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1->'''Malfurion:''' We are its protectors, and through it we were granted immortality and power over nature. Now, at last, it is time we gave that power back.\
2'''Tyrande Whisperwind:''' You realize that we will age as these mortals do. Our powers over nature will wane in time.\
3'''Malfurion:''' If pride gives us pause, my love, then perhaps we have lived long enough already.
4-->-- ''VideoGame/{{Warcraft}} III''
5
6(Mor'''t'''ality, not morality)
7
8An immortal character becomes mortal, usually via external means.
9
10Overlaps with NighInvulnerability when the immortality is due to invulnerability and no longer having the latter means no longer having the former. Commonly done to {{Big Bad}}s so that they can be killed. Sometimes such a way is [[WhoWantsToLiveForever sought by the immortals themselves]]. At other times the way is [[LivingForeverIsAwesome avoided at all costs.]]
11
12Sometimes results in (a usually rather gruesome scene of) NoImmortalInertia.
13
14Related to: BroughtDownToNormal or IJustWantToBeNormal, BeingHumanSucks, HumanityEnsues. Contrast ImmortalityInducer for ways for a mortal to become immortal. Closely-related to ImmortalBreaker, a weapon or spell that can supersede immortality to kill immortal beings. The chief difference is that this trope kills indirectly, while ImmortalBreaker kills directly.
15
16----
17!!Examples:
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19[[foldercontrol]]
20
21[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
22* ''Franchise/LyricalNanoha'': After being separated from the Book of Darkness, the Wolkenritter lose their ResurrectiveImmortality and slowly become normal (well, normal in the context of a WorldOfBadass where EveryoneIsASuper) over the course of the next several years. Notably, they're all perfectly content with this, since it allows them to live out their first and final lives with their beloved master Hayate.
23* This is the goal of both Rain and [[spoiler:Yuca]] in ''Manga/ImmortalRain'': both are immortal, albeit in different ways, and [[WhoWantsToLiveForever neither wants to be]]. In the epilogue, [[spoiler:Yuca has lost his memory, which eliminates the painful part of his immortality for now, and Rain has actually become a mortal 24-year-old man]], so they both succeed to varying degrees.
24[[/folder]]
25
26[[folder:Comic Books]]
27* ''ComicBook/WonderWoman'':
28** ''ComicBook/WonderWoman1942'': Traditionally the Amazons were only immortal while on Paradise Island and while upholding their oaths. If they left and revoked their oaths they were just as human as anyone else and aged at the same rate.
29** ''ComicBook/WonderWoman2006'': For an unclear reason Athena revoked her own immortality and godhood, which lead to her death.
30** ''ComicBook/WonderWoman2011'': In the New 52 continuity Apollo strips Hera of her immortality and divinity, turning her human, after he becomes the new king of Olympus.
31* In ''ComicBook/{{Lucifer}}'', Lucifer orders all immortals from his Creation on pain of death. When Mona, who is sent to enforce his will, encounters a broken-down immortal who has just been through a major case of LoveHurts, she allows him to choose between exile, death, or his immortality. This allows him to live out the rest of his life with his home and his best friend.
32[[/folder]]
33
34[[folder:Fan Works]]
35* The ''Series/{{Torchwood}}'' fanfic series "[[https://archiveofourown.org/series/2123109 It changes you]]" involves Gwen going to confront Syriath for stealing her voice, which leads to her taking on Syriath's powers. As too long spent with those powers would have killed her, Jack sucks the energy representing Syriath out from her. His immortality, when put into contact with the powers over death and entropy given by Syriath, leads to them both canceling each other out, saving Gwen and, as Jack helpfully demonstrates by stabbing his thumb with a knife, making him mortal again. To confirm that this isn't a case where his HealingFactor was just stripped (as in ''Series/TorchwoodMiracleDay''), a later fic in the series shows him aging and dying.
