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10[[quoteright:350:[[Film/OfficeUprising https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/office_uprising.png]]]]
11
12->''Heya Tom, it's Bob from the office down the hall\
13Good to see you buddy, how've you been?\
14Thing have been OK for me, except that I'm a zombie now\
15I really wish you'd let us in\
16I think I speak for all of us when I say I understand\
17Why you folks might hesitate to submit to our demand\
18But here's an FYI: you're all gonna die screaming!''
19-->--'''Music/JonathanCoulton''', "RE: Your Brains"
20
21A job can be stressful. There's annoying coworkers, demanding bosses, low wages, and [[BreadEggsMilkSquick ghosts and demons trying to murder you during your shift]]. Despite everything, your job is supposed to be mundane and not something to fear for your life.
22
23Workplace Horror is a subgenre of {{horror}} where someone who's just trying to do their job may find themselves in mortal danger while supernatural (and sometimes not so supernatural) entities are trying to kill them. Why the character doesn't just quit their job is usually not explained or is HandWaved as the character really needing the money.
24
25The character will usually try to continue doing their work tasks even as it gets harder and harder for them to survive. It may be the FirstDayFromHell on the job, there may be a [[DemonicPossession demon slowly possessing them]], a [[HauntedTechnology homicidal animatronic]] hunting them, or a [[StalkerWithoutACrush stalker closing in on them]]; but the floors aren't going to sweep themselves.
26
27Usually the horror stays in the workplace, but it will sometimes follow the protagonists home.
28
29Contrast HunterOfMonsters, where hunting the horrors is itself the job.
30
31A popular genre for SurvivalHorror games.
32----
33!!Examples:
34
35[[foldercontrol]]
36
37[[folder:Alternate Reality Games]]
38* ''ARG/OmegaMart'': The employee training videos are about teaching new hires how to get through a shift at the surreal grocery store, which includes confusing mind-broken customers into buying things, dealing with potentially equipment-destroying messes, and taking breaks when they start to feel disoriented from reality.
39[[/folder]]
40
41[[folder:Comic Books]]
42* Any story in the ''ComicBook/{{Batman}}'' mythos that focuses on the horrific aspects of Arkham Asylum will inevitably feature this trope as a plot point. As ''the'' TropeCodifier for BedlamHouse and CardboardPrison in comic books, Arkham is packed with homicidal maniacs, slavering psychopaths, and terrifying serial killers--and that's just the regular population. The super-criminals who are frequently imprisoned there, from the LaughingMad Joker to the [[GreenThumb plant-controlling]] Poison Ivy to the [[ImAHumanitarian human-devouring]] Killer Croc, are also a constant threat. Yet most of the employees are simply nine-to-five Gothamites trying to make an honest living, and the contrast between their everyday lives and those of the insane inmates is quite jarring. To name a few specific examples:
43** In ''ComicBook/TheKillingJoke'', Batman goes to personally interrogate the Joker. He's assisted by the receptionist, a kind-looking woman who points him in the right direction and doesn't seem fazed by what's happening around her. She even has a "You don't have to be crazy to work here, but it helps!" joke sign on her desk.
44** At least three employees of Arkham eventually succumbed to madness themselves and became criminals in their own right. The most famous is probably Harleen Quinzel, a psychiatrist who tried to take on the Joker and ended up being charmed into [[MadLove loving him]] instead as [[VillainousHarlequin Harley Quinn]]. There's also Jonathan Crane, a psychiatrist whose obsession with phobias drove him over the edge and made him into the [[IKnowWhatYouFear fear-controlling]] Scarecrow, and Lyle Bolton, a security guard whose extreme attempts to correct patients' behavior pushed him into taking up the mantle of Lock-Up, a villain specializing in imprisoning techniques.
45** ''ComicBook/ArkhamAsylumLivingHell'' is a rather more literal example of this trope. One of the main characters, Aaron Cash, is an Arkham security guard who struggles with day-to-day operations in the asylum, not the least of which is the fact that Killer Croc has bitten his hand off. Things go FromBadToWorse when the legions of Hell invade Arkham, and Cash suddenly has to deal with both human and supernatural threats. [[spoiler: There's also Dr. Carver, a psychiatrist who was murdered by the villainous Jane Doe; Doe's been impersonating her as part of an escape plan.]]
46** The biggest example of this trope might be ''ComicBook/ArkhamAsylumASeriousHouseOnSeriousEarth''. Arkham's inmates take over the asylum on April Fools' Day, and several regular staff members, including psychiatrists, orderlies, and kitchen workers, end up trapped by their insane schemes and forced to participate in the CriminalMindGames the villains are playing on Batman. The story ends with the implication that Arkham itself is a GeniusLoci possessed by a "spirit of madness" that compels insanity in its population.
