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10[[quoteright:350:[[WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/img_1064.png]]]]
11[[caption-width-right:350:No one told him it was Griffin season.]]
12
13->''"You will forsake all claim to your brother's inheritance and start north before evenfall. If you do not, then on the morrow we shall have a hunt, and somewhere in these woods your horse will stumble, and you will be thrown from the saddle to die... or so I will tell your mother. Nothing would please me more."''
14-->-- '''Lord Randyll Tarly''' (to his son Samwell Tarly), ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire''
15
16A specific and common variety of MakeItLookLikeAnAccident, this is an assassination attempt during a hunting party which cleverly takes advantage of all of the weaponry about to "accidentally" fire upon a fellow participant. Particularly clever about this method is that even if the perpetrator was identified as firing the fatal shot, at most, they appear guilty of manslaughter.
17
18The weapons aren't the only dangerous things one encounters while hunting, of course: variations of this trope are seen in which the victim is killed by a riding "accident" or [[TheHunterBecomesTheHunted their supposed quarry]] or something else. These can make for the most convincing [[MakeItLookLikeanAccident "accidents"]], but tend to be somewhat more complex to arrange.
19
20Of course, sometimes, [[TheCoronerDothProtestTooMuch it fails to look like an accident at all]].
21
22Might overlap with ThisBearWasFramed, when a murder scene is tampered with so it looks like a wild animal did it. MurphysBullet can be used as an excuse, too. SisterTrope of UnfriendlyFire, which is passing off a murder of a fellow soldier as just a casualty of war. If there's not even the pretense of an accident, see HuntingTheMostDangerousGame.
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24!!As this can be a {{Death Trope|s}}, [[Administrivia/SpoilersOff unmarked spoilers abound]]. [[Administrivia/YouHaveBeenWarned Beware]].
25----
26!!Examples:
27
28[[foldercontrol]]
29
30[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
31* In ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'', the DecadentCourt of Midland attempts this against Griffith during the arc in which he and the Band of the Hawk rise through society despite their common origins. The attack fails due to [[PocketProtector the arrow hitting Griffith's Behelit instead]]. Griffith knows what's up, though, and [[spoiler:eventually arranges the deaths of everyone responsible. Including the frigging QUEEN!]]
32* ''Anime/LupinIIIVsDetectiveConan'' begins with the queen of a country named Vespania out enjoying nature while her son and brother go hunting. It appears that the prince accidentally shoots her while aiming at a fox, and immediately commits suicide out of grief. TheReveal is that [[spoiler:the queen replaced the prince's bullets with blanks to keep him from killing anything - her brother actually killed them both]].
33[[/folder]]
34
35[[folder:Comic Books]]
36* A graphic novel co-written by Enki Billal, ''The Hunting Party'', is one ''looong'' Hunting "Accident" spanning the entire book. With all the characters being officials in Soviet vassal states, the "accident" is a little more advanced than usual, by using the Credible Threat of an angry bear and the rather telling line:
37-->"I would watch my mouth if I were you, it is not uncommon for a second accident to occur when someone has already died."
38* Fifteen years before the start of ''ComicBook/MotherPanic'', the protagonist's father was killed this way.
39* In ''ComicBook/{{Preacher}}'', this is what lead to the death of Tulip's father during a hunting trip they were both on. To add insult to injury, he was taking a crap in the woods at the time. Note that unlike the other examples listed under this trope, this really was a genuine hunting accident. The hunters who shot him were just that stupid.
40[[/folder]]
41
42[[folder:Fan Works]]
43* ''Fanfic/TheAlmanacChronicles'': Lorraine and Cliff arrange this kind of death for Biff.
44* King Halvard of the ''Frozen'' fic ''Fanfic/InPainAndBlood'' loved hunting. One day, he went out hunting with a group but he didn't come back alive. He was attacked by a bear and mysteriously died of his non-lethal injuries. It was considered an unfortunate stroke of infection until his elder son started showing similar symptoms a few years later. It turns out that his other son Aksel has poisoned his father and was attempting the same with his brother.
45[[/folder]]
46
47[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
48* In ''WesternAnimation/Shrek2'', Fiona's father tells Shrek to meet him in the early morning to go hunting, but it is really a trap so the professional assassin Puss In Boots can kill him, at the behest of the movie's BigBad.
49[[/folder]]
50
51[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
52* In ''Film/CadillacMan'' Robin Williams assures himself that his old friend Carmine will look out for him if he is threatened by other mobsters. Upon asking Carmine's whereabouts he is answered with these two words.
53* In the "Father's Day" segment of ''Film/{{Creepshow}}'', we learn that Bedelia Grantham's monstrous father had her beau killed in a "hunting accident" (this explanation is delivered complete with air quotes).