36[[/folder]]
37
38[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
39* In Disney's ''WesternAnimation/{{Hercules}}'', Hades has his minions Pain and Panic kidnap an infant Hercules to feed him a potion that will turn him mortal so he can be killed, but because they miss the last drop Herc loses only part of his powers. Hercules becomes a full god again at the end of the movie, but chooses to go back to being "just" a [[SemiDivine demigod]] (and thus mortal) to live with his LoveInterest.
40** A harsher example is before the climax, when Hades tricks Hercules into making a deal with him (his strength for Meg's safety). As Hades so points out, Hercules is pretty unused to having mortal-level strength, much less being pinned down by a heavy barbell. It doesn't help when Hades makes our protagonist [[BeingHumanSucks feel helpless]].
41--> '''Hades:''' (coldly) [[IronicEcho Now you know how it feels to be "just like everyone else"]]... (Nastily) ''[[SarcasmMode Isn't it JUST peachy]]''?
42[[/folder]]
43
44[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
45* The premise of ''Film/{{Hook}}'' is Literature/PeterPan giving up the eternal youthfulness that Neverland gave him so he can [[GrowOldWithMe grow old together]] with his eventual wife, Moira. This is because Peter realized any girl he fancies will outlive him should he never left Neverland, having seen Wendy Darling growing up into a grandmother and refusing to go on adventures with him again because she's too old for them.
46* In ''Film/{{The Mummy|1999}}'', it turns out that the companion book to the Book of the Dead doesn't kill the BigBad when read from. What it does is remove his immortality, allowing him to be killed like a mortal. Imhotep, however, didn't know this and simply walks into a sword, assuming he'll be fine.
47* In ''Film/TheOldGuard'', the immortals will eventually lose their immortality. This happened to Lykon many years before the film, and happens to Andy during the course of the story. Of course, given the violent lives the immortals live, they are most likely to discover this when they take a wound and find that it isn't miraculously healing.
48* ''Film/PiratesOfTheCaribbeanTheCurseOfTheBlackPearl'' has this happen to Barbossa at the worst possible time. He's among the pirates cursed with immortality for stealing Aztec gold, and the curse can only be lifted by returning all of the stolen gold. Will drops the final gold piece into the cursed treasure chest just after Jack Sparrow blows a fatal hole in Barbossa's chest with a pistol, removing the curse and causing Barbossa to bleed out.
49-->'''Barbossa:''' [[DesignatedBullet Ten years you carry that pistol]], and now ya waste your shot?
50-->'''Will:''' He didn't waste it. ''(drops coins)''
51-->'''Barbossa:''' ''(pulls open his jacket to see blood on his shirt)''...I ''[[FirstTimeFeeling feel]]''...[[ImColdSoCold cold.]]
52* Part of The Prize in ''Film/{{Highlander}}'' is the option to live as a normal human, which Connor states is his intention at the end of the original film.
53* In ''Film/WrathOfTheTitans'', the [[GodsNeedPrayerBadly level of prayers to the gods]] has dwindled so much that the gods have lost their immortality and many have died before the movie even started. The gods who are left still have their powers, but they are fading and they are vulnerable to being killed.
54[[/folder]]
55
56[[folder:Literature]]
57* ''Literature/AndAnotherThing'': Wowbagger the Infinitly Prolonged wants to die, but can't because he's been made immortal against his will. [[spoiler:At the end he become de-immortalized, so he will eventually die. Close Enough.]]
58* The plot of ''Literature/HarryPotterAndTheDeathlyHallows'' was Harry and company searching for and destroying the Horcruxes in order to remove Voldemort's immortality.
59* In ''Literature/MortalHeart'' gods can stop being gods and become mortal by dying and coming back to life. [[spoiler:Mortain does this while protecting Annith, and Father Effram reveals he was once the god Salonius until he, too, died and resurrected into a mortal life.]]
60* In Creator/JRRTolkien's Middle-earth, the members of the Half-elven family descended from Lúthien get the cosmic choice to which kind they want to belong, leading to (im)mortality and a different fate after death. Arwen from ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings'', and before her her uncle Elros, choose humanity and mortality. Their ancestor Lúthien was Elven, but got a once-only cosmic exception to have a mortal fate to be with her human lover Beren, before and after death.