47[[/folder]]
48
49[[folder:Film -- Live-Action]]
50* ''Film/TheBelkoExperiment'': The employees at an office for a non-profit organization are forced into lockdown and told that they must begin killing each other until only one person is left alive. [[spoiler:The whole ordeal is revealed to only be round one of a twisted social experiment from a MegaCorp]].
51* ''Film/CemeteryMan'': Francesco Dellamorte is a cemetery caretaker tasked with not only burying the dead, but it's just as much a public service to shoot the zombies that keep coming back to life every night.
52* ''Film/ForkliftDriverKlaus'': New forklift driver Klaus is the cause of and ultimately a victim of workplace horror in a German warehouse that is [[NoOSHACompliance very lax]] when it comes to workplace safety, and is [[EverythingTryingToKillYou an absolute death trap]].
53* In ''Film/{{Mayhem}}'', a virus spreads through an office complex causing white-collar workers to act out their worst impulses.
54* ''Film/PoultrygeistNightOfTheChickenDead'': The fictional fast food restaurant [[BurgerFool American Chicken Bunker]] was built on top of an ancient IndianBurialGround. The protagonist Arbie, who was working there, and his girlfriend Wendy have to fend off the customers who got turned into zombie chickens.
55* ''Film/SorryToBotherYou'' is about protagonist Cassius Green getting a telemarketer job at [=RegalView=], where he puts on a borderline supernaturally compelling "White Voice" to bring in customers. As he moves upwards in the company, he learns about its connections to MegaCorp [=WorryFree=], a company that makes criminal dealings and houses its workers in factories not unlike prison or slave labor, [[spoiler:and uncovers their plans to genetically modify employees into literal workhorses.]]
56* ''Film/WillysWonderland'': When [[TheProtagonist the Drifter]] is offered a job to do for the night while his car is being fixed, he's given the assignment of spending the night cleaning up Willy's Wonderland, a local SuckECheeses restaurant that's been closed for some time, which the Drifter accepts. What the guy giving him the job doesn't mention is that the restaurant is populated by HostileAnimatronics [[spoiler:who are haunted by the ghosts of a bunch of serial killers]] who will kill anyone that they catch inside of their stomping grounds, with the Drifter being the next intended victim. What [=NOBODY=] expected, though, was that the Drifter is able to fight back against, and [=KILL=] said killer animatronics, which he does... before going right back to doing the job to which he was assigned.
57[[/folder]]
58
59[[folder:Literature]]
60* ''Literature/AndThenThereWereNone'': Rogers continues to perform his duties as a butler after the murders start, even though his own wife was one of the victims [[spoiler:until he is murdered himself]].
61* ''Literature/{{Horrorstor}}'' by Grady Hendrix is about a haunted furniture store clearly based on Ikea, and the terrible, terrible things that happen to its staff.
62* Creator/RobertAHeinlein's ''The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag'': The titular character hires a pair of private investigators to find out what he himself does for a living. Despite encountering several terrifying events and a literally monstrous cult called the Order of the Bird, the pair continue the investigation to its conclusion.
63[[/folder]]
64
65[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
66* ''Series/AshVsEvilDead'': A possessed doll attacks Ash while he's pulling a shift at his workplace, Value Stop.
67* ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'': The episode "Doublemeat Palace" is about Buffy getting a job at a fast food burger joint, where she suspects something is wrong with the meat being served. It turns out the meat itself is fine, but there is a demon in the restaurant that she defeats.
68* ''Series/Severance2022'' is more along the lines of a PsychologicalThriller but is about a MegaCorp that has its employees separate their work memories from those of their personal lives outside of work, essentially creating SplitPersonalities known as "innies" (the half with the work memories) and "outies" (the half outside of work). Naturally this procedure works to prevent both counterparts from finding out the true reality that the other is living in.
69* ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'': The season 4 episode "[[Recap/SupernaturalS04E17ItsATerribleLife It's a Terrible Life]]" is an AlternateRealityEpisode where Sam and Dean are somehow unrelated co-workers at a large software company. When a ghost at the building starts killing people, they are forced to work together to stop the threat. At the end they learn that the angels of Heaven had altered their memories as a SecretTestOfCharacter to prepare them for their fight with the demon Lilith.