54* Part of Salluste's EvilPlan in ''Film/DelusionsOfGrandeur''. After his planned marriage with the Infanta, it involves ''lots'' of hunting accidents to clear up the succession line to the throne of Spain.
55-->'''Salluste:''' All that would be needed is for the King to have a hunting accident, bang! There, the fat cousin Leopold, bang! bang! The little Duke of Anjou, bang! Everybody, lots of hunting accidents, bang, ba-ba-bang, ba-ba-ba-ba-bang! And here I am... King!\
56'''[[ServileSnarker Blaze]]:''' Not to mention that, this way, we'd avoid a UsefulNotes/WarOfTheSpanishSuccession...
57* The title character of ''Film/TheDictator'' seized power after his father died in a hunting accident, hit by [[NoKillLikeOverkill 97 stray bullets and a stray hand grenade]].
58* In ''Film/{{Fantomas}} Against Scotland Yard'', Lord Rashley's secretary plans to kill his boss during a fox-hunting party, since he covets the latter's wife. What he does not know is that Lord Rashley is dead already, and Fantômas is impersonating him, leading to a case of MuggingTheMonster as the supervillain is no easy prey.
59* In ''Film/GosfordPark'', during the hunt, a low shot grazes Sir William, which is [[EverybodyDidIt yet another possible murder attempt]].
60* Toby and Tanner's [[AbusiveParents abusive]] father died this way in the backstory of ''Film/HellOrHighWater''. Out of season. [[ImplausibleDeniability In a barn.]]
61* The final scene of ''Film/{{The Hunt|2012}}'', where during the community's annual hunt somebody shoots at Lucas. The shot misses, and we don't know if it was meant to just scare him off or actually kill him. [[TheUnsolvedMystery We never learn]] who the shooter was.
62* In ''Film/{{Moonraker}}'', Franchise/JamesBond accompanies Hugo Drax on a quail hunt, while one of Drax's men hides up a tree waiting to shoot Bond. Bond aims at a quail and fires, seemingly to no effect.
63-->'''Drax:''' You missed, Mr. Bond.\
64''[dead assassin falls out of the tree]''\
65'''Bond:''' [[ExactlyWhatIAimedAt Did I?]]
66* This is how Louis murders Ethelred D'Ascoyne in ''Film/KindHeartsAndCoronets''. He lures Ethelred into a mantrap and then shoots him with his own gun; making it look like Ethelred dropped the gun and it discharged when it hit the ground.
67* In ''Film/{{Ran}}'', the princes Taro and Jiro attack their father's castle and slaughter everyone inside when a general rides up to Jiro and tells him that his older brother was fatally shot by a stray bullet that probably came from one of the towers. Jiro just stares at him intensely, which makes the general look at the still smoking musket he is holding in his hand. The general just throws the musket away, and the two never speak of this unfortunate tragedy again.
68* ''Film/ScotlandPA'' subverts this trope. Joe [=McBeth=] considers faking a hunting accident to kill Banko for [[HeKnowsTooMuch knowing too much]], and it briefly looks like he did so. Then it turns out the death was just deceptive editing, and Banko's just unconscious. Joe finds another way to kill him later.
69* ''Film/TheSingleStandard'': Tommy's plan for himself, to save face, after his wife Arden has decided to leave him for her old boyfriend Packy. He tells Packy that Packy should reject Arden, but after that, Tommy will kill himself via hunting "accident". That way, Arden can get together with Packy in the end without shame or scandal.
70* ''Film/TheThreeStoogesTheMovie'': Teddy mentions that his adoptive mother died of a hunting accident. [[spoiler: It was caused by his father who wanted her money.]]
71* After John Sterling finds out in ''Film/WildOrchids'' that Prince de Gace has been after his wife, he gets the prince to come with him on a tiger hunt -- but deliberately give the prince an unloaded gun.
72[[/folder]]
73
74[[folder:Literature]]
75* Before the start of the ''Literature/BlackBlade'' series, Lila's father was sent on a routine monster-hunting job by his boss. But Victor Draconi deliberately forgot to tell Luke how many monsters there were, so he went alone into a major nest and was killed.
76* ''Literature/TheBlackSwan'': Discussed but averted. Queen Clothilde's husband died in a genuine hunting accident, and she encourages her son's dangerous hobbies in the hopes that he'll end up the same way. However, she decides against planning one, as she knows that people are [[GenreSavvy aware of the trope]] and any false accident would get exposed quickly.
77* One of the adoptive fathers in ''Literature/TheBoysFromBrazil'' is shot and killed in a "hunting accident", with the investigators arriving in time for the funeral.
78* ''Literature/TheBurningRoom'': Broussard, the BigBad, eliminated the man who carried out a hit for him via Hunting "Accident" at a gun club.
