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1Suicide is a big deal, and killing oneself is [[SuicideIsShameful not a path most people choose lightly]]. However, ''these'' people here didn't really choose to do so by their own free will. Someone (or something) indirectly killed them by coercing them into killing themselves. Methods of forcing one to kill oneself can range from making their lives a [[DrivenToSuicide living hell]] to actual [[PsychicAssistedSuicide mind control]].
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3Death here should be (one of) the intended outcomes. For cases where the victim kills themselves to defy their attacker, see DyingAsYourself, IDieFree, and BetterToDieThanBeKilled. Closely related to AccidentalSuicide which can overlap. Not to be confused with MutualKill, TakingYouWithMe, MurderSuicide, or SuicideAttack, which all involve (near-)simultaneously killing both oneself and others on purpose. Not really related to SuicideNotMurder (a suicide disguised as a murder) or NeverSuicide (a murder disguised as a suicide).
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5This is an inversion of SuicideByAssassin and SuicideByCop, where the victim wants to die but [[ICannotSelfTerminate needs someone else]] to kill them for them -- basically Suicide by Murder. See also LeaveBehindAPistol, when they're allowed to kill themselves to escape punishment or retain their dignity. StopHittingYourself, taken to the logical extreme, would be a very literal version of ''making'' someone kill themselves. May be performed by PeoplePuppets.
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7!!Sub-tropes and related tropes:
8[[index]]
9* DrivenToSuicide: When they willingly kill themselves because of another's actions, usually without knowing they were being manipulated.
10* IndirectSerialKiller: Some {{Serial Killer}}s manipulate people into killing themselves rather than getting their own hands dirty.
11* OrderedToDie: When they're ''commanded'' to kill themselves, as punishment or to demonstrate their loyalty.
12** {{Seppuku}}: A form of suicide/execution where a {{samurai}} must gut themselves with their blade to punish their own dishonor.
13** WalkThePlank: Form of execution where the condemned is forced to perform the act themselves.
14* PsychicAssistedSuicide: If they're being [[MindControl mind-controlled]], [[DemonicPossession possessed]], compelled by [[CompellingVoice an irresistible command]], [[TrickedToDeath tricked]] [[MasterOfIllusion by illusions]], or under the influence of a magic spell.
15** ThisIsNotAFloor: A version of the "illusion" version of PsychicAssistedSuicide where the trap takes the form of [[GravityIsAHarshMistress a false floor]].
16* SuicidalSadisticChoice: A version of SadisticChoice, where they must kill themselves in order to save someone else or avoid a [[FateWorseThanDeath worse punishment]].
17* SuicideDare: When another person or people, often bullying peers, dare them to do it.
18* TrickedToDeath: Tricking someone into doing something that will kill them.
19[[/index]]
20!!As this is a {{Death Trope|s}}, [[Administrivia/SpoilersOff unmarked spoilers abound]]. [[Administrivia/YouHaveBeenWarned Beware]].
21----
22!!Examples:
23[[foldercontrol]]
24%%
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26%% This page has been alphabetized. Please add your examples alphabetically by series.
27%% And please make sure your examples don't belong in one of the sub-tropes above instead.
28%%
29%%
30[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
31* In the "Future Arc" part of ''[[Anime/Danganronpa3TheEndOfHopesPeakHighSchool Danganronpa 3]]'', it is eventually revealed that this happened to [[spoiler:all of the supposed murder victims of the Killing Game. Monokuma made the killing game participants think that one of their number was secretly the killer, who would awaken after everyone was drugged to sleep and murder one victim each cycle. The truth is that each victim was shown a mind-controlling video through one of the building’s numerous TV screens, which manipulated them to commit suicide in such a way that it would look like they were murdered by another participant.]]
32* Light from ''Manga/DeathNote'' forces [[spoiler: Naomi Misora]] to kill [[spoiler: her]]self in such a way that [[spoiler: her]] body will not be found by mind-controlling [[spoiler: her]] with the Death Note.
33** Light also kills [[spoiler: Rem and later Takada]] this way.
34** In the musical adaptation, Light forces [[spoiler: L]] to shoot [[spoiler: him]]self
35* In ''VisualNovel/HigurashiWhenTheyCry'', Oyashiro-sama's curse (or whatever it really is) causes many characters to kill themselves throughout the various story arcs, some more than once. Methods include clawing out your own throat.
36* In ''Manga/InoHeadGargoyle'', the "Blue Rose" drug, when ingested with alcohol, will induce suicidal hallucinations in the victim.
37* Johan in ''Manga/{{Monster}}'' is an absolute master of this, knowing every trick to get his targets to kill themselves. Almost anyone who gets in his way or even so much as stays near him for too long becomes a victim of some scheme of his that will culminate in the victim committing suicide. He seems to prefer this method because it allows him to kill whomever he wants with as little evidence as possible. Dr. Tenma, TheProtagonist, spends a significant amount of time in the series coming across Johan's victims and talking them out of suicide.
