that causes Optimus to crash. Optimus later laments that he didn't have to "look that convincing", but Rattrap figured Optimus was tough enough to take the hit and used it to preserve his cover.
** Dinobot genuinely does want to change sides and become a Predacon again, but when Megatron tells him to kill Rattrap as proof of his loyalty, Dinobot ultimately can't go through with it, [[spoiler:which is good because Megatron was going to stab him in the back anyway]].
* In ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague'', an episode of ''WesternAnimation/BikerMiceFromMars'', Limburger tries to get Modo to join them by offering him a new fancy artificial arm. Modo pretends to go along with it to find out what Limburger's latest scheme is. Naturally, he is told to prove his loyalty by shooting Throttle and Vinnie as they drive by the tower. He does and Limburger is pleased. Of course, they were actually dummies with the bikes being operated by remote control.
* In ''WesternAnimation/ExoSquad'', the title crew is captured by the Neosapiens (rebellious artificial super-humans) after an ostensible betrayal by Neosapien crew member Marsala. The Neosapien leader Phaeton decides to pull this trope on Marsala and orders him to kill his ex-comrades. Marsala receives an obligatory "How could you?! After all we went through together!" reprimand from the humans, responds with a heartfelt and hateful speech about human oppression of his people... and naturally shoots the Neosapiens. However, the second part of the trope is subverted, as Phaeton turns out to be dumb enough to actually give him a loaded gun.
* ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague'': In "[[Recap/JusticeLeagueS2E24To26Starcrossed Starcrossed]]",
exposed agent Hawkgirl was is asked by fellow Thanagarian soldier Kragger to kill the captured Justice Leaguers. She took takes the pistol, but explained explains that killing the superheroes will only anger and ignite the Earth's population to retaliate. While her explanation is reasonable, it only strengthens his suspicion against her loyalty.
* ''Franchise/{{Transformers}}: WesternAnimation/BeastWars'':
** Dinobot genuinely did want to change sides and become a Predacon again, but when Megatron told him to kill Rattrap as proof of his loyalty, Dinobot ultimately couldn't go through with it. [[spoiler: Which was good because Megatron was going to stab him in the back anyway.]]
** The opposite occured as well a season earlier. Rattrap was pretending to have betrayed the Maximals for the Predacons, and Megatron demanded he shoot Dinobot as proof of his loyalty. He didn't.
*** Although subverted in that same episode when Rattrap was ordered to attack Optimus who was flying overhead attacking them. While he at first fires intentional misses, when Terrorsaur gets suspicious he does actually land a glancing shot causes him to crash. Optimus later laments that he didn't have to "look that convincing" but Rattrap figured Optimus was tough enough to take the hit and used it to preserve his cover.
loyalty.



* In ''WesternAnimation/ExoSquad'' the title crew is captured by the Neosapiens (rebellious artificial super-humans) after an ostensible betrayal by a Neosapien crew member Marsala. The Neosapien leader Phaeton decides to pull the ShootYourMate on Marsala and orders him to kill his ex-comrades. Marsala receives an obligatory "How could you?! After all we went through together!" reprimand from the humans, responds with a heartfelt and hateful speech about human oppression of his people...and naturally shoots the Neosapiens. However the second part of the trope is subverted as Phaeton turned out dumb enough to actually give him a loaded gun.
* In one episode of ''WesternAnimation/AllDogsGoToHeaven'', Charlie tried to FaceHeelTurn and was asked to kill Itchy. [[FridgeLogic Which is no biggie, since, y'know,]] WesternAnimation/AllDogsGoToHeaven.
* Near the end of ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyondReturnOfTheJoker''[='s=] infamous [[WhamEpisode Wham Flashback]], the Joker managed to smash Batman up, even so far as to shank him in the leg and send him plummeting to the ground, where he picked ol' Bruce up and tossed a BangFlagGun to Robin so he could "deliver the punchline". An interesting twist is that Robin ''wasn't'' actually trying to infiltrate the Joker's organization; the Joker had kidnapped Robin, and spent weeks [[ColdBloodedTorture torturing]] him, and wanted to prove that [[BeingTorturedMakesYouEvil he had broken Robin's mind]].
* In an episode of ''WesternAnimation/BikerMiceFromMars'', Limburger tries to get Modo to join them by offering him a new fancy artificial arm. Modo pretends to go along with it to find out what Limburger's latest scheme is. Naturally, he is told to prove his loyalty by shooting Throttle and Vinnie as they drive by the tower. He does and Limburger is pleased. Of course, they were actually dummies with the bikes being operated by remote control.
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* In ''Film/BlueStreak'', Martin Lawrence's character, Miles Logan, is told to shoot his murderous ex-partner by a group of drug traffics, in order to prove he's not a cop. Since he hates the guy, Miles just says "no problem" and shoots him in the arm. When told that he was supposed to kill him, Miles replies "Well you didn't say kill him, you just 'shoot him'!". When told to kill instead, it's then that Miles can't seem to do it.