79* ''Literature/TheCrownerJohnMysteries'': In ''Crowner's Quest'', one of the victims is a Norman nobleman killed during a hunt. Having first lamed the horse of the reeve who was accompanying him to ensure that he would be alone, the murderer hits the noble over the head and then breaks is neck to make it look like he died in a fall from his horse after striking his head on a branch.
80* From the ''Literature/{{Deryni}}'' works: Liam-Lajos's older brother Alroy dies in a "riding accident" a month after reaching his majority. Both Kelson and the boy's uncles are rumoured to have engineered it to put another child heir on the Torenthi throne. Eventually, Mátyás confirms to Kelson, Morgan, and Dhugal that [[spoiler: Mahael and Teymuraz were behind it]].
81* A variant occurs in one of Katharine Kerr's ''Literature/{{Deverry}}'' novels -- a character fakes their own death in a hunting accident. The point was to avoid real killers that would come calling, not to mention the clan [[SeriousBusiness Dishonor]], if certain things came out. The boar, however, was an unexpected surprise; [[spoiler:the character was expecting a convincing illusion, not the real thing]].
82* Played with in ''Literature/DragonBones'': Ward's grandfather was allegedly killed by an arrow to the back, by some bandits he and his son were hunting at the time. [[spoiler: His son murdered him, a case of KlingonPromotion]]. Ward's father, on the other hand, ''really'' dies in a hunting accident ... or at least everyone says so, and it is never proven to have been different. The horse, whom he treated very badly, had a role in his death, but that counts as accident. Ironically, it was on a hunting trip when ten-year-old Ward was [[spoiler: told by his drunk father that the grandfather didn't die through an enemy arrow.]]
83* In the Literature/{{Flashman}} novel ''Flashman and the Great Game'', the Russian villain Count Ignatieff tries to kill him while they are both guests at Balmoral.
84* Creator/IsaacAsimov's ''Literature/FoundationSeries'': "Literature/TheMayors": King Lepold's father died in the BackStory, although it is alluded to several times that Prince Regent Wienis may have arranged for it to happen. Fifteen-year-old King Lepold still goes on many [[TheGrandHunt royal hunting trips]], and Wienis comments on the danger.
85-->''"The king's father died under suspicious circumstances. A needle bullet through the chest during a hunt. It was called an accident."'' -- '''High Priest Poly Verisof'''
86-->''"Be careful on these Nyak hunts, my boy. Since the unfortunate accident to your father, I have had the strangest presentiments concerning you, at times. In the confusion, with needle guns thickening the air with darts, one can never tell. You will be careful, I hope. And you'll do as I say about the Foundation, won't you?"'' -- '''Prince Regent Wienis''' to his fifteen-year-old nephew, '''King Lepold I'''
87* Toward the end of ''Literature/TheGoblinEmperor'', Maia (the eponymous Emperor) inquires of his Lord Chancellor about the remaining family members of a traitor who was sadistically cruel and an all-around terrible person. Besides several sisters, the Lord Chancellor mentions a younger brother who he vaguely remembered dying years back in a hunting accident. It's not spelled out if this was an accident or an "accident", but since the traitor also [[HuntingTheMostDangerousGame "hunted" another person]] at least once...
88* ''Literature/HeraldsOfValdemar'':
89** After Queen Selenay's husband Prince Karathanelan is killed during his attempt to assassinate Selenay, the explanation is that he died in a hunting accident. It's MetaphoricallyTrue, since he was hunting Selenay. Atypically, Thanel is a villain, and his killers are the heroes of the piece. Karathanelan's own family also realizes what really happened, but it turns out they knew he was scum too and decide not to press the matter further.
90** In the short story "A Leash of Greyhounds", Lady Shantell insists this is what happened to her husband at the hand of his friend, while the friend maintains that he thought he was shooting at a deer. The inquest proves that the man's death really ''was'' an accident and that he was stupid enough to go hunting in brown pants and boots and a deerskin jacket.
91* ''Literature/HerculePoirot'':
92** The short story "The Cretan Bull" has a suicide version; when the scion of a noble family fears he's becoming a homicidal lunatic, he decides to go hunting rabbits with a shotgun and not come back. Poirot stops him, [[spoiler: but not the ''actual'' homicidal lunatic]].
93** In ''Literature/{{Curtain}}'', Colonel Luttrell shoots his wife (non-fatally) with a rook rifle, and says he mistook her for a rabbit.[[spoiler: As with all the murderers in the book, he was manipulated by Norton.]]
94* Happens in the backstory of ''[[Literature/KushielsLegacy Kushiel's Dart]]'', albeit not with a weapon - before a hunt, the saddle on the horse Dauphin's fiancee was to ride was tampered with, and she had a fatal fall.
