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  • Mikko Sandt from AMC Squad is the cybernetically enhanced CEO of his own company, MSCorp Industries, and is one of the core agents of the titular squad. He's only in it if it means lining up his own pockets with cash and discovering new technologies that he could exploit as money generators. He even runs a Cult of Personality where his own followers revere him as a god. His actions at the new AMC Base in Episode 3 reveal that he has no loyalty at all to the AMC Squad, as he files reports on them and has vats containing clones of his fellow agents. These reports reveal that he only finds some of his agents to be worthy of using for super soldiers and that he finds Micky's intelligence to be below his own followers'. The dream James has with Axon in Episode 3 even reveals that he would rather jump to the next dimension he has rather than stay behind and help the Squad fight off the Beyonders.
  • Revenant from Apex Legends, a Robotic Psychopath and remorseless assassin who has no goals beyond reveling in the pain of others and getting revenge on the corporation that turned him into a robotic assassin. Unsurprisingly, he's The Friend Nobody Likes, thanks to both his aforementioned insanity and his unbelievably rude attitude towards his teammates (most of his voicelines consist of unprovoked insults). He's especially hated by Loba, given that he murdered her parents.
  • Assassin's Creed:
    • Assassin's Creed: The Templars are comprised of Well Intentioned Extremists who truly believe they are making the world a better place, no matter how nightmarish their methods are. However, this is not the case for their agent Majd Addin, the regent lord of Jerusalem. Majd Addin routinely and personally conduct mass executions of his own people, not because they did anything wrong or because he believes it's the right thing to do, but because killing people is fun for him and it makes him feel like a god.
    • Assassin's Creed Syndicate:
      • Maxwell Roth. He's supposed to be the Templars' mook handler, but he's basically Joker in the late 1800s.
      • The Jack the Ripper DLC reveals that Jack himself was an Assassin who believed in enforcing the Brotherhood's will through the spread of fear and wanton murder. The fact that his existence tarnished the reputation of the Brotherhood is why his true identity is now a mystery.
  • In Avengers Academy you can recruit Loki, Enchantress, and Taskmaster. They're usually villains, but here they're fellow students with the heroes. Loki and Enchantress, at least, are still arrogant, rather unpleasant people in line with their comics incarnations; and all three have taken trips through the Heel–Face Revolving Door in the comics so it's plausible they could work with the heroes at times.
  • Baldur's Gate: It's possible to have evil aligned companions in otherwise good aligned groups, as long as you're careful with your Reputation Meter (not reaching above 18) and avoid Mutually Exclusive Party Members. Here are a few of them:
    • Kagain, a Lawful Evil dwarven fighter that happens to be an incredibly good tank. He can be recruited by good aligned charname, but expect a lot of bickering with the others, and having him with Yeslic is not a good idea in the long run.
    • Korgan Bloodaxe in Baldur's Gate II. His Chaotic Evilness is to the point where some people LEAVE YOUR PARTY if the right dialogue goes down. He is also immensely badass — just look at his name. Korgan will chase Aerie out of the party by verbally abusing her. If you're playing the expansion, however, Aerie instead starts verbally insulting him right back — at which point Korgan reveals it was a Secret Test of Character to see if she was able to stand up for herself or not — and now that she's proven that she does, he no longer has a problem with her.
    • In Throne of Bhaal, this extends all the way up to bringing the villain of the first game Back from the Dead as a recruitable party member!
    • Edwin, snarky Gender Bender wizard who talks to himself frequently about fireballing the party as they sleep. He also hated Dynaheir, Minsc's partner in BG1; in BG2 she's dead, and he mocks Minsc about it, showing zero sympathy. He seems to be driven by ambition and thinks the PC is a quick route to power - and despite mutinous mutterings, Edwin is one of the most loyal NPCs in the game, and it is perfectly possible to go through the game with a Good party, high Reputation, good deeds left and right, and all Edwin will do is some amusing snarking about it.
    • Viconia. A skillful healer and a Neutral Evil drow unless you're romancing her in TOB, which sends her to True Neutral. Regardless, she returns in Baldur's Gate III as the Big Bad of Shadowheart's storyline, as she was the one who raised her as a Tyke Bomb.
    • Baldur's Gate III has three (and a half); Lae'zel, Astarion, Minthara, and Shadowheart. Lae'zel is a githyanki Fighter who looks down on other races and approves of being a cold-hearted brute to everyone you come across. Astarion is a vampire Lovable Rogue who enjoys murder and underhanded behavior. Minthara is a drow Oath of Vengeance Paladin and sadistic Blood Knight initially in service to the Big Bad. Shadowheart is a Cleric for a Religion of Evil, but acts as a Token Heroic Orc to them as she has stricter limits on how far she's willing to go in service to her God of Evil who she (falsely) believes to be just misunderstood. She approves of selfish behavior, but hesitates to cross the line into full-on malice. They (aside from Minthara) soften up as the game goes on however, unless an evil-aligned Player Character inspires them to become worse.
  • BlazBlue:
    • Terumi was the Token Evil Teammate of the Six Heroes. He only allied with them out of necessity when he realized that the Monster of Mass Destruction that he had secretly created wasn't controllable, and since it was now indiscriminately destroying the world, as opposed to destroying it the way Terumi wanted it to be destroyed, it simply HAD to be put down. Also, one of the heroes, a witch named Nine, put him under a geas that he WILL have to obey her so he's steered to destroy his creation. When the monster finally had been killed, Nine managed to catch whiff of the fact that it had been Terumi who set it loose in the first place, so he simply HAD to kill her (that and he didn't take being mind-controlled that well)... Guess who of the two people mentioned in the above paragraph Nine was the mother of? Here's a hint: It wasn't Jin.
    • It's revealed in BlazBlue: Chronophantasma that Azrael is one in Sector Seven. At least Kokonoe can be touted as a Nominal Hero. Azrael is already said to be a villain of the series, though he may be unrelated to whatever the main villains are planning.
  • Nisha in Borderlands: The Pre-Sequel!. While Claptrap, Timothy and Athena are largely moral, Wilhelm is purely mercenary and detached and Aurelia has some standards, Nisha just plain likes killing stuff.
  • Borderlands 2 features DLC character Krieg, an escaped Hyperion test subject transformed into a mutant Badass Psycho, with all the power and insanity that implies. Salvador is up there as well, though he's not as insane and mostly in it for the guns.