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* In ''Film/BlueStreak'', Martin Lawrence's character, Miles Logan, is told to shoot his murderous ex-partner by a group of drug traffics, in order to prove he's not a cop. Since he hates the guy, Miles just says "no problem" and shoots him in the arm. When told that he was supposed to kill him, Miles replies "Well you didn't say kill him, you just 'shoot him'!". When told to kill instead, it's then that Miles can't seem the real cops break in to do it.protect him (as they think he's an undercover cop working with them).
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* In an episode of ''Series/{{Castle}}'', Ryan goes undercover as a member of the Irish mob. His boss finds out his ex-girlfriend was a snitch, brings her to him, hands him a gun, says kill her or you're both dead. Exactly as described above, he threatens to kill his boss instead, and discovers the gun was messed with and won't fire. (Too bad for the mob boss, [[TheCavalry Esposito's and Beckett's guns work much better.]])

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* In an episode of ''Series/{{Castle}}'', ''Series/{{Castle|2009}}'', Ryan goes undercover as a member of the Irish mob. His boss finds out his ex-girlfriend was a snitch, brings her to him, hands him a gun, says kill her or you're both dead. Exactly as described above, he threatens to kill his boss instead, and discovers the gun was messed with and won't fire. (Too bad for the mob boss, [[TheCavalry Esposito's and Beckett's guns work much better.]])
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* Near the end of ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyondReturnOfTheJoker''[='s=] infamous [[WhamEpisode Wham Flashback]], the Joker managed to smash Batman up, even so far as to shank him in the leg and send him plummeting to the ground, where he picked ol' Bruce up and tossed a BangFlagGun to Robin so he could "deliver the punchline". An interesting twist is that Robin ''wasn't'' actually trying to infiltrate the Joker's organization; the Joker had kidnapped Robin, and spent weeks [[ColdBloodedTorture torturing]] him, and wanted to prove that he had broken Robin's mind.

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* Near the end of ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyondReturnOfTheJoker''[='s=] infamous [[WhamEpisode Wham Flashback]], the Joker managed to smash Batman up, even so far as to shank him in the leg and send him plummeting to the ground, where he picked ol' Bruce up and tossed a BangFlagGun to Robin so he could "deliver the punchline". An interesting twist is that Robin ''wasn't'' actually trying to infiltrate the Joker's organization; the Joker had kidnapped Robin, and spent weeks [[ColdBloodedTorture torturing]] him, and wanted to prove that [[BeingTorturedMakesYouEvil he had broken Robin's mind.mind]].
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%%

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%%



-->-- '''Michael Westen''', ''Series/BurnNotice'', [[Recap/BurnNoticeS3E2QuestionAndAnswer "Question and Answer"]]

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-->-- '''Michael Westen''', ''Series/BurnNotice'', [[Recap/BurnNoticeS3E2QuestionAndAnswer "Question "[[Recap/BurnNoticeS3E2QuestionAndAnswer Question and Answer"]]
Answer]]"









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[[quoteright:350:[[ComicBook/TheBraveAndTheBold https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_brave_and_the_bold_v1_134.png]]]]

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[[quoteright:350:[[ComicBook/TheBraveAndTheBold https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_brave_and_the_bold_v1_134.png]]]]png]]]]\
[[caption-width-right:350:Green Lantern would probably come out unharmed, but [[WeaksauceWeakness bullets are pretty much always yellow]], which is not good for him.]]
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Updating Link


* Subversion: when [[Comicbook/RobinSeries Robin]] and ComicBook/{{Batgirl|2000}} start watching over Bludhaven, they attempt to take out the seeds of the Penguin's organization, and they end up faking a fight; Batgirl lets him win in such a way that makes it look like she's dead. The Penguin isn't convinced, and tells Robin to shoot her "corpse". He does. She doesn't react. The Penguin lets down his guard, and Batgirl [[WaifFu springs into motion]]. Later, when Batgirl and Robin have escaped:

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* Subversion: ''ComicBook/{{Robin|1993}}'': Subverted when [[Comicbook/RobinSeries Robin]] Robin and ComicBook/{{Batgirl|2000}} start watching over Bludhaven, they attempt to take out the seeds of the Penguin's organization, and they end up faking a fight; Batgirl lets him win in such a way that makes it look like she's dead. The Penguin isn't convinced, and tells Robin to shoot her "corpse". He does. She doesn't react. The Penguin lets down his guard, and Batgirl [[WaifFu springs into motion]]. Later, when Batgirl and Robin have escaped:
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* ''Lightnovel/FullMetalPanic''. When one of Gauron's mooks has Kurz Weber pinned down, he suggests Kurz surrender and let himself be taken to the BigBad. "If you shoot one of the crew in front of him, he'll let you join us." Kurz decides being a backstabbing mook wouldn't go with his cool image, and kills the mook instead.