95* In Creator/EdgarRiceBurroughs's ''Literature/TheMadKing'', proposed by one of the villains for Prince Ludwig von der Tann.
96-->''He hunts a great deal in the Old Forest. It might be possible—in fact, it has happened, before — there are many accidents in hunting, are there not, your highness?''
97* Happens in one of Laurie R. King's ''Literature/MaryRussell'' mysteries, albeit unsuccessfully: the Duke of Justice Hall is shot during a pheasant hunt by a would-be assassin hoping to take advantage of the dually-convenient circumstances of "lots of guns around and nobody's looking at the people" and "[[TheScapegoat a young, inexperienced shooter]] standing next to the Duke".
98* In ''Literature/TheMaskedEmpire'', Grand Duchess Calienne arranged one of these for Clarisse de Montfort shortly before Celene, Clarisse's teenage daughter, became [[Franchise/DragonAge Empress of Orlais]].
99%% * ''Literature/TheMortalInstruments'': Kind of. Valentine never intended to murder Lucian, just get him bitten by a werewolf. ''Then'' he hands him a dagger and asks him to kill himself.
100* OlderThanPrint: Hagen's murder of Siegfried in the ''Literature/{{Nibelungenlied}}'' (and ''[[Theatre/DerRingDesNibelungen Götterdämmerung]]''). Hagen even talked Kriemhild into marking Siegfried's one vulnerable spot via a cross/Thor's hammer sewn on his clothing so Hagen could [[BlatantLies watch his back]] extra carefully.
101* ''Literature/NickVelvet'': At the end of "The Theft of the Bathroom Scale", it is mentioned that the man Nick stole the scale from had been shot and killed by his wife (whom Nick suspected of having committed the murder of a cowhand during the theft) in a 'hunting accident'. However, she did not make a very convincing job of it and was arrested a few days later.
102* In ''One Tenth Percent'', Literature/ErastFandorin investigates a murder that looks like a Hunting "Accident", since the murderer has no motive at all, [[spoiler:but it turns out, he [[StrangersOnATrainPlotMurder "traded places" with another murderer]], so that they could kill each other's targets without arousing suspicion]].
103* Given a science fiction twist in the [[Literature/TheCulture Culture]] novel ''Literature/ThePlayerOfGames''. The protagonist goes on a hunting trip with a noble who is described as being a rather ruthless schemer who tries to kill him. The twist is that the character didn't attempt this of his own volition, but instead had his body taken over and controlled by others through technology. In fact, he surprisingly tries to show some HeroicWillpower. Underscoring how involuntary this is, he continues firing, even after his head has been blown away.
104* In ''Literature/PrinceCaspian'', Doctor Cornelius tells Caspian that some of his father's supporters were done away with by this method.
105* Happens with [[spoiler:the eldest son of the Pridd family]] in ''Literature/ReflectionsOfEterna'' by Russian fantasy writer Vera Kamsha. It was seen as an [[HonorBeforeReason honour killing]] (because of his rumored [[BuryYourGays "inappropriate" relationship]] with one of the main characters) by one of the POV characters in first few books.
106* In Creator/AlexandreDumas' ''Literature/LaReineMargot'', Charles IX would have died in such an accident if it wasn't for Henry of Navarre. He got himself in a dangerous situation on his own, but his brother, Duke of Alençon, who would have been the King of Poland if Charles died, worsened it by shooting his horse in the leg and making it pin the king to the ground, instead of helping him. [[spoiler: In the end, Charles still dies in a hunt-related accident — from reading a poisoned book about falcon hunting that was meant for Henry and was left in his room by d'Alençon.]]
107* At the beginning of the first ''Literature/{{Safehold}}'' novel, an attempt is made to kill Prince Cayleb by encouraging him to hunt a man-killing slash lizard. When the lizard loses the fight, the parties responsible break out swords and crossbows and turn it into a more straight-up assassination attempt.
108* Mentioned in the backstory of ''[[Literature/TheChroniclesOfAmber The Sign of the Unicorn]]:''
109-->'''Corwin:''' [My archenemy] and I had gone out hunting...\
110'''Ganelon:''' It seems strange that the two of you, being on the terms you were, would go out alone together.\
111'''Corwin:''' Well, perhaps it was a bit more contrived than I make it sound. [[CainAndAbel Perhaps the two of us had reasons to want to be out hunting by ourselves.]]\
112'''Ganelon:''' I see.
113* ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'': Given the cut-and-thrust nature of politics in the series, this crops up a fair bit. And, even when it genuinely doesn't, most players in the Game will naturally assume any untimely demise to likely be less accidental than it appears.