  • Ceville from the game Ceville is one. He, in fact, is the disposed former tyrant of the kingdom - your first act while playing as him is sending the Three Little Pigs and the Big Bad Wolf into slave labor and stealing all their possessions. He never really changes his personality or attitude during the entire game. The only real reason he tolerates Lilly is because she's useful in his quest to get revenge and (sorta) take back his kingdom. Despite being a stereotypical evil tyrant though, Ceville shows quite the amount of intelligence and foresight; he's well aware that he can't just kill, say, his favourite cook if he wants food later and dwarven exploitation of the elves and the forests is bad (if only because they're greedier than he). Of course, once he comes to see how greedy and evil the senators can be, he starts to get appreciative of the new 'democracy' in his former kingdom. Paraphrasing his words, they're just as bad and decadent as he was, they just can hide it better.
  • Magus in Chrono Trigger is more the Token Anti-Hero once you get to know him, since Dark Is Not Evil, but his priorities and goals don't really align with the party's besides "kill Lavos."
  • Conviction (SRPG): Downplayed because the Abyss Empire is the main antagonistic force. Angelii is the worst of the empire's generals even before taking in the Dark Elf's power. Unlike Grace, Stan, and Emperor Abyss, she has no altruistic motive other than power and has no moral restraints in her battle tactics, to the point where she's willing to injure her own troops just to attack her enemies with a rock trap. After her first defeat, she destroys Lassla out of spite for Ire, which disturbed Stan.
  • The Silencer, of the Crusader series. An unusual example, given that he is the player character.
  • Danganronpa:
    • Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc's Byakuya Togami dances the line between this and Anti-Hero; the snooty heir of the powerful Togami family, who quickly and ruthlessly takes to the game, openly telling the others that they mean nothing to him. While he does do a huge amount of detective work during the various investigations, he'll also refuse to divulge information and at one point even plants false evidence to throw off the investigation and make things more interesting. But then eventually, an even eviler Token Evil Teammate is revealed in the form of Touko's Split Personality, the Serial Killer Genocider Syo/Genocide Jack. Eventually, they both survive the game, and their personalities soften in the sequels.
    • In Danganronpa: Trigger Happy Havoc IF, Mukuro Ikusaba, originally one half of Super High School Level Despair, undergoes a Heel–Face Turn after surviving her sister's murder attempt (which killed her in the original game). However, she's still played a major role in the world's destruction thanks to everything she did for her sister.
    • Nagito in Danganronpa 2: Goodbye Despair is a Well-Intentioned Extremist whose Blue-and-Orange Morality frequently puts him at odds with the others. In the very first case it's revealed that he attempted to murder the first victim but was beaten to it by the real killer, and he spends the entire rest of the game offering to help the others plan murders (which nobody takes him up on).
    • The Fan Game Super Danganronpa Another 2 has two; Syobai Hashimoto the Ultimate Broker and Mikado Sannoji the Ultimate Wizard. Syobai is an abrasive Noble Demon who attempts to stab Yuki the moment he hears killing someone is the only way off the island before they get the rules for the Deadly Game, while Mikado is outed as the Big Bad almost immediately but the others are powerless to do anything about it and he's bound by the same rules they are. Despite this, Mikado is rather Affably Evil and even prepares meals for everyone while they keep him at arm's length, much to his dismay.
  • Etna in Disgaea 2. Though not in the first one simply on the basis that you don't play the good guy.
  • Vergil in Mission 13 of Devil May Cry 3: Dante's Awakening. A Enemy Mine situation against Arkham/Jester forces Vergil to join forces with his brother The Hero Dante and Action Girl Lady in fighting her father. He's still arrogant and cruel but is directing his violence towards another villain, rather than the main characters. Once he and Dante defeat Arkham in Mission 19, he goes back to trying to kill his brother. After he Came Back Strong in Devil May Cry 5 he's less hostile towards the rest of the family after being beaten by Nero but not quite at the level of a Heel–Face Turn yet.
  • Dota 2:
    • The Radiant side is full of characters that are either heroic or sympathetic. Some are a little bit more bloodthirsty such as Luna or Legion Commander, or fall into a more neutral category like Bounty Hunter. The only identifiably evil character in the faction is Troll Warlord. He is a psychopath that regularly threatens to kill his teammates, is the only hero in the game incapable of thanking people who help him, declares himself the one who carried the team to victory, and is the only hero who blames his team when he loses. If it's not obvious yet, he's also a parody of Internet trolls and the infamous Dota playerbase.
    • On the Dire side, there are some characters that are extremely evil and stand out even among their peers, such as Terrorblade, Pugna, and Shadow Demon.
  • Dragon Age:
    • Dragon Age: Origins:
      • Morrigan is the daughter of the infamous Witch of the Wilds, Flemeth, and while she claims to be an ultra-pragmatic survivalist, most of her actions show her to be rather cruel, disapproving of virtually anything you do that isn't sadistic and cruel. Oh, and you later learn that the only reason she joined you was so she could birth a child with the soul of an Old God. Of course, she does have standards... just not many.
      • Zevran is an assassin who initially opposes the party, but can eventually be convinced to join you. Even if he does, he never quite drops his "evil assassin" nature. Unless the PC manages to gain his approval and convinces him to turn against his old assassin's guild in the endgame, in which he becomes a bit Heroic Neutral.
    • Dragon Age II is set in a Crapsack World with Grey-and-Gray Morality, but a few stand out:
      • Isabela, a pirate who stole the qunari's most sacred relic and is willing to let the qunari go to war with Kirkwall to save her own skin (unless you convince her to pull a Changed My Mind, Kid).
      • Anders is a Well-Intentioned Extremist mage possessed by a spirit of Justice whose inability to deal with human emotions is steadily turning it into Vengeance. At the end of the game, he commits a terrorist attack to spark mage revolution - you can kill him, tell him to go or let him rejoin you.
      • Sebastian vows to recruit an army and raze Kirkwall to the ground if you spare Anders after the Chantry attack, which he tries to make good on in Dragon Age: Inquisition).
      • Played with in Merrill's case, as despite being a Blood Mage who sought out a Demon to help her rebuild an Eluvian, Merrill frequently comes across as one of the kindest, most friendly members of the entire party:
        Hawke: Merrill couldn't hurt you if she tried. At worst, she might make frowny faces.