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* ''Lightnovel/FullMetalPanic''.''Literature/FullMetalPanic''. When one of Gauron's mooks has Kurz Weber pinned down, he suggests Kurz surrender and let himself be taken to the BigBad. "If you shoot one of the crew in front of him, he'll let you join us." Kurz decides being a backstabbing mook wouldn't go with his cool image, and kills the mook instead.
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In addition, if the good guys are using this ploy, they will be careful to commend the testee's reluctance to pull the trigger, since [[DirtyBusiness killing should never be easy]]. (Well it depends on the person on whether or not its easy.)

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In addition, if the good guys are using this ploy, they will be careful to commend the testee's reluctance to pull the trigger, since [[DirtyBusiness killing should never be easy]]. (Well (Well, it depends on the person on whether or not its easy.person.)
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* ''The Dead Can Wait'' by Robert Ryan. A German FemmeFataleSpy says that for the passing out test at the ''Sie Wolfe'' camp they had to [[DeadlyGraduation hunt down live targets]], and in her case the target was another female trainee who hadn't come up to scratch, [[YouKnowTooMuch but couldn't be released because the camp was top secret.]]

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* ''The Dead Can Wait'' by Robert Ryan. A German FemmeFataleSpy says that for the passing out test at the ''Sie Wolfe'' camp SpySchool they had to [[DeadlyGraduation hunt down live targets]], and in her case the target was another female trainee her roommate who hadn't come up to scratch, [[YouKnowTooMuch but couldn't be released because the camp was top secret.]] It might have [[GoneHorriblyWrong made her overly paranoid]], as her behaviour verges on the psychopathic and at one point she murders a dentist in their UndergroundRailroad, thinking [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness he's planning to kill her after her mission fails]], only to wonder afterwards if she just imagined it.
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* The Dead Can Wait'' by Robert Ryan. A German FemmeFataleSpy says that for the passing out test at the ''Sie Wolfe'' camp they had to [[DeadlyGraduation hunt down live targets]], and in her case the target was another female trainee who hadn't come up to scratch, [[YouKnowTooMuch but couldn't be released because the camp was top secret.]]

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* The ''The Dead Can Wait'' by Robert Ryan. A German FemmeFataleSpy says that for the passing out test at the ''Sie Wolfe'' camp they had to [[DeadlyGraduation hunt down live targets]], and in her case the target was another female trainee who hadn't come up to scratch, [[YouKnowTooMuch but couldn't be released because the camp was top secret.]]
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* The Dead Can Wait'' by Robert Ryan. A German FemmeFataleSpy says that for the passing out test at the ''Sie Wolfe'' camp they had to [[DeadlyGraduation hunt down live targets]], and in her case the target was another female trainee who hadn't come up to scratch, [[YouKnowTooMuch but couldn't be released because the camp was top secret.]]
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** ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'': In the episode "Repression", Chakotay tells Tuvok to phaser Janeway to prove his loyalty to Chakotay's mutiny. Tuvok pulls the trigger. Later he explains to Janeway that he logically deduced that if Chakotay doubted Tuvok's loyalty, he would not have given Tuvok a working phaser. She finds this logic to be less than ironclad.
*** Especially given "Initiations". Chakotay is given a phaser and told to kill Kar, a Kazon {{Child Soldier|s}} that Chakotay took prisoner, disgracing him in the eyes of the other Kazon. Chakotay is told he'll be released if he kills Kar, but he uses the weapon to escape with Kar instead. Their leader was trying to demonstrate that an enemy you don't kill will kill you instead, so it makes sense he'd have to give Chakotay a working phaser.
** A variation appears in the ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'' episode "The Die Is Cast". Garak takes the role of a FakeDefector (though he seemed to have convinced himself it's genuine) for reasons which are complicated, and is ordered to torture Odo, both to get information and test Garak's commitment to his defection. Garak goes through with it despite some reluctance, since someone else would have done so if Garak hadn't, and he couldn't refuse without losing the trust of the bad guys. Odo has nothing useful to reveal but in the ends admits that despite his people's evil actions, he does have a desire to return to the Great Link. The shock of how far he would go torturing Odo, the complete uselessness of the information he finally obtained (other than to drive home how similar the two men are in their desire to go "home" and be with their own kind), and the magnitude of how all this affected him, make Garak realize he really is a ''fake'' defector and he can't just go back to his old life anymore. When his superiors ask what results he obtained in his session, Garak lies on Odo's behalf and says he never broke. The two of them end up becoming something like friends afterwards, commiserating their isolation and sharing a mutual respect.