114** [[spoiler:King Robert Baratheon]] dies from a wound taken while hunting. It is set up by [[spoiler: Cersei]], who arranges for him to be [[TheAlcoholic drunker than usual]]. [[spoiler: It might, perhaps, have helped that two of his squires just happened to be cousins of hers, who might, possibly, maybe (read: we're pretty certain) have been able to suggest that he chase after something bolder (read: bloody dangerous) when the reported white hart they'd set out to hunt was a curious no-show. While they also just so happened to be [[AlcoholInducedIdiocy supplying him with considerably stronger alcohol than he usually drank]], which impaired not just his judgement but also the physical coordination and reflexes needed to hunt a giant boar with a spear.]]
115** Sam Tarly is threatened with one of these by his father if he doesn't leave to join the Night's Watch. Specifically, that he would be deliberately ridden down and hunted like a pig. So, um, not a particularly ''convincing'' "accident", then. House Tarly's sigil is, appropriately enough, a "striding huntsman".
116** Cersei also asks Ser Balman to arrange a hunting "accident" for Bronn. The honorable (and "cunning") Ser Balman instead tries fighting Bronn openly in a knightly, tournament-like duel. Which goes poorly. Dude really should have ''attempted'' the stealthy option: less [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness embarrassing for all concerned]].
117** The Clegane brothers' father is strongly rumored to have been killed in one such hunting "accident" arranged by Gregor.
118** Luthor Tyrell, father of Mace Tyrell, died in a genuine hunting accident when he rode off a cliff while hawking. Given the sheer absurdity of it, Tyrion briefly wonders whether it was a suicide, even more so after meeting the guy's [[HenpeckedHusband widow]].
119* A self-inflicted variant occurs in ''Literature/SongOfTheLioness'' when King Roald dies attempting a risky jump. His son Jonathan knows that it ''had'' to have been deliberate, since Roald was an excellent rider, but was deeply in mourning for his recently-deceased wife.
120* Near the end of ''Literature/TheThreeHostages'', the villain attempts to arrange such an "accident" for the hero.
121* A side character in ''Literature/TheTommyknockers'' murders his father this way in apparently subconscious revenge for childhood sexual abuse. The killer ''thinks'' he's simply committing an InheritanceMurder to get himself out of a financial jam, but narration talks about how thoroughly he's repressed the memories of the abuse.
122* King Elhokar in ''Literature/{{The Way of Kings|2010}}'' suffers a fall during a fight with a very large crab that he insists was the result of an assassination attempt. [[spoiler:In the end, it turns out that he cut the saddle strap himself so that he could make [[TheWisePrince Dalinar]] take his paranoia seriously. However, this was apparently simultaneous with a ''real'' assassination attempt; his magical armor malfunctioned and the creature attacked the party unexpectedly.]]
123* ''Literature/TheWheelOfTime'': One of the minor southern nations went through four rulers in a year; one of them like this.
124--> It wasn't an accident, unless he forgot which end of the boar spear to hold.
125[[/folder]]
126
127[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
128* ''Series/TheBorgias'':
129** Lucrezia arranges one of these (of the riding-accident variety) for her abusive husband in the first season. Unlike many of the other examples on this page, her husband survives, but he doesn't suspect a thing, and being laid up for some time with a broken leg prevents him from exercising his MaritalRapeLicense (and gives her time to hook up with the helpful stable boy who sabotaged his saddle).
130** The third season has another example, where Micheletto murders [[spoiler:King Frederick IV of Naples due to separating Lucrezia from her bastard child: the king has,]] inspired by a passage in Seneca, set up a pond full of carnivorous eel to aid him in hunting boars. When Micheletto and [[spoiler:Frederick]] separate from the hunting party to pursue the game, [[spoiler:the king]] has an unfortunate accident.
131* ''Series/{{CSI}}'' has had the occasional "hunting accident" case. In one episode, it turns out that the hunter had actually lost his job and tried to commit suicide in a way that looked like an accident so his wife would get the life insurance pay-out.
132* Something similar was attempted in ''Series/DesperateHousewives''. It wasn't a hunting trip, but rather a camping trip where "poachers" were supposedly around.
133* ''Series/TheKingLoves'': Song In tries to arrange one when the king goes hunting, and steals one of Won's arrows so everyone will blame him.
134* ''Series/{{JAG}}'': 3rd season episode "With Intent to Die" has Admiral Chegwidden’s mentor decease at such an occasion, and Chegwidden refuses to believe that it was either a suicide or an accident.
135* Used in ''Series/{{Lost}}'': This is how Locke manages to tie up Boone.
136* ''Series/TheManInTheHighCastle'': Obergruppenfuehrer John Smith discovers a plot by senior Nazis to assassinate Hitler and start a war with Japan. He's invited to a hunting party where he is to be quietly killed for [[HeKnowsTooMuch knowing too much]].