  • In The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind, the God-Emperor Tribunal weren't exactly good to begin with considering that they were Treacherous Advisors who betrayed their king Nerevar to become gods, but Almalexia was especially vile as Nerevar was her own husband. Vivec was a backstabbing pervert but also a Reasonable Authority Figure who really did care about his followers, whereas Sotha Sil became a Properly Paranoid recluse who secluded himself in his Clockwork City until Almalexia murdered him before betraying Nerevar again in the present day.
  • Elden Ring: Preceptor Seluvis is this among Ranni the Witch's inner circle. While Blaidd and Iji are both friendly, affable men who are childhood friends of Ranni and are completely loyal to her, Seluvis is a pompous jerkass who's brought onboard only because of his expertise in puppet magic, and in fact plots to betray her by turning her into a mindless puppet of his own.
  • Elsword:
  • Epic Battle Fantasy: Lance started out as the Big Bad of the second game, and even after his Heel–Face Turn, he's still a militant wannabe ruler of the world and a pervert on top of that. Because the fifth game is a soft reboot, he starts out as a villain again and has to be forced to work with the heroes, and for the bulk of the game they're not on friendly terms with him.
  • In Evolve we have Hyde, a pyromaniac who joined the military to avoid jail time and refused to wear a filter mask so he could look his foes in the eye as they died. It's safe to say that if the antagonists weren't so far removed from human he wouldn't have been considered one of the good guys.
  • Reaver in Fable II: he's arguably more evil than the game's main villain, being not just a mass murderer but cold-blooded and sociopathic. The only thing that keeps him from being a far greater threat to the world is his lack of ambition and scope. He shows up again in Fable III, this time as a ruthless captain of industry who exploits, abuses, murders, and ridicules his employees to no end. And alas, you are forced into an alliance with him, and at the end of the game he once again walks away virtually unscathed from the events.
  • In the original translation of Final Fantasy Tactics, Gustav Margueriff seems to be this for the Death Corps. Aside from his Marquis-kidnapping shenanigans, which damaged the reputation of the Corps (just as the guy who was paying him off to do it intended), his Brave Story biography had it that he was kicked out of a knightly order for his war crimes (i.e. rape and pillaging) before joining up with The Idealist Wiegraf's forces. The new translation, however, completely inverts his background—the rest of the order was full of war criminals and Gustav left in disgust, though this doesn't stop him from making life difficult in the present.
  • Fire Emblem:
    • Lifis from Fire Emblem: Thracia 776. Every other recruitable Thief in the series is either a Gentleman Thief or Lovable Rogue, but it's clear Lifis is still an unrepentant slimeball. Safy believes he's done a genuine Heel–Face Turn, but you later find out he only joined so he could turn Leif over to The Empire for a reward. After he gets his hands on Safy, that is. Thankfully, he's on the receiving end of a Pay Evil unto Evil moment from Pahn later on (who is incidentally a much more likable thief).
    • Karel the Sword Demon from Fire Emblem: The Blazing Blade is a Blood Knight who only cares about improving his sword skills. In his backstory, he kills his entire family over a sword technique save for his younger sister Karla who he didn't see as a suitable challenge yet. He then goes on a journey to slay powerful opponents across the continent. He only ends up joining Eliwood's army because he wishes to observe his skills. He threatens to kill anyone who challenges him, including his allies, such as Guy who only wants to learn sword fighting from Karel and though he agrees to teach Guy, he stops when Guy reaches a threshold because teaching him any more would compel Karel to kill Guy. When he is reunited with Karla, he doesn't hesitate to tell her that he will try to kill her soon. By the era of Fire Emblem: The Binding Blade, he has undergone development and has become Older and Wiser. During conversations with him, he elaborates on his younger self and the blood lust he once had. Notably, while he expresses remorse and has clearly become a better person, he makes no excuses for his past actions and now only serves as the protector to a small village but joins Roy after being convinced by his niece Fir or her father Bartre.
    • Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance and Fire Emblem: Radiant Dawn have a few examples.
      • First is Izuka, the Mad Scientist from Path of Radiance who ends up with Daein again in Radiant Dawn, who utilizes deplorable tactics for the cause, though he was serving two other causes at the same time, all three of which sought very different ends.
      • Second is Soren, who really seems indifferent to everything other than Ike, is more suspicious of others' motives than his teammates, and at one point actually advocates working for Daein.
      • Third is Shinon, an unabashed racist who never (at least openly) repents even given the somewhat Anvilicious race-based events in the game.
      • Finally, Oliver can be convinced to pull a very unexpected Heel–Face Turn in the tail end of Radiant Dawn. Prior to joining the heroes, he was an unrepentant slave trader and a particularly corrupt member of the Begnion senate. In some conversations characters will straight up ask him to defect back to the enemy side.
    • In Fire Emblem: New Mystery of the Emblem, a Guide Dang It! moment can lead to you recruiting Michalis onto your team. Michalis is a wannabe tyrant who committed patricide to claim the throne of Macedon and shacked up with Dolhr out of sheer ambition, and his ending indicates that his time in Marth's army does nothing to change him for the better. He is the biggest example of a Token Evil Teammate in the franchise with regards to the sheer amount of damage he causes and his lack of redemption in the end.
    • Fire Emblem: Awakening:
      • Tharja, sort of. On the one hand, she is a Dark Mage with a surly attitude, a love of curses, and a very intense interest in the player's avatar. One Paralogue even has her suggesting using her magic to give people a horribly agonizing death over two years. Her Kid from the Future also describes her alternate future self as being an abusive parent. On the other hand, many of her supports have her helping people out in some form or another, her support with the avatar shows she really does care for their wellbeing, a DLC conversation if she's married to a male avatar will show them as a surprisingly normal couple, and the people she wanted to kill horribly were slavers.
      • Henry, the game's other Dark Mage, looks like this at first glance. Despite his outwardly friendly attitude, he also has an enthusiastic love of blood and death. He subverts it, however, because even though he cooks up a lot of violent schemes, it's mainly because he doesn't think something is wrong if it helps his friends, ranging from killing birds to power a spell to help Lissa sleep to offering to kill his own leader to make Panne feel better. Most of the time though, he's just openly helpful to others and will cut out any disturbing antics the moment someone asks him to.