61* In ''Literature/SkinGame,'' Uriel lends his Grace to Michael to use for a day, resulting in him becoming temporarily mortal. It is revealed when Harry punches him in the face and sees him actually bleed, which a being who can unmake galaxies should not do.
62** In the same book, Nicodemus temporarily takes off Judas' Noose which makes him invincible to anything but being strangled with itself, for a ploy.
63* In ''[[Literature/TheVampireChronicles The Tale of the Body Thief]]'', Lestat swaps bodies with a human for a day in order to feel what's it like being mortal again. Unfortunately, the other guy turns out to be a con man and a thief, who absconds with Lestat's body, while Lestat is trying to figure out what to do with being squishy and vulnerable again and needing things like food and shelter. He gets his body back at the end.
64* In ''Literature/TheZodiacSeries'', the backstory of the series is that the Guardian Stars—or rather, the WesternZodiac—were turned mortal so they could watch over the galaxy. [[spoiler:Most of them, anyway—Ophiuchus was supposed to stay immortal thanks to his [[MacGuffin Talisman]], but the other guardians killed him.]]
65* ''Literature/WarriorCats'': While not completely immortal, Clan leaders have [[CatsHaveNineLives nine lives]] and therefore stick around for a long time. In ''River of Fire'', while Rowanstar is dying, he becomes the first Clan leader to choose to willingly give up his nine lives, and it works, because he dies and stays dead.
66[[/folder]]
67
68[[folder:Live Action TV]]
69* ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'': In an episode Q had his omnipotence taken away as a punishment by the Q continuum, thus becoming mortal. The ''Enterprise'' crew are saddled with him until he regains his immortality--in fact, he specifically chose them because he knew that they are idealistic enough that in spite of their own dislike of Q, they would still protect him from other creatures who might desire revenge on Q for his past torments.
70* ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'':
71** ''Voyager'''s first encounter with the Q involves one of them who has [[WhoWantsToLiveForever gotten bored]] and basically [[CourtroomEpisode sues them]] to have his immortality revoked. [[spoiler: He wins, but despite Janeway urging him to live out his new mortal life, he decides he's lived quite long enough already.]]
72** 7 of 9 hurt her hand while working and was upset with the fact that supressing the Borg nanotechnology removed her HealingFactor.
73** Q once made his son q (yes, lower-case) mortal and dumps him on ''Voyager''. It's less of a punishment and more of a disguised lesson.
74* On ''Series/{{Angel}}'' according to the Shanshu Prophesy, the Vampire with a Soul will eventually be rewarded by dying - which is to say, he'll be rewarded by becoming human, and thus being allowed to die as a human.
75* Nathan from ''Series/{{Misfits}}'' sells his immortality on the black market.
76* ''Series/DoctorWho'': The clone of David Tennant's Doctor, grown from his severed hand and Donna Noble's human DNA. He has all the Doctor's memories, but only one heart and a normal human lifespan, which he chooses to spend with Rose on a parallel Earth.
77* The final episode of ''Series/{{Lost}}'' implies that Richard Alpert has lost his immortality, [[WhoWantsToLiveForever which he considers a very good thing]].
78* ''Series/TorchwoodMiracleDay'':
79** Captain Jack Harkness loses his immortality just when ''everyone else'' loses the ability to die.
80** At the end of the series, this happens to everyone, except [[spoiler:Jack and Rex.]]
81** WordOfGod is that Jack merely loses his HealingFactor. He still has his ResurrectiveImmortality.
82* ''Series/AshVsEvilDead'': In the second season, Ruby loses her immortality that has kept her alive for centuries by that point, forcing her to ask Ash and co. for help when her demon offspring turn against her. [[spoiler:She's eventually killed for good by a younger-and still evil-version of herself.]]