70[[/folder]]
71
72[[folder:Podcasts]]
73* ''Podcast/TheMagnusArchives'': The Magnus Institute's archival staff deals with a lot of this. Special mention goes to [[BodyHorror Jane Prentiss]], who [[spoiler:traps Martin in his apartment and impersonates him over the phone to his coworkers, resulting in him having to live in the Archives for his own safety, and later attacks the Institute, resulting in the death of Sasha and the near-deaths of Jon and Tim]]; Michael/the Distortion, who [[spoiler:lures a statement-giver into its doors, stabs Jon, and traps Tim and Martin in its hallways for two weeks]]; and [[spoiler:Not-Sasha, who murders Sasha, erases almost everybody's memories of her, and [[HumanDisguise pretends to be her]] for a whole season]]. However, as the series progresses and the characters gain more information about the setting their job descriptions gradually shift more towards [[HunterOfMonsters hunters of monsters]]. Also, [[spoiler:it turns out that employment in the Archives is automatically this, as signing an employment contract binds the employee to the Eye, and archival assistants cannot leave their positions unless either the Archivist they work under dies or]] [[spoiler:[[EyeScream they take a different way out]]]].
74[[/folder]]
75
76[[folder:Radio]]
77* ''Radio/TheAttendent'': This Creator/TheBBC Radio 4 dramedy series is about an all-night garage attendant who finds himself inexplicably living in a different movie genre every episode. These have included dealing with FrankensteinsMonster, a ZombieApocalypse, and [[EvilTwin evil clones]].
78[[/folder]]
79
80[[folder:Video Games]]
81* ''VideoGame/AbioticFactor'': Inspired by the resonance cascade failure from ''VideoGame/HalfLife'' - Abiotic Factor a SurvivalSandbox set in a sprawling, underground laboratory complex full of mundane office settings and science-fiction technology, rather than the typical "mysterious island in the middle of nowhere that seems to contain every type of biome somehow" - Complete with petty office bickering and frustrating routine procedures and policies that you'll have to figure out workarounds for.
82* ''VideoGame/TheClosingShift'': You play as a barista at a coffee shop during the night shift, but soon discover unsettling clues that a stalker is out to get you.
83* ''VideoGame/{{Control}}'': The setting is a massive, Brutalist skyscraper called the Oldest House. It was discovered by the FBC by complete accident (having a PerceptionFilter over it that makes it invisible to the rest of New York City) and they had repurposed it into their headquarters ever since. Befitting its place as a NewWeird game, a lot of the game's horror comes from the banality of its workplace environment. This ranges from rooms shifting out of nowhere, rooms spontaneously filled with clocks and killer sharks, {{Eldritch Abomination}}s invading through portals, a cursed novel killing its readers in a staff book club, and the staff making a SubvertedKidsShow as part of a team building exercise.
84* ''VideoGame/DoYouCopy'': The game puts the player in the shoes of a park watchman who is radioed for help by a hiker, who is being chased by something. The watchman must give the hiker instructions to guide him to safety, while also trying to lead whatever's after him in the opposite direction, though you also have to be careful not to lead it to ''your'' location either.
85* ''VideoGame/FallenLondon'': Many of the story lines involve the characters treating the various horrors of the Neath as workplace inconveniences. The Exceptional Story The Bloody Wallpaper is a standout example. In it the player is charged with working a shift at the [[BedlamHouse Royal Bethlehem Hotel]] and the horror comes equally from the threats and dangers within the hotel itself, and the soul crushing horror of having to [[StepfordSmiler keep smiling]] while dealing with the inconsiderate and disgusting guests. It is equally comparable to a surreal nightmare and a tough shift at a bad service job.
86* ''VideoGame/FearsToFathom'': In a first for the series (unless one counts Noah's housesitting duties in ''Carson House''), ''Ironbark Lookout'' heavily revolves around the player carrying out Jack's duties as the new fire lookout in a state park. This includes recording the wind speed, temperature and weather each night before turning in, communicating with other lookouts, investigating problem campers and assisting a lost hiker over the radio. Over the course of about a week, Jack starts to sense there's something sinister going on in the park, but the other staff are either dismissive or give only cryptic warnings.
87* ''VideoGame/FiveNightsAtFreddys'': The entire premise for most of the games is this. You are a night-shift security guard tasked with watching over animatronics that come to life at night and try to murder you. Usually, you have to survive five nights on the job to complete the main game, not counting extra nights and challenges. Certain games play around with this premise, such as ''VideoGame/FiveNightsAtFreddys4'' (which averts this by having you as a child fending off animatronics in a bedroom) and ''VideoGame/FiveNightsAtFreddysSisterLocation'' (where you're a technician responsible for maintaining the animatronics and the place).