      • The Spotpass Paralogues have four recruitable characters who were fought at earlier points in the game: Aversa, Yen'fay, Walhart, and Gangrel. The first was brainwashed the whole time during their stint as an antagonist, while the second was Forced into Evil in the main story. The third one is unrepentant about his prior actions but was a Well-Intentioned Extremist. Meanwhile, the fourth was a tyrant deliberately running his own country into the ground whilst trying to start a war. You do learn that he originally was also a Well-Intentioned Extremist before becoming Drunk with Power. While some of his supports indicate he changed, his ending mentions he may have gone back to villainy.
    • Peri in Fire Emblem Fates. After her mother was murdered by a stalker servant, Peri grew into a childish, amoral serial killer who sees no problem in the slaughter of others. However, as mentioned above, she's a downplayed example, as she's still Affably Evil with her friends and can even grow out of her bloodlust via Character Development.
    • Fire Emblem: Three Houses:
      • Hubert falls into this if the player chooses the Black Eagles and goes on to the Crimson Flower route. Hubert's Undying Loyalty to Edelgard means he'll do absolutely anything to see her grand ambitions come to fruition, up to and including (sometimes overtly) plotting the assassination of his own allies (and the player character) at first. He eventually cuts out this behavior if you're still allied with him after the Time Skip but loses little of his ruthlessness, as many of his battle quotes would attest.
      • On the Blue Lions route, Dimitri himself becomes one immediately after the Time Skip. While all the other allies are concerned with ending the war, Dimitri has become a Blood Knight who only cares about killing Edelgard. He alienates and creeps out the others at strategy meetings and is even locked out of support conversations because no-one can stand being around him. After Chapter 17 this changes, and Dimitri begins a Redemption Arc to gradually become the heroic Lord he was pre-timeskip again.
      • Of the Golden Deer, Lorenz is a variant of this. Outside the Golden Deer route, Lorenz is the only member of the Golden Deer to side with the Empire instead of against it (Claude, Hilda, Ignatz, Azure Moon Raphael, Lysithea, Leonie) or stay neutral (Marianne, Crimson Flower Raphael), and even leaves your party briefly on the Azure Moon and Silver Snow routes. Notably, however, Lorenz does not actually support the Empire but does so to protect his territory.
      • On the Verdant Wind and Silver Snow routes, Ashe of the Blue Lions is a very strange variant of this, as he is the only Blue Lion to fight for the Empire instead of against it (Dimitri, Dedue, Felix, Sylvain, Mercedes, Ingrid) or staying out of the conflict (Annette), even briefly leaving your party after the timeskip. He notably does not harbor any ill will towards your party, and in fact apologizes if he attacks, saying he does so out of duty as Lonato's son.
  • Fist of the North Star: Ken's Rage:
    • Jagi becomes this for the Hokuto side in Dream Mode, choosing to take his chances with his brothers after royally pissing off Thouzer. Jagi was one of the biggest monsters in the series, although for this one mode, his brutality has been toned down with some hilarious moments. He also enlists the aid of Amiba, who also qualifies since Amiba has set out to ruin Toki's good name for a totally petty reason.
    • Raoh of the Hokuto Side, since by default, he's the ruthless Big Bad, and even when he's a Noble Demon, he's still got the evil within him.
  • Five Nights at Freddy's: Security Breach: The Glamrock Animatronics, unlike their predecessors, are normally not inherently dangerous; they are only attacking the player due to being reprogrammed by Vanny, thus they cannot be held accountable for their actions. That being said, however, it's implied in the game's backstory that prior to being brainwashed, one of them - Montgomery Gator - was responsible for the death of Glamrock Bonnie. If that's true, then that would make Montgomery this trope.
  • Flower Knight Girl: Most Flower Knights are defined by their cause to do good and help those in need... but then you have these particular girls, who by contrast have less sympathetic and/or immoral motivations.
  • In Grand Theft Auto V, Mike is a Consummate Professional with plenty of humanizing traits, and Franklin is an Anti-Villain with very sympathetic motives. Trevor, by contrast, is a complete psychopath who is motivated solely by amusement (Mike and Frank at least admit they do crimes for money), and of the three protagonists, has the highest body count and most atrocities to his name.
  • Margrid The Sly joins your party in Guild Wars. She's a member of the Corsairs, a ragtag group of bandits you've been fighting since level 1. It just so happens she can provide you with a quick escape from one mission, and she has no qualms with helping you as long as you can pay up. She ends up joining you permanently, though (she claims) it's more for money and treasure than the chance to be a hero.
  • Hogwarts Legacy has Sebastian Sallow, a Lovable Rogue and Well-Intentioned Extremist from Slytherin house. Over the course of his storyline he delves deeper and deeper into Black Magic over a Healthcare Motivation, and teaches the Player Character all three of the Dangerous Forbidden Technique Unforgivable Curses. At the end of his questline he gets Drunk on the Dark Side and murders his Knight Templar uncle for stopping him, and the player has to choose whether to turn him in or help him become The Atoner.
  • Three examples from Indivisible:
  • Nix in inFAMOUS 2. Nix is more of an Anti-Villain. While she is willing to kill it is more due to her traumatic experience and wanting to get revenge. After the plot twist, she is willing to sacrifice her life to stop the Beast who will destroy everything, compared to her counterpart Lucy, who joins with the Beast to save herself. Granted, it due to her wanting vengeance for the mutants she adopted as pets and not wanting to live in a world where everyone's a Conduit.
  • A lot of the hirable mercs in the Jagged Alliance games are either Ax-Crazy, massive Jerkasses, or both. They'll ignore orders if they're busy trying to kill a baddy, annoy other team members so much that they quit, or (in some instances) murder teammates that they dislike between missions.
  • Journey On: Most of the summoned spirits are friendly people, but one of the spirits, Ryuga, once invaded the Beastmen's Village despite their generosity towards him, and his ghost is unrepentant of his crimes. He can still be summoned as an ally though.
  • The King of Fighters: Iori Yagami plays this for his official teams in KOF 2001 and XI. Iori becomes this any time he allies with Kyo and Chizuru to form the Three Sacred Treasures Team. They're all descended from the three clans (Kusanagi, Yasakani, and Yata) responsible for sealing away Orochi, but the Yagami clan (formerly the Yasakani) made a deal with Orochi out of jealousy of the Kusanagi. In the present day, Iori hates Kyo with a passion, but he's joined forces with Kyo on at least five occasions ('96, '97, 2003, XI, and XV) because a) Chizuru is somehow able to coax him into fighting for their cause and even act as less of jerk than normal (Shingo fulfills a similar role in XI) and b) no one gets to kill Kyo but him. As such, Iori's gradually progressed into Nominal Hero territory over the course of the series.