83* In Season 4 of ''Series/{{The Librarians|2014}}'', [[spoiler:Jenkins]] willingly gives up [[spoiler:his]] immortality to save [[spoiler:Nicole, Flynn's first Guardian, to whom this trope happens minutes earlier, courtesy of [[UsefulNotes/RasputinTheMadMonk Rasputin]] wielding Koschei's Needle]]. Several subsequent episodes deal with [[spoiler:Jenkins]] trying to deal with suddenly being mortal after so long.
84[[/folder]]
85
86[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
87* This trope was the culmination of a centuries-long GambitRoulette against [[BigBad Fu Leng]] in the official storyline of the ''TabletopGame/LegendOfTheFiveRings'' RPG/CCG setting.
88[[/folder]]
89
90[[folder:Video Games]]
91* In his best ending in ''VideoGame/SoulCalibur 3'', Zasalamel succeeds in becoming mortal and spends the rest of his life as a scholar, chronicling everything he experienced.
92* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIII'', the great sage Noah awards each of his three students with a gift. [[CoolOldGuy Doga]] is bestowed with great magical power while [[CoolOldLady Unei]] was given control over the world of dreams while she slept, and both go on to become renowned sages in their own right. Xande? [[WhatKindOfLamePowerIsHeartAnyway He receives the "gift" of mortality]]. [[BigBad He doesn't take well to this perceived snubbing.]] In fact, he's so bent on avoiding death that he's willing to "live" forever by freezing time for himself and everyone around him.
93* The BigBad of ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyV'', as well as the previous wielder or the Void, both lost their immortality when they acquired this power.
94* In the finale of ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' ''Cataclysm'' [[spoiler:the Dragon Aspects lose their immortality (and possibly more of their powers) after focusing their power through the Dragon Soul to slay Deathwing for good.]]
95** And before that, in ''VideoGame/{{Warcraft}} III'', the destruction of the WorldTree saw this happen to the Night Elves.
96* This is the goal of the Nameless One in ''VideoGame/PlanescapeTorment'', in part due to the ImmortalityImmorality he's unwittingly using -- whenever he dies, somebody else in TheMultiverse gets the life sucked from them to restore him, causing them to linger as vengeful undead shadows.
97* ''Franchise/TheElderScrolls'' provides several examples:
98** This was the goal of the Underking in ''VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIIDaggerfall'', as a necessary component of being able to ''finally'' [[WhoWantsToLiveForever die]] -- which puts him as one of the [[MultipleEndings endings]] of the game, as to die he needs the Mantella (which will be destroyed by this), the thing everyone else is searching for to either power Numidium or become a god. Whether he pulled it off is uncertain, but trending 'yes' -- indications are that the end of ''Daggerfall'' broke time and all endings happened as much as was possible without directly contradicting another in anything but cause, and the Underking's death would have been easy to slot in for Akatosh' servants.
99** ''VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIIIMorrowind'' has the Tribunal, a trio of [[PhysicalGod flesh and blood gods]] who ascended to that status by tapping into the heart ("divine center") of the [[GodIsDead dead creator god Lorkhan]]. [[spoiler: The main quest of the game features the [[PlayerCharacter Nerevarine]] severing their ties to the heart in order to defeat the BigBad Dagoth Ur, who also draws his power from the heart. Once those ties are severed, the Tribunal revert to mortal forms, which only happens, per Vivec (one of those deities), due to the faith of their followers.]]
100* Daemons in ''VideoGame/TheAllianceAlive'' are normally immortal, but near the end of the game Vivian is made mortal after being cursed by [[BigBad Kuwalsa]]. She presumably regains her immortality after you beat him.