88* ''VideoGame/GoingUnder'': Fizzle is a company literally built on the remains of failed startups, with its former employees twisted into monstrous forms. On behalf of her superiors, Jacqueline, an unpaid intern for the company, must adventure into the depths and hunt down the remaining monsters before they can overrun the surface.
89* ''VideoGame/HappysHumbleBurgerFarm'': You're an AmnesiacHero who has just been appointed as the night shift manager at the titular burger joint. Better get to work. It's your job to juggle all manner of cooking and cleaning tasks while also serving up the food orders. You'd better do a good job, lest you stir the wrath of Asset Joy, who will literally mash you up into a fine pink paste if she catches you. If you keep at your job well enough, you'll start to unravel the mystery of what is really going on around you.
90* ''VideoGame/HellPie'': The game's hub world and first level is an office building in {{Hell}} -- named Sin Inc. -- and it's portrayed as a pretty hostile work environment. The halls are littered with pools of lava and mangled piles of meat, your coworkers could literally go insane and set up deathtraps out of office supplies should anything happen to the [=WiFi=], and pissing off [[{{Satan}} the Boss]] in any way can result in [[YourHeadASplode a bloody stump where your head used to be]]. All of this is PlayedForLaughs, as the game has a decidedly light-hearted tone despite all the nasty stuff within.
91* ''VideoGame/KillerFrequency'': The game's plot involves a radio jockey (Forrest Nash) and his producer (Peggy Weaver) trying to manage a usual call-in radio station routine, but on the night Gallows Creek's mythical serial killer The Whistling Man returns to take revenge on the town. Due to earlier circumstances, you're also tasked by the town's only 911 operator Leslie to serve as a temporary operator team, while she gets help from a neighboring town. In their radio station, Forrest and Peggy have to juggle listening to callers, some of whom will be potential victims, and give them directions on how to survive their plight to avoid The Whistling Man killing them. Failure will result in listening to horrific murders on-air, while the leads and their listeners can only contemplate within the ambiguous safety of the radio station and homes. At the same time, you're tasked with playing music and ads, interviewing people, and dealing with the occasional prank caller. [[spoiler: In the game's climax, Forrest's safety inside the radio station is tested when The Whistling Man traps you inside with them.]]
92* ''VideoGame/TheMortuaryAssistant'': The game casts you as the newly-hired mortician's assistant at a morgue. The object of the game is to work the night shift while your boss is away, preparing a bunch of bodies for their funerals... and trying to figure out which one contains a demon that must be exorcised.
93* ''VideoGame/NightDelivery'': You're doing your job of [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin delivering packages at night]] to a Japanese apartment complex, but soon start to uncover a twisted conspiracy involving all of the tenants that verges into the supernatural.
94* ''VideoGame/NightOfTheConsumers'': You are a retail worker trying to keep the store clean while attempting to help rude, unpleasable customers under the threat of summoning the store's manager -- an AmbiguouslyHuman, perpetually grinning man who will ''kill'' you if he thinks you're not doing your job well.
95* ''VideoGame/{{Night Shift|2018}}'': A survival-horror game about a gas station attendant named Debra attempting to do her job while [[SerialKiller a customer]] behaves rather strangely...
96* ''VideoGame/NoDelivery'': The employees of a haunted pizza parlor are just trying to make it through their workday while dealing with supernatural horrors.
97* The sequel to ''No Delivery'', ''VideoGame/SorryWereOpen'', ramps up the horror, with your character being the manager in charge of a struggling store that must visit other stores in the chain, as well as corporate headquarters, in order to understand the monstrosities at the heart of everything.
98* ''VideoGame/SpookysJumpScareMansion'' alludes to this regarding the encounter with Specimen 11, which takes place in a ([[EldritchLocation heavily distorted]]) [[BurgerFool burger joint]]. The monster was discovered under a large abandoned corporate office once owned by a restaurant franchise, and likely had something to do with the paranormal happenings surrounding its stores -- an employee who worked at one noted that customers suddenly became addicted to the beef, the managers became extremely violent [[DisproportionateRetribution towards anyone bringing outside food into the restaurant]], and after having one of the burgers themselves, the employee too became addicted and finally quit after becoming plagued with nightmares about being chased by Specimen 11 in the restaurant.