  • Kirby:
  • Knights of the Old Republic:
  • League of Legends:
    • The faction of Ionia is filled with heroic characters who would usually oppose the evil factions like Zaun and Noxus. However, it's also home to a few decidedly evil characters:
      • Syndra, a powerful, loose-cannon Lady of Black Magic who murdered her master for the 'crime' of teaching her self-control and plans to destroy the Ionian leadership for being wusses.
      • Zed, a villainous Ninja who drove out the old order of heroic ninjas (Shen, Akali and Kennen) and wants to convert everyone to his dark arts of ninja and kill anyone else who are weak or opposing him. Riot even states that he and Syndra are allies.
      • Kayn, a former apprentice of Zed's who just so happens to be in possession of Rhaast, the Darkin Scythe.
      • Jhin, a professional assassin under the paycheck of Ionian's shadowy cabals who views killing as an art.
    • Piltover is a tech-city home to several good champions like Caitlyn and Vi. But then there's Camille, a cyborg who also serves law but is far more ruthless than the other Piltover champions.
    • Demacia has Sylas, a formerly incarcerated mage who seeks to organize a magical uprising against the Demacian government which persecutes mages like him. Despite his intentions, his actions have slowly driven him down the path of He Who Fights Monsters as he has committed several villainous acts to further his cause, driving the conflict into Grey-and-Gray Morality.
  • Lie of Caelum: The current generation of Kazuri students are mostly benevolent and even when they challenge the party for their ranks, they're good sports about it. The same cannot be said about Kenzo Vanguard, who is actively malicious towards Kyou and seeks revenge for losing against the latter.
  • In Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha A's Portable: The Gears of Destiny, everyone who had joined forces to fight the Unbreakable Darkness is doing it for good reasons, may it be to stop the Eldritch Abomination from destroying everything, to fix the mistake they did for unsealing her in the first place, or because they're completely loyal to both their master and their newfound friends and would like to have fun times after beating the threat. Well, everyone that is, except for Lord Dearche, the Evil Overlord-like Humanoid Abomination who's only doing it because she plans to take the unlimited power of the Unbreakable Darkness and use it to kill all her non-Material allies so that no one would stand in her way as she begins a reign of darkness! She was slightly annoyed when her fellow Materials protested her plans since that would mean that she'd kill their new friends too. Damn minions straying from their original mission of bringing chaos to everything and becoming all nice behind her back...
  • Marvel: Avengers Alliance:
    • Magneto becomes this. He reluctantly joined forces with the Avengers as the Syndicate he used to side committed one thing he wouldn't cross: reviving Red Skull.
    • Magik, if you get her, in a weird way. When she joins you, she could count as a normal heroine. However, as of Avengers vs. X-Men, Magik turned out to be Evil All Along at the time, so she could've counted. However, for the game, her 'evilness' has been toned down a bit, subverting this trope.
  • Marvel Ultimate Alliance:
    • The original game has a Villains DLC that allows the player to control Venom, Sabretooth, Magneto, and Doctor Doom. Yes, the freaking Big Bad of the game is available as a playable character, and there is even an achievement should he confront himself in the Final Battle.
    • Marvel Ultimate Alliance 2 has the Thunderbolts with Songbird, Penance, Green Goblin, and the Mac Gargan Venom (though Eddie Brock is available as his alternate costume). While Songbird is a genuinely reformed supervillainess and Penance is The Atoner, the latter two only join your group after you free them from being controlled by the Fold, a hive mind of nanite-possessed people. Judging from their dialogue with other characters, where they're total Jerkasses, they're not too happy about it. The partnership between them and the heroes is a strict Enemy Mine to take down their common foe. On the DLC side, Magneto returns along with the introductions of Juggernaut and Carnage.
    • Marvel Ultimate Alliance 3 has Venom and Magneto return, accompanied by the playable debuts of Loki and Thanos. Yes, once again the freaking Big Bad is a playable character (though this time around he is only unlocked upon completing the game). The DLC introduces Doctor Michael Morbius alongside the return of Doctor Doom.
  • Mass Effect:
    • In Mass Effect, none of Shepard's squadmates are evil. However, they are all placed on a Paragon to Renegade scale that determines what they will advocate when a big choice is presented to the player. Wrex is one of the two characters on the most extreme end of the scalenote  and will always advocate the Renegade option regardless of who the third squadmate is. Even Ashley, the next most Renegade character after Wrex, will advocate the Paragon option if she and Wrex are in the squad together.
    • Mass Effect 2 gives you the psychotic former lab rat Jack, the revenge-obsessed mercenary Zaeed, and the asari sex demon Morinth (who you can only recruit if your Shepard agrees to kill another teammate instead). Jack and Zaeed, while they don't end up being fully redeemed (at least until 3 for Jack), can at least be convinced to see things in a Paragon fashion; Jack by helping her deal with her past and convincing her that you're not merely out to just use her and Zaeed by punching him in the face and threatening, at gunpoint, to let him burn in a factory like he would have done to innocent hostages. Morinth, on the other hand, is a monstrous character who has no intention of ever changing and enjoys what she does. The Mass Effect 2 squad is quite far from the "heroic" side of the scale, when you consider that Thane Krios, an assassin, is one of the most moral characters in Shepard's team.
    • Mass Effect 3 has Javik, though he's not so much evil as he is just brutally pragmatic and ruthless in dealing with the Reapers. He also has zero tolerance for synthetic lifeforms and believes that they have no right to exist. He's also more than a little racist with other organic lifeforms (though you can talk him out of that over time), considering most of the sapient species of this cycle to be clearly inferior to Protheans like him.
    • Then there's Aria T'Loak. Sidequests she give you during the main course of the game implying assassination of head of one crime group to promote Aria's marionette or turian general, who stops the other groups from plundering the weapon deliveries (which can be avoided), or releasing the Ax-Crazy head of the third group from C-Sec (which can be avoided as well, by provoking her vice to kill her to take her place). Then she becomes an actual teammate for the Omega DLC, where she ruthlessly forces Shepard to kill hundreds of Omega civilians just for her to survive (which she does anyway), and then murders the surrendered Cerberus general, if not stopped.
    • In a sense the Batarian Hegemony is this to the other Citadel races. They're the only member nation with a garden-variety dictatorship for a government and which still practices slavery. They're considered a rogue state, but not to the extent of the Terminus Systems which are just a loose conglomeration of feuding fiefdoms.