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** ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'': In the episode "Repression", "[[Recap/StarTrekVoyagerS7E4Repression Repression]]", Chakotay tells Tuvok to phaser Janeway to prove his loyalty to Chakotay's mutiny. Tuvok pulls the trigger. Later Later, he explains to Janeway that he logically deduced that if Chakotay doubted Tuvok's loyalty, he would not have given Tuvok a working phaser. She finds this logic to be less than ironclad.
*** Especially given "Initiations"."[[Recap/StarTrekVoyagerS2E2Initiations Initiations]]". Chakotay is given a phaser and told to kill Kar, a Kazon {{Child Soldier|s}} that Chakotay took prisoner, disgracing him in the eyes of the other Kazon. Chakotay is told he'll be released if he kills Kar, but he uses the weapon to escape with Kar instead. Their leader was trying to demonstrate that an enemy you don't kill will kill you instead, so it makes sense he'd have to give Chakotay a working phaser.
** A variation appears in the ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'' episode "The "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS03E21TheDieIsCast The Die Is Cast".Cast]]". Garak takes the role of a FakeDefector (though he seemed to have convinced himself it's genuine) for reasons which are complicated, and is ordered to torture Odo, both to get information and test Garak's commitment to his defection. Garak goes through with it despite some reluctance, since someone else would have done so if Garak hadn't, and he couldn't refuse without losing the trust of the bad guys. Odo has nothing useful to reveal but in the ends end admits that despite his people's evil actions, he does have a desire to return to the Great Link. The shock of how far he would go torturing Odo, the complete uselessness of the information he finally obtained (other than to drive home how similar the two men are in their desire to go "home" and be with their own kind), and the magnitude of how all this affected him, make Garak realize he really is a ''fake'' defector and he can't just go back to his old life anymore. When his superiors ask what results he obtained in his session, Garak lies on Odo's behalf and says he never broke. The two of them end up becoming something like friends afterwards, commiserating their isolation and sharing a mutual respect.



*** A form of this is used at the end of the two-part episode "Descent". Lore orders Data to kill Captain Picard in order to prove his loyalty. Data actually had defected at one point. However, by now, Picard and the others have managed to reboot Data's ethical program and so Data simply refuses to shoot Picard.
*** It's not set up by the bad guys, but in "Gambit" Riker has fallen into the role of FakeDefector on a mercenary ship, and when the ''Enterprise'' shows up he cements his cover by firing on them after ostensibly taking down their shields with his command codes. (What actually happens is that Data lowers the shields himself, trusting that Riker must have a good reason for wanting them down, Riker sets the weapons to almost zero power, and Data fakes taking damage.)
*** In "The Mind's Eye", Geordi is brainwashed into a ManchurianAgent assassin by the Romulans, and is tested by being ordered to kill a holographic Chief O'Brien. He briefly hesitates before finally doing it, prompting the lead Romulan to order another brainwashing session.

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*** In "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS4E24TheMindsEye The Mind's Eye]]", Geordi is brainwashed into a ManchurianAgent assassin by the Romulans, and is tested by being ordered to kill a holographic Chief O'Brien. He briefly hesitates before finally doing it, prompting the lead Romulan to order another brainwashing session.
*** A form of this is used at the end of the two-part episode "Descent"."[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS6E24S7E1Descent Descent]]". Lore orders Data to kill Captain Picard in order to prove his loyalty. Data actually had defected at one point. However, by now, Picard and the others have managed to reboot Data's ethical program and so Data simply refuses to shoot Picard.
*** It's not set up by the bad guys, but in "Gambit" "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS7E4Gambit Gambit]]", Riker has fallen into the role of FakeDefector on a mercenary ship, and when the ''Enterprise'' shows up he cements his cover by firing on them after ostensibly taking down their shields with his command codes. (What actually happens is that Data lowers the shields himself, trusting that Riker must have a good reason for wanting them down, Riker sets the weapons to almost zero power, and Data fakes taking damage.)
*** In "The Mind's Eye", Geordi is brainwashed into a ManchurianAgent assassin by the Romulans, and is tested by being ordered to kill a holographic Chief O'Brien. He briefly hesitates before finally doing it, prompting the lead Romulan to order another brainwashing session.
)



* ''Series/PersonOfInterest''. In "Blue Code" an undercover cop shoots Reese, but [[OnlyAFleshWound just grazes him so he'll bleed]].