99* ''VideoGame/TheStanleyParable'': While the game is largely light-hearted and comedic, the premise is about the sole remaining employee in an office trying to figure out what happened to the rest of his coworkers. Which is but one of the paths he can take: the further he explores, the more gradual his office is shown to be an EldritchLocation, as well as continuously being influenced by a narrator who seems to change things around on a whim. The themes of who's really in control of the situation can affect both of them, from Stanley [[spoiler:driven to insanity and suicide after realizing the Narrator's presence]] in one ending to [[spoiler:the Narrator [[GoMadFromTheIsolation becoming frantic without Stanley or a Player to bounce off of]]]] in another, to [[spoiler:''both'' panicking over what will happen to them next after ReadingAheadInTheScript]] in yet another.
100* ''VideoGame/VampireTheMasqueradeBloodlines'': Romero is the caretaker of the Hollywood Forever Cemetery, where the corpses [[RiseFromYourGrave don't tend to stay dead]]. Every night, he has to put down any reanimated zombies to prevent them from spilling out into Hollywood Boulevard. One mission has the [[PlayerCharacter fledgling]] take over for a few minutes (and take out a zombie horde) while Romero does some personal business.
101* ''VideoGame/TheWereCleaner'' is an inversion, the protagonist is a janitor at a corporation, the problem is he's a werewolf and everyone has to work the night shift for a week, meaning he either has to do his job without being spotted by coworkers or kill them and hide the evidence.
102* ''VideoGame/WhackYour'': A series of flash games about a VillainProtagonist tasked with brutally killing various caricatures in various ways. The games started with ''Whack Your Boss'' and was popular enough to spawn a few continuations with more ideas.
103* ''Working Stiffs'': This flash game deals with a ZombieApocalypse inside an office building with the employees as survivors.
104* ''VideoGame/YuppiePsycho'' focuses on the first day at the office for Brian, who must brave monsters, coworkers, and puzzles to kill the immortal witch lurking in the building.
105* ''VideoGame/{{Zoochosis}}'' has you playing as a night shift zookeeper in a zoo filled with animals that have been mutated into [[AnimalisticAbomination Animalistic Abominations]] due to a parasite, such as a [[BellyMouth pouch-mouthed]] kangaroo and a giraffe that [[WallCrawl can skitter up a wall.]]
106[[/folder]]
107
108[[folder:Web Animation]]
109* ''WebAnimation/SpookyMonth'': Kevin's subplots revolve around him working at the Candy Club and being forced to deal with dangerous and/or supernatural events that Skid and Pump, either directly or indirectly, bring along with them; such as an EldritchAbomination that [[YouCannotGraspTheTrueForm momentarily breaks Kevin's mind]], a bag of sugar that looks like cocaine right as two cops enter the store, and being attacked by both a killer doll and a cannibal on two separate occasions. He also mentions an offscreen NoodleIncident in which he had to clean up fake blood off the floor.
110[[/folder]]
111
112[[folder:Web Original]]
113* ''Blog/TalesFromTheGasStation'': The series details the ongoing saga of a "shitty gas station on the edge of town" where all manner of strange happenings go down, to the point that, for example, getting kidnapped by a deranged Satanist or meeting a god of darkness doesn't warrant much more than annoyance.
114* The nosleep [[Website/{{Reddit}} subreddit]] and similar online forums are fond of a genre known as 'rules horror', many of which follow the same formula; A (often nameless) protagonist, desperate for work, sign on to a mysterious business with the promise of a paycheck. Upon arriving they find a list of rules that ''must'' be followed to keep away the monsters/evil/CosmicHorror away, [[InevitablyBrokenRule which will inevitably be broken.]]
115* The ''Website/SCPFoundation'', much like ''VideoGame/{{Control}}'', which takes much inspiration from it, has shades of this - With the majority of the entries taking the form of a somewhat-standardized report to give appropriate staff the knowledge they need to handle the various "skips", akin to something like a Material Safety Data Sheet, but for giant, murderous monsters, portals to other dimensions, cursed objects, and [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking a toaster]]. Some of the commentary between researchers, guards, and other staff definitely plays up the workplace mundanities, even in a workplace that's about as far removed from mundane as you can get.
116[[/folder]]
117
118[[folder:Web Videos]]
119* Creator/JamesRolfe's ''The Deader The Better'': Two men are working at a cemetery where zombies keep popping out of their graves. The men kill off the zombies and clean up the blood and gore afterwards.
120[[/folder]]
121
122[[folder:Western Animation]]
123* ''WesternAnimation/RegularShow'': The central premise of the show is that Mordecai and Rigby, a pair of slacker groundskeepers working at an urban park, will often find themselves in bizarre or supernatural circumstances in their efforts to do (or avoid) their jobs. For example, the pilot episode involves Mordecai and Rigby unintentionally unleashing an EldritchAbomination during a game of RockPaperScissors.
124[[/folder]]

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