  • In Namco × Capcom, amongst the multitudes of good heroes, one of the members you can get is Heihachi Mishima, one of the chief antagonists of Tekken. Though to be fair, he's on the 'Thou' part on the Eviler than Thou deal against Devil Kazuya... You also get the aid of Bravo Man's Waya-Hime, but this is justified in that, after her final battle, she was reset to factory settings and no longer wants to fight her nemesis.
    • Project × Zone continues the tradition with young Heihachi, T-ELOS, Juri Han from Super Street Fighter IV. And in the sequel, one of the first images you see in promotion materials is that the aforementioned Kazuya is going to be fighting on the players' side. There's also Vergil on the same boat.
  • Neverwinter Nights provided Grimgnaw, a Lawful Evil monk with the creepy turned up to eleven.
    • Aribeth de Tylmarande in Hordes of the Underdark is a Fallen Paladin who ended up as The Dragon in the first campaign. You can either make her the Token Evil Teammate, or convince her to seek her god's forgiveness, in which case she regains Lawful Good alignment.
    • Nathyrra from the same campaign is not an example. She is listed as Lawful Evil purely because of game mechanics on the Assassin Prestige Class (or, at most, because she had done evil deeds before reforming, and it can take a while before metaphysical alignment catches up for The Atoner) and acts completely Lawful Good.
    • Neverwinter Nights 2 has Bishop, a Social Darwinist ranger; Ammon Jerro, a warlock who is determined to defeat the Big Bad by any means necessary, including murder and consorting with fiends; and Qara, a sociopathic sorceress who has no qualms about "solving" problems by blasting everything in sight (and does not react well to people trying to prove that it doesn't solve anything).
    • One-of-Many, an undead Hive Mind, could possibly be this in the expansion Mask of the Betrayer, but this would largely be averted (provided the player doesn't choose to make a sudden Heel–Face Turn) by the fact that the PC would have to make a consciously evil choice to get him/it/them/? instead of Okku (the corresponding good character).
    • Leaving aside the fact that Storm of Zehir lets you hand-craft your own party, T.E.T. and all if you so desire, among the cohorts are the deep gnome wizard Chir Darkflame (Chaotic Evil), the aasimar Shadow Thief Belueth the Calm (Neutral Evil), and the half-drow warlock Quarrel (Chaotic Evil).
  • Okage: Shadow King has one (kind of) in the form of Stan. Evil King Stan believes himself, clearly, to be evil, and thus goes along with Ari to destroy the other Evil Kings and regain his power to do...evil things, apparently. Ironically, a majority of the Evil Kings Ari defeats ends up joining their group.
  • Among the founders of the titular organization in Overwatch, Gabriel Reyes (the man who would eventually become Reaper) qualifies. While the other four founders were (and still are) good people, he was a Well-Intentioned Extremist at best and a ruthless Knight Templar at worst.
  • While most of the champions in Paladins are heroic at best and Ambiguously Evil at worst, Zhin is the first real villain of the playable characters. He's the leader of a dark organization called the Thousand Hand Guild and shows utter contempt for everyone. In his champion teaser, he burns down the building that he was sharpening his sword in just because he can.
  • Peacemaker Series:
    • Most of the authority figures in the Dark Realm are benevolent to their own people, except for Dark Lord Spidergland, who is willing to sacrifice her fellow Dark Ones to protect herself from the Cerulean Kingdom.
    • After Spidergland is overthrown, Sanguine the Reanimator is the most twisted authority figure in power, since she is sadistic towards humans and is a Mad Scientist who wants to collect more bodies to zombify. However, she's still an ally of the more reasonable Spiderweb and treats her fellow dark mages well, making her A Lighter Shade of Black to Spidergland.
  • Peret em Heru: For the Prisoners: Most of the tour group members are sympathetic people, with even the ones with major flaws being able to recognize their errors. That is, except for Soji Mizumi, a completely unapologetic Immoral Journalist who regularly abuses his position to rape women.
  • Persona 5 Royal: If you unlock the remaster's Bonus Dungeon, Goro "Crow" Akechi, the traitor from the group and the culprit behind the mental shutdowns rejoins the party; they're not The Mole this time, but neither do they try hiding their true nature, making them this. They simply have a common enemy in the form of the third term's antagonist, Takuto Maruki, which is why the rest of the party, even Futaba and Haru, who each lost a parent to Akechi are willing to put up with them.
  • Ignus in Planescape: Torment; he is technically Chaotic Neutral, but he's an Ax-Crazy Pyromaniac who only avoids being Evil because he's too dumb (Charisma score of 3, which is the bare minimum possible; there are animals more charismatic than Ignus) to understand that arson is a bad thing and that people object to being set on fire. The main character could become this as well, depending on how you play.
  • Pokémon:
    • Malva is this to the Elite Four in X and Y - she was once a member of Team Flare and constantly talks about how much she despises the player for defeating them. The other Elite Four members don't seem to mind this.
    • The fact that Giovanni was the leader of Team Rocket did not prevent him from being the Viridian City Gym Leader in Red and Blue, or being brought back in the Pokémon World Tournament in Generation V even after ownership of the gym was relinquished to Blue. On a milder case, Piers being the boss of Team Yell doesn't have any actual consequences, though it helps that Team Yell are Harmless Villains at worst and are simply his Gym Trainers supporting his sister Marnie in his stead.
    • Pokémon Masters allows you to enlist villains to join your team, including Giovanni, Jessie, James, Cyrus, N, Zinnia, Guzma, Plumeria, and Lusamine (all of whom, with the exception of Zinnia, have "Villain" as a Theme Skill). Granted, some of them became good, but it still counts.
  • Dr. Nefarious in Ratchet & Clank: All 4 One, especially in that he was the Big Bad for two previous games.
  • In Rosenkreuzstilette Freudenstachel, Eifer Skute was an interesting double subversion. While the Schwarzkreuz was already an antagonizing group to begin with, Eifer showed that she was even worse than the rest of the bunch when she not only betrayed Pamela, but also revealed that she murdered the pope, and that her true allegiance goes to none other than Iris. That doesn't stop her from being Easily Forgiven in Pamela's side story, however.
  • The Warlord in Rebel Inc. has 6 unique initiatives (the most of any governors) and all six of them are dedicated to bully and misuse the locals for his and your benefits.