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* ''Series/PersonOfInterest''. ''Series/PersonOfInterest'': In "Blue Code" Code", an undercover cop shoots Reese, but [[OnlyAFleshWound just grazes him so he'll bleed]].



* ''Series/TheBoys2019''. In "Over The Hill With The Swords Of A Thousand Men", Homelander orders Starlight to kill Hughie Campbell, suspecting (accurately) that she is in league with him. When she hesitates, he threatens to kill both of them. Being something of a DeathSeeker by that point, Hughie quietly gives her the nod, but fortunately the rest of The Boys pull a BigDamnHeroes. In the next episode Homelander is ready to kill Starlight, assuming from her hesitation that his suspicions are correct, but Starlight convinces him she just didn't want to carry out a VigilanteExecution.

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* ''Series/TheBoys2019''. ''Series/TheBoys2019'': In "Over The the Hill With The with the Swords Of A of a Thousand Men", Homelander orders Starlight to kill Hughie Campbell, suspecting (accurately) that she is in league with him. When she hesitates, he threatens to kill both of them. Being something of a DeathSeeker by that point, Hughie quietly gives her the nod, but fortunately the rest of The Boys pull a BigDamnHeroes. In the next episode Homelander is ready to kill Starlight, assuming from her hesitation that his suspicions are correct, but Starlight convinces him she just didn't want to carry out a VigilanteExecution.



* ''Series/{{Arrow}}''

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* ''Series/{{Arrow}}''''Series/{{Arrow}}'':



[[folder: Music]]

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[[folder: Music]][[folder:Music]]



[[folder:Web Comics]]

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[[folder:Web Comics]][[folder:Webcomics]]
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** Oliver Queen's first assignment for ComicBook/AmandaWaller is to kill his friend Tommy Merlyn, who suspects Oliver is alive in Hong Kong and has come looking for him. If he doesn't, someone else will do the job anyway, so Oliver is able to TakeAThirdOption by staging a fake kidnapping for ransom to convince Tommy it was all a plot by criminals to lure him there.

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** Oliver Queen's first assignment for ComicBook/AmandaWaller Amanda Waller is to kill his friend Tommy Merlyn, who suspects Oliver is alive in Hong Kong and has come looking for him. If he doesn't, someone else will do the job anyway, so Oliver is able to TakeAThirdOption by staging a fake kidnapping for ransom to convince Tommy it was all a plot by criminals to lure him there.
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* This scenario crops up in the climax of the next-gen version of ''VideoGame/SplinterCell: Double Agent'', where undercover agent Sam is ordered to kill his boss, Irving Lambert, who has been captured by the terrorists. The gun you're given is loaded with 1 bullet, and you're given the choice of either shooting Lambert to maintain your cover, or turning the gun on the terrorist in the room who was left behind with orders to kill you if you hesitated. The canonical ending to the game is that he shoots his boss. A CG trailer revises the scene by showing a stoic Lambert looking down the barrel of Sam's gun and simply stating "[[DyingMomentOfAwesome Finish your mission]]".

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* This scenario crops up in the climax of the next-gen version of ''VideoGame/SplinterCell: Double Agent'', ''VideoGame/SplinterCellDoubleAgent'', where undercover agent Sam is ordered to kill his boss, Irving Lambert, who has been captured by the terrorists. The gun you're given is loaded with 1 bullet, and you're given the choice of either shooting Lambert to maintain your cover, or turning the gun on the terrorist in the room who was left behind with orders to kill you if you hesitated. The canonical ending to the game is that he shoots his boss. A CG trailer revises the scene by showing a stoic Lambert looking down the barrel of Sam's gun and simply stating "[[DyingMomentOfAwesome Finish your mission]]".
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* ''Film/{{Red}}'': Victoria recounts at one point how she was in love with a Russian agent. She was assigned to kill him, and sums it up with "I shot him three times in the chest." [[spoiler:That agent was Ivan, who realized she didn't ''want'' to kill him - else she would have shot him in the ''head'' - and loves her to this day.]]

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* ''Film/{{Red}}'': ''Film/Red2010'': Victoria recounts at one point how she was in love with a Russian agent. She was assigned to kill him, and sums it up with "I shot him three times in the chest." [[spoiler:That agent was Ivan, who realized she didn't ''want'' to kill him - else she would have shot him in the ''head'' - and loves her to this day.]]

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