101* ''VideoGame/FateGrandOrder'': This becomes a problem for the heroes in the Babylonia chapter, as they are up against [[Myth/MesopotamianMythology Tiamat]], primordial mother of all life. Putting aside Tiamat's enormous raw power, she is the "alpha and omega" of all life, meaning she cannot die until she is literally the only living thing left in the world. The heroes despair at this, as it seems like there's no way to kill her that doesn't involve killing themselves beforehand. [[spoiler:They end up dropping Tiamat into Kur, the Underworld. Since there are no living things in the Underworld, by definition, Tiamat is therefore the only living thing in that "world". Unfortunately, this still isn't enough: all the spirits of the dead and Ereshkigal herself are unable to kill Tiamat, and she begins to climb back out. So instead, King Hassan, the original Assassin, sacrifices the majority of his power to turn his sword into a one-time Conceptual Weapon that inflicts "mortality" on its target. This robs Tiamat of her immortality, regardless of whether any other life exists, which finally allows the heroes to destroy her.]]
102* In ''VideoGame/GodOfWarPS4'', the first boss Kratos encounters is an odd man who is able to regenerate the wounds he takes, and thus, is unable to die. Kratos finishes the fight with a NeckSnap, but predictably, the man comes back later. It turns out that he's [[spoiler: Baldr, son of goddess Freya, who ended up granting him immortality out of sheer [[MyBelovedSmother overprotectiveness]]. But it turns out that her "[[BlessedWithSuck blessing]]" can be broken with mistletoe. Convenient, then, that [[TheBlacksmith Sindri]] gives [[BadassAdorable Atreus]] a quiver full of arrows made of the stuff. Also convenient is that Atreus' quiver strap breaks later, causing [[AntiHero Kratos]] to use one of the arrowheads to fix it. ''Even more'' convenient is that [[WouldHurtAChild Atreus takes a nasty punch from Baldr in the late game]]... directly to the arrowhead in his quiver strap, which impales Baldr's hand and breaks the immortality spell. This time, Baldr doesn't survive getting his neck broken]].
103* In ''VideoGame/PaperMario'', Mario has to defeat Tubba Blubba, who was granted immortality and invulnerability by the Star Rod. Though Tubba is an idiot, he is smart enough to not let Mario learn that the immortality can be circumvented, let alone the means on how to do it. As Mario discovers, the Star Rod gave Tubba Blubba complete immunity to all attacks by [[spoiler: distilling all of his mortality into his heart, giving it sentience, and separating it from his body. Mario finds the heart hiding in a cave at the bottom of an old windmill and engages in battle with it. When the heart becomes critically low on health, it rejoins with Tubba Blubba as a last resort,]] ending Tubba Blubba's invulnerability and his immortality with it and thus providing the means Mario needs to defeat him.
104* In ''VideoGame/NierAutomata'', [=YoRHa=] androids can recover from death by uploading a backup of their memories into a new body. After a certain point in the game, however, [[spoiler:the Bunker is destroyed, and with it, the ability to backup and upload memories into new vessels. This is also reflected [[GameplayAndStoryIntegration in gameplay]]: if you run out of HP in the Route C[=/=]D part of the game, you'll be forced to reload a previous save.]]
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107[[folder:Web Comics]]
108* ''Webcomic/{{Housepets}}'': This was the stake of the cosmic game played between 'Pete' the griffin and the Spirit Dragon: The loser has to spend an objective time period (as opposed to subjective time, which is over the moment it starts) as a mortal being. [[spoiler: They both lose. A few story arcs later, we see them as what appear to be two foxes - still arguing, naturally.]]
109[[/folder]]
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111[[folder:Other]]
112* This is basically what usually happens to {{lich}}es once their [[SoulJar phylactery]] is destroyed: they don't immediately die from that, they just become killable.
113** Technically they're always killable; but as long as their phylactery survives, they won't ''stay'' dead.
114* In ''WebAnimation/NoEvil'', [[spoiler:Xipetotec]] [[HeroicSacrifice sacrificing her life]] to deal with a serious problem is revealed to involve this: she doesn't die on the spot, but forfeits her spiritual status and immortality, living as an ordinary human for the rest of her days. [[spoiler:This takes place in episode 2, but we don't learn about this particular interpretation until episode 35; the characters knew it all along, even if they kept talking about it like she died, meaning that Calamity saying "Hey, Murder" is possibly the most casual WhamLine ever.]]
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