  • Despite the main characters in Red Dead Redemption II are part of a gang who commit crimes throughout, Micah Bell is an Ax-Crazy serial killer who's only out for himself he even goes as far as betraying the gang for his own selfish reasons.
  • Resident Evil:
    • Femme Fatale Spy Ada Wong has been this to the protagonists’ side in RE2, RE4 and RE6. She’s got a Dating Catwoman relationship with Leon, has a Pet the Dog moment by protecting Sherry and Jake and even helps Claire in the non-canon ending of RE2. Nevertheless, she’s still Only in It for the Money, has no qualms helping out the villains’ plans and nobody besides Leon really likes her. With Claire in Resident Evil The Dark Side Chronicles disliking and distrusting Ada immediately upon meeting her. Ironically among Umbrella, Ada is a Token Good Teammate.
    • Nicholai Zinoviev for the first portion of Resident Evil 3 (Remake). While U.C.B.S as a whole is hardly a clean cut group being mercenaries, Nicholai in particular is a contemptible Smug Snake whose personality repulses his more heroic teammates Carlos, Mikhail and Tyrell just as much as it does the heroine Jill Valentine. They put up with Nicholai, while evacuating civilians from the Zombie Apocalypse that is Raccoon City but unfortunately Nicholai soon betrays them and does his best to kill Jill and Carlos.
  • Shadowrun Returns:
    • Blitz from the Dragonfall campaign comes the closest to this. Of your regular team-mates, Dietrich is an anarchist (of the non-bomb-throwing kind), Glory is surprisingly empathetic considering all her Essence Loss and Eiger is a Consummate Professional who believes in sticking to your rep and doing the job. Blitz, by comparison, is a criminal and an opportunist, and while he's more impulsive than outright evil will support pretty much any job outcome no matter how dubious. In the Director's Edition, however, Glory will turn into a straight example if you have her pursue vengeance in her personal quest, becoming a toxic mage unconcerned with casualties.
    • Racher and Gaichû from Hong Kong. The former is The Sociopath and a self-proclaimed Mad Scientist, and will support violent and self-serving outcomes to any quest as long as Kindly Cheng is happy with it. Gaichû is a former Elite Mook from a MegaCorp and a Blood Knight, and similarly thinks nothing of violent solutions to make your reputation more fearsome. They are the only two party members who will support you making a Deal with the Devil in the climax, and will help you kill the other members of your party if you do.
  • E-123 Omega from Sonic Heroes and Sonic Chronicles. Dr. Eggman in Sonic Chronicles as well.
  • Gig in Soul Nomad & the World Eaters. Except, obviously, in the Demon Path, where everyone is evil.
  • In StarCraft II: Legacy of the Void, Alarak is a ruthless Magnificent Bastard with questionable morality and an Obviously Evil appearance, but he serves as one of Artanis' generals after a Heel–Face Turn. He even gets a handful of Pet the Dog moments throughout the story.
  • Star Wars: The Old Republic: The Jedi Knight has Lord Scourge as one of their companions, he is a Sith Lord who happened to be the Sith Emperor's former bodyguard. He sides with the Jedi because he saw that they would be the one who will defeat the emperor. It should be noted that in the past he aided Revan and the Exile in taking down the Emperor, but betrayed them when he had a vision that they would fail, and the Jedi Knight would be the one who will kill the Emperor.
    • Other examples in the game are Consular companion Zenith (a not-quite-former terrorist who will approve of any action that hits the Empire, and too bad if there are hundreds of civilian casualties in the crossfire), Trooper companion Tanno Vik, who is a dishonorably discharged soldier turned mercenary, and Theron Shan from the Shadow of Revan arc (who almost always advocates for the Republic flavor of Dark Side - like killing Rakata soldiers asleep in kolto tanks or sniping Imperial ships in the chaos during a fight with the Revanites).
    • Even Imperial classes have characters that come off as extra cruel or brutal compared to others. The Imperial Agent and Bounty Hunter has Kaliyo Djannis and Skadge, who are Psychos For Hire that largely approve of violence and cruelty. Most notably, Kaliyo is the first companion of the Agent and will be around for quite a while before they get their second companion.
      • Then there is SCORPIO, an Agent companion, a ruthless assassin droid. She is a major companion in Knights of the Fallen Empire who plays the role of an unpredictable Wild Card.
  • Street Fighter V has Birdie and, to a greater extent, Juri. Birdie is a former Shadowloo minion who only helps the World Warriors due his own Big Eater gluttony and even tries to escape during the Final Battle but ends up aiding the heroes in defeating the Dolls. Juri is a former member of S.I.N who is still very Ax-Crazy and just wants Shadowloo destroyed due to her personal vendetta against M.Bison and only helps out Cammy and the Dolls to amuse herself.
  • Suikoden:
    • Sid in Suikoden II counts. His creepy demeanor, which you get to witness firsthand, makes him The Un-Favourite among the local townspeople where he lives. He also qualifies as Wild Card, as he joins you only because Chaco, his younger brother has joined you and Sid, being the Big Brother Bully that he is, would find more opportunities in tormenting Chaco by joining you as well.note 
    • Suikoden V has Nakula, an Ax-Crazy killer who makes absolutely no attempt to hide the fact that he wants to murder one of your other teammates. A little elaboration is needed. He's not "evil by design". Rather, he's just insanely pissed one of your other teammates murdered his father, and though he really wants said teammate to die (who even acknowledges he's right to be so angry), he's willing to be professional enough to put his grudge aside to aid you, even against his own people, mostly because they gave him up for dead.
  • Super Mario Bros.:
    • Bowser in Super Mario RPG and Super Paper Mario, although he can hardly be called "Evil" in either of those games. In the former case, he only joins the party (or claims that Mario is working for him to save face) to get his castle back. He almost leaves after Exor is defeated, but is convinced to stay until Smithy is defeated when Geno points out that if Smithy launches another invasion of the Mushroom Kingdom, Bowser's castle will be first to fall.
    • Lady Bow in Paper Mario 64. Her subjects picked on Tubba Blubba before and after the events of her chapter, and after he uses powers bestowed by Bowser to take revenge on them, Bow blackmails Mario with a Star Spirit to help her. While she does willingly help Mario afterwards, and begrudgingly agrees to stop bullying Tubba, she still explicitly tells Mario she's not sorry for any of the trouble she caused in the first place.