137* ''Series/MidsomerMurders'': In "[[Recap/MidsomerMurdersS7E7 Ghosts of Christmas Past]]", during a Christmas family reunion (and if Fatal Family Reunion isn't a trope yet, it should be), there's a pheasant shoot scheduled. The unsuspecting victim picks up the gun, says it feels heavier than usual, pulls the trigger, and Kablooie. The cartridges slipped into her pocket were too small, meaning they slid down the barrel and didn't fire (or eject) until the victim loaded another set in thinking the last shot was a dud. What's worse is that, according to TheCoroner, this is actually a very common accident when hunting is involved. Had the threat for there to be two victims not been made, it would've been ruled a genuine accident.
138* In one ''Series/{{Monk}}'' episode "Mr. Monk Is At Your Service", Natalie is almost made victim to this, but Monk arrives just in the nick of time.
139* The ''Series/{{NCIS}}'' team once investigated a missing Marine in a small town with no murders but lots of hunting accidents.
140* ''Series/ThePrincessWeiYoung'': Chiyun Nan and Tuoba Han attempt to kill Xin Er and Tuoba Jun during a hunt. Subverted when Xin Er and Tuoba Jun survive.
141* An after-the-fact variation in ''Series/TheRedGreenShow'': Buzz's plane was about to be inspected, and it had bullet-holes in the tail. He told Red he was going to blame that on a hunting accident, but it's [[NoodleIncident never stated how they really got there]].
142* In one episode of ''Series/RumpoleOfTheBailey'', Rumpole's client is accused of murdering her husband (it was a bad marriage), with the evidence being her saying to "I killed him. I don't know what to do with him. Help me." and holding a just-fired shotgun; she insists that it was a hunting accident. Subverted, because [[spoiler:she actually shot her husband's dead body, because after stumbling upon the corpse, she thought her lover, whose estate was nearby, was responsible. He wasn't, being in London on business at the time, and the real culprit was the gamekeeper, who had accidentally shot the man while illegally hunting pheasants from his cottage window.]]
143* ''Franchise/ASongOfIceAndFire'':
144** ''Series/GameOfThrones'': Gets brought up a few times.
145*** Sam reveals that his father threatened him with a "hunting accident" if he didn't renounce his claim to the family title and join the Night's Watch.
146*** [[spoiler:King Robert Baratheon has a fatal hunting accident. The boar wasn't in on it, but his squire Lancel Lannister made sure to get him extra drunk as part of a BatmanGambit to make an accident more likely]].
147** ''Series/HouseOfTheDragon'': Daemon Targaryen is unhappily married to Rhea Royce, and DivorceRequiresDeath. When she goes on a ride in the opening to the episode "[[Recap/HouseOfTheDragonS1E5WeLightTheWay We Light the Way]]", he spooks her horse so it crushes her. He would have been content to [[LeftForDead leave her for dead]], but she taunts him and he bashes her head in. [[spoiler:The official story (revealed later in the episode) is that she died while on a hunt, but because she was a skilled rider and huntress by reputation, nobody believes it and her cousin is quick to accuse Daemon of TilMurderDoUsPart.]]
148--->'''Corlys:''' A most surprising end. Lady Rhea's skill as both rider and hunter were well-known.
149* ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'': In "[[Recap/SupernaturalS05E15DeadMenDontWearPlaid Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid]]", a man rises from his grave and immediately goes to kill the man who had, five years earlier, killed him in what was made to look like a hunting accident.
150* In one episode of ''Series/That70sShow'', Red Foreman takes Eric and Kelso deer hunting, where Kelso's annoying behavior leads Red to [[InvokedTrope invoke this trope]] as a threat.
151* ''Series/TheTwilightZone1985'': In "[[Recap/TheTwilightZone1985S1E10 Opening Day]]", Joe Farrell reluctantly goes along with his lover Sally Wilkerson's plan to kill her husband Carl by making it look as he was killed while duck hunting. After Carl is killed, the police believe that it was simply an accident. Joe returns to what used to be the Wilkerson house to find that it is the previous day and that he is now Sally's husband. When Carl takes him on the same hunting trip, Joe becomes concerned that he is going to be killed and falls into the water. He refuses Carl's attempts to help him and dies.
152[[/folder]]
153
154[[folder:Music]]
155* Music/TomLehrer explores the concept in "The Hunting Song".
156-->''I went out and shot the maximum the game laws will allow,\
157 Two game wardens, seven hunters, and a cow.''
158* In the song ''Music/ToKeepMyLoveAlive'', the narrator sends her erstwhile husband Sir Alfred on a hunting trip. [[NeverFoundTheBody The searchers are still hunting for him]].
159[[/folder]]
160
161[[folder:Radio]]
162* In episode 2 of the ''Franchise/StarWars'' radio series, after Lord Tion is shot during a fight with Leia, her father arranges for him to be taken to the woods so they can say it was a hunting accident.
163[[/folder]]
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165[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
166* ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'': Attempted in ''War for the Crown Part 2: Songbird, Scion, Saboteur''. After clashing with the [=PCs=], Lord Titus Lotheed-Casava rigs the draw of hunting grounds for a [[HuntingTheMostDangerousGame "peasant hunt"]][[note]]A peasant convicted of a crime is released into a hunting ground for partying nobles to pursue non-lethally (in theory), and if they stay uncaptured for 24 hours they get a pardon.[[/note]] so that the [=PCs=] are assigned to hunt in lands where he knows a powerful manticore has taken up residence, hoping it will kill them.
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169[[folder:Video Games]]
170* In the ''VideoGame/AgeOfEmpiresII'' expansion, the Attila the Hun campaign starts this way. The player can do this to Atilla's brother Bleda or have him killed by the Iron Boar (making it something of a cross between this trope and an actual hunting accident), but Bleda also has his brother ambushed, so they're both trying to pull this on each other. Or you can subvert it by just leaving and starting civil war.
171-->'''Hun warrior:''' Bleda will lead us to ruin! Perhaps he should not return from his boar hunt. Accidents can happen...
172* One method of assassinating rivals in ''VideoGame/CrusaderKings'' is to arrange a hunting accident. Hunting events can also result in genuine hunting accidents. The third game has a possible double-up event where you catch one of your companions on a hunt killing a fellow guest in the undergrowth, and then trying to claim "[[ImplausibleDeniability It wasn't me! It was the hart!]]". One of your response options is to kill the killer in retribution and say "Too bad the hart got both of you".
173* ''VideoGame/Destiny2'': One lore entry from [[ConspiracyTheorist Timur's]] perspective depicts him and [[KnightInSourArmor Felwinter]] on a seemingly routine hunting mission and chatting about the nature of ArtificialIntelligence. A much later entry [[PerspectiveFlip retells this incident from Felwinter's perspective]] and reveals [[spoiler:Felwinter had lured Timur out there to murder him and blame his death on an enemy ambush, mistakenly believing that he had [[HeKnowsTooMuch deduced a little too much]] about Felwinter's DarkAndTroubledPast. He quickly cancels this plan when [[TalkativeLoon Timur's ramblings during the trip make clear he doesn't really know much of anything]]. Timur, for his part, never realizes just how close he came to getting killed by his "friend".]]
174* In ''VideoGame/EuropaUniversalis'', one of the annoying random events that can happen to a monarchy is a hunting accident which offs your heir. In recognition of this, it is possible to send a diplomatic message (read: gross and scornful insult that makes enemies of that nation titter) to another nation, complimenting them on their heir's passion for hunting. Players often joke how this only happens to good heirs, and never to the heir they want to die.
175* It's not assassination [[FateWorseThanDeath per se]], but Friedrich von Glower in ''VideoGame/GabrielKnight: The Beast Within'' uses this to turn Ludwig II of Bavaria [[spoiler:and later Gabriel himself]] into a werewolf.
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179* In the first ''Webcomic/TheBMovieComic'' chapter, "Revenge of [[{{Mummy}} Rutentuten]]", it is said that pharaoh Rutentuten died in a [[https://bmoviecomic.com/chapter-1-strip-27/ tragic hunting accident]].
180* ''Webcomic/MadameOutlaw'': Estelle Dumont is very suspicious of the circumstances behind her brother Isaac's death. He had tried to tell her something before going off on a hunting trip with Thaddeus, only for Thaddeus to come home uninjured with Isaac's bloody rifle and an eye on the Dumont fortune.
181* One of the characters in ''Webcomic/PennyArcade'' is killed in one such hunting accident. It is decided that they should leave him behind for the cougars to take care of. It ''is'' clarified that they are talking about mountain lions, and not [[MrsRobinson attractive older women]]. (One DescriptionCut later, we see him being eaten by an attractive older woman.)
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185* In Creator/DavidMacaulay's ''WesternAnimation/{{Pyramid|Documentary}}'', this is the fate of Crown Prince Baufre, next in line to be Pharaoh after his father Khufu. One day the prince goes leopard hunting with his conniving brother Djedefre, the latter of which is "kind" enough to point out to Baufre where a particularly large leopard has been spotted. Unfortunately for Baufre, all he finds when he goes looking for the leopard are two assassins paid by Djedefre and armed with fake claws, who slash Baufre's throat and make it look like the "leopard" was responsible. This is what clears the way for Djedefre to ultimately become Pharaoh, though [[AllForNothing his reign is apparently short and somewhat disgraceful]].