    • Mario Party 8: Blooper and Hammer Bro are the only playable characters that explicitly work for Bowser here as one of them will act as the final opponent in the Star Battle Arena.
    • Mario Party 9: In Solo mode, Magikoopa/Kamek and Shy Guy accompany Mario and friends throughout each board, but are working against them and are on Bowser's side. If either of them come in first place on a board, they will steal all of the Mini-Stars collected on that board, forcing the player to try the board again from the start.
    • Super Mario Party: Toad, Toadette, and Kamek act as the judges in the board games. While Toad and Toadette are supportive to the partygoers, giving them instructions and awarding them with stars, Kamek instead prefers to harass the participants with different punishments whenever they land on his Bad Luck spaces.
  • Harold Berselius in Tales of Destiny 2 is the Token Amoral Teammate, essentially doing everything for either her amusement, to get the chance to murder a goddess, or For Science!, including threatening to vivisect people and experimenting on them without consent. It must be pointed out she was a Mad Scientist for the good side of the Aether war, however.
  • Anyone with the Darcsen Hater potential in Valkyria Chronicles. Cezary is a Dirty Coward who only became a sniper to stay off the front lines, besides being a complete Jerkass. (even to the player) And then there's Theold Bohr, a Might Makes Right, Social Darwinist, bully and utterly unrepentant Jerkass who calls Darcsens heretics. Rosina isn't quite as bad as the other two (she only dislikes Darcsens because they tend to be skinny, and she has a thing for macho men) but she can still be a jerk sometimes. Given the nature of the game, most players don't even touch them.
  • Warhammer 40,000: Rogue Trader: Given the universe, many party members tend to be morally grey. Still, one party member recruited in the late game manages to stand out, even by the standards of the grim darkness of the future, for being utterly, openly, and unrepentantly evil: the Dark Eldar Marazhai Aezyrraesh, a sadistic killer who can only join the party and be reined in because he's out of options. Other party members may be shaped by the setting's Fantastic Racism, fanaticism, and the harsh necessities of their 'verse, but Marazhai is just in it For the Evulz and won't pretend otherwise.
  • Wasteland 3 has a few, being a brutal post-apocalypse after all.
    • Ironclad Cordite is a former warlord who was betrayed by one of his own men and imprisoned by The Patriarch. Even after being freed by the Desert Rangers, he sees them as just a means to an end in his goal to reclaim his gang and threatens to leave if you continue supporting The Patriarch.
    • Victory Buchanan is the Patriarch's middle child and a literal psychopath who you're tasked with arresting alongside his other out-of-control kids. By the time you find him he's slaughtered god-knows-how-many civilians with his Brainwashed and Crazy mooks, taken several of your comrades hostage as well as a few civilians, and keeps a corpse in the safe room with him as company. If you can talk him down he offers to join the Desert Rangers instead of being locked up, but virtually everyone would rather you put the mad dog down.
    • Fishlips is the leader of the cannibalistic raider gang known as the Hard-Heads, and attacks the party when you first meet him. However once you get his health down low enough in the ensuing boss battle, he'll declare you the new boss and offer to join the party.
  • Joshua of The World Ends with You. He starts as the protagonist's partner and foil in the second level of the game, fakes a Heroic Sacrifice, and ends up as the Big Bad and The Man Behind the Man in The Reveal. Not bad for a smarmy git.
  • Minamimoto of NEO: The World Ends with You was a major villain in the first game, and he isn't much less of a Jerkass when he joins the Wicked Twisters. It turns out he hasn't given up on his plans as The Starscream from the past game, and only joined the Twisters to further his own interests, quickly ditching them when they're no longer useful. He helps out again in the finale, but only because he can't take over Shibuya if it gets destroyed.
  • World of Horror has two examples:
    • While most of the protagonists are teenagers, Haru is a 25-year old member of the yakuza who serves as a driver. The Sole Survivor of a disastrous attempt to rob an old, abandoned mansion that turned out to be far more dangerous than any of them anticipated, he gets involved in trying to stop the supernatural out of self-preservation.
    • Unlockable character Miku, meanwhile, starts as one of your enemies, making a Heel–Face Turn after you fill her sickly grandmother's Prescription for her. The game refers to them as the Chaos Survivor, stating in their description that they fight the Old Gods for their own selfish reasons rather than pursuing any greater good.
  • Warlocks and Death Knights seem to serve this role in World of Warcraft. Warlocks fit the role very loosely, since they indeed horribly kill their enemies and steal their souls, but their class quest chain is dedicated to resisting the Burning Legion's influence and not succumbing to evil.
    • As well as many Forsaken leaders, who are not saints and seem to be part of the Horde mostly out of it being mutually beneficial (and Sylvanas having at least some degree of respect for Thrall).
    • And Death Knights feed by the very act of killing, which is perfectly suited to the role of adventurer… and thus not really fitting the trope very well. All of what made the DK class "evil" was because they were compelled to do Arthas' will, which disappears after the Knights of the Ebon Blade rebel.
      • On the other hand, many of the Knights of the Ebon Blade take questionable approaches to fighting the Scourge, from being willing to fire even while risking hitting web-wrapped "human shields" to destroying the soul of an enemy commander.
    • In Wrath of the Lich King, Malygos, leader of the Blue Dragonflight, has gone insane and is leading his dragonflight in an attempt to destroy the world due to what he sees as overuse and misuse of magic by mortals. The Wyrmrest Accord is an alliance of the other four dragonflights of Azeroth against the blues. The black dragonflight is part of the alliance. The leader of the black dragonflight also wants to destroy the world, in his case because he was corrupted by Eldritch Abominations, and in fact he would attempt to do so in the very next expansion, but he wasn't around during the events of Wrath of the Lich King. So the blacks, while evil in general, weren't making a concerted effort to blow things up when the blues were.
    • Magatha Grimtotem and her clan are this to the Tauren. She's responsible for the death of Cairne Bloodhoof (Cairne had a duel with Garrosh Hellscream where both fighters were allowed to have their weapon blessed by a shaman before the fight, Magatha applied poison to Hellscream's weapon) and was exiled for it. Players help her acquire an artifact called the Doomstone in post-Cataclysm Thousand Needles, after which she vanishes. She reappears in the Shaman campaign in Legion, where the player can acquire her as a follower in Patch 7.1).
  • In Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Links, Pegasus, Yami Marik, and Yami Bakura are among the playable characters.


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