186* On one ''WesternAnimation/LooneyTunes'' short, Elmer Fudd's dog sees a TV show about cruel dog owners who get rid of their pets by taking them on hunting trips. ("Two go out, but only ''one'' returns.") He becomes suspicious when his master takes him hunting and decides to get Elmer before Elmer gets him. HilarityEnsues. [[spoiler:Eventually, the dog [[HeelRealization realized how much of a heel (visual gag included)]] he was and decided to go to the TV station to attack the show's host]].
187* Subverted in ''WesternAnimation/MoralOrel'' when [[spoiler:Orel shoots Clay's liquor bottles at the end of "Nature (Part 1)".]] Then played straight when [[spoiler:Clay shoots Orel by accident after attempting to punish him.]]
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190[[folder:Real Life]]
191* Although the exact circumstances are subject to debate, this was basically the method by which UsefulNotes/GenghisKhan offed his brother Begter when he was a teenager.
192* Same for UsefulNotes/AttilaTheHun and his brother, Bleda.
193* The death of King William II of England while hunting in the New Forest in 1100 might have been an actual hunting accident -- he was shot in the chest with an arrow. Or, it might have been his brother Henry's way of getting rid of him and seizing the crown -- which he did, as King Henry I. In any case, the man who supposedly shot the deadly arrow, one Walter Tirel (a long-time acquaintance of both brothers), immediately decided that a quick trip and a very long stay in France would be a ''really'' good idea. [[AmbiguousSituation Even if it really was an accident]], it's not exactly safe to be either the fellow who accidentally killed the king or the guy who knows who else accidentally did, but for whom you might have taken the blame because you were all mates.
194* Two rival Russian newspapers decided to have an April Fool's joke playing on this: they acted like they were just bought out by Pravda, and the previous editors' disappearance was attributed to "freak simultaneous hunting accidents with high-powered rifles to the back of the head". Some people took it for real.
195* Eastern Roman Emperor Basil the Macedonian, an old man but an experienced hunter, was reported to have been entangled in the antlers of a stag and dragged for over 15 miles resulting in injuries that led to his death in 886. He had also imprisoned his eldest surviving son [[TheUnFavorite Leo]][[note]]Leo's mother was both Basil's wife and the mistress of Michael III, so there is some confusion as to the actual parentage[[/note]] for three years and was only narrowly dissuaded from having him blinded, so it is not hard to [[KlingonPromotion draw various conclusions.]]
196* Hojo Soun was able to seize Odawara Castle in 1495 after inviting the local lord on a deer hunt whose real prey was not deer.
197* A variation in Finland in 2017 when a murderer, [[https://yle.fi/news/3-9808150 Pekka Seppänen]] with a very bizarre ''modus operandi'' - a serial drowner - was caught. He had lured his victims on a fishing trip on which they had gone fishing on a rowboat, then they had drunken heavily, and then he had deliberately capsized the rowboat, leaving his victim to drown (he himself was a good swimmer). Everything had looked like a tragic accident - fishing, heavy drinking, capsized Savonian-style rowboat (which is notoriously unstable), no life vests. He had managed to drown at least five victims until the authorities began to suspect foul play.
198* Crown Prince Rudolf of Austria wrote to his wife, Princess Stéphanie, that he would have invited Emperor Wilhelm II "only to get rid of him in some elegant hunting accident", his cousin who Rudolf found obnoxious (and the sentiment was mutual). Rudolf later ended up dead of a gunshot at the Mayerling hunting lodge, and Emperor Franz Joseph (Rudolf's father) had to politely and tacitly ban Wilhelm from Rudolf's funeral to avoid any incidents of gloating at the {{Irony}}.
199* This was a commonly made joke regarding an incident in February of 2006, when Dick Cheney, the then-Vice President to UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush, ended up shooting Harry Whittington, a Texas lawyer and an acquaintance, in his right side during a quail hunt. [[AvertedTrope Unlike most media examples,]] it was determined that the incident was an ''actual'' hunting accident, and Mr. Whittington not only survived but made a full recovery since bird shot is pretty terrible at taking down large game.
200* A complicated series of events lead to one of these during China's Han dynasty. Li Guang and his soldiers got lost in the desert and were too late to provide reinforcements for the main army. Humiliated, Li Guang committed suicide so he wouldn't face a court martial. His son Li Gan blamed the main army's commander, Wei Qing, for causing Li Guang's death, so he attacked Wei Qing in his own home. Wei Qing was willing to let the matter pass. His nephew Huo Qu Bing wasn't. Shortly after the attack Huo Qu Bing personally shot Li Gan during a hunting trip.
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