38* In the ''Anime/ReadOrDie OVA'', one character attempts to broadcast a "Death Symphony" that will cause mass suicide.
39* ''Manga/OokuTheInnerChambers'': After the end of the Boshin War, the victorious side is told by the foreign powers who were backing them that their government will not be taken seriously internationally if they execute their defeated enemies instead of giving them a civilized treatment as prisoners as war. The victors get around this by intentionally imprisoning their high-profile prisoners in hostile clans and taking away their domains, knowing this treatment is all but certain to drive them into committing {{Seppuku}} and making it look like it was a conscious choice to die to international observers.
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41[[/folder]]
42
43[[folder:Comic Books]]
44* Several goons in ''ComicBook/{{Tintin}}'' would try to make Tintin jump off a cliff by holding him at gunpoint to MakeItLookLikeAnAccident. He always managed to get out of it somehow.
45* In ''ComicBook/UltimateMarvel'', the EldritchAbomination [[{{ComicBook/Galactus}} Gah Lak Tus]] uses a similar tactic to thin out the populations of the worlds it attacks before it arrives, and sends silver, angel-winged emissaries to mollify the populace into cults that will either commit mass-suicide or embrace their coming destruction when Gah Lak Tus finally arrives.
46[[/folder]]
47
48[[folder:Fan Works]]
49* In Star Trek TOS fanfic [[https://archiveofourown.org/works/31518401/chapters/77969666 Shadows of the Mind]] the telepathic villain tries this method to kill Spock before the latter can derail his plan. It works well enough thanks to the Vulcan's [[ItsAllMyFault guilt complex]] and [[HalfHumanHybrid complicated past.]]
50-->There was no way the Vulcan would allow himself to feel anger, true anger, at another. When it came to anger directed at others, his armor was perfect.However, anger directed at oneself, guilt and shame… There his armor was not so strong. There he wouldn’t be able to shield himself…
51* This is how [[GoldDigger Brigit Stark]] kills her husband in ''Fanfic/MyNameIsCinder''. She grew tired of waiting for him to kill himself because of his depression, so she simply told him [[BitchInSheepsClothing the truth about her]], causing him to hang himself from despair.
52[[/folder]]
53
54[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
55* ''Film/GuyanaCrimeOfTheCentury'': At the end of the movie, following the murder of Lee O'Brien, Johnson orders his people to drink poisoned juice to die. While some of the people drink it willingly, others are forced to do so.
56* In M. Night Shyamalan's ''Film/TheHappening'', people are committing suicide in vast numbers under mysterious circumstances. The audience never gets to know the actual cause of the mass suicides, but speculation about it is sprinkled throughout the film (radiation fallout, a plague, etc.) and some have even spread their own WildMassGuessing entries.
57* ''Film/HardCandy'' has Hayley do this to Jeff, an ephebophile and sexual predator, at the end. She drugs him and puts him through hours of psychological torture in revenge for the death of one of his victims, and then tells him if he kills himself, she'll get rid of the evidence so he can keep his reputation intact. [[spoiler:She lied.]]
58* In ''Film/TheOtherGuys'' after Terry and Allen [[spoiler: hand over all the evidence against Ershon to his lawyer]], the lawyer is forced to drink a bunch of gin at gunpoint [[spoiler: by Wesley]], and then pushed onto a ledge for [[HeKnowsTooMuch seeing something he wasn't meant to see]]. When arresting Ershon, they put him on the charge for his murder [[spoiler: when they believe he was involved]].
59* In ''Film/{{Shooter}}'' the antagonists employ a device that, when strapped to a victim's arm, uses a series of pulleys to force the victim to put a gun against their head and pull the trigger, literally physically forcing them to kill themselves (see it [[https://youtu.be/huOZPQ6Hl2c?t=56 here]]).
60[[/folder]]
61
62[[folder:Literature]]
63* ''Literature/TheAndromedaStrain'': If the titular strain itself does not kill the victim via coagulation, it can also migrate towards the brain, causing the victim to commit the most bizarre suicides (examples include one boy swallowing glue or another person willingly drowning himself in the sink).
64* ''Literature/TheEmpiriumTrilogy'': ''Furyborn'''s prologue shows Garver Randell being forced into suicide by Corien shortly after Rielle gives birth to her daughter.
65* The modus operandi of Despair from ''Literature/TheFaerieQueene'' is persuading poor passerbys that they'd be better off dying rather than continuing to live and do more and more evil to merit greater punishments in Hell. He nearly manages to get the Redcrosse Knight to drive a dagger through his chest.
66* ''Literature/HonorHarrington'': The [[spoiler:Mesan Alignment]] have nanomachines which control the bodies of anyone they end up in. They're used for multiple instances of this trope, from a potential liability being made to [[AteHisGun shoot himself]], to a trusted lieutenant performing SuicideByCop after attempting to murder his captain. The worst part is that victims of these nanomachines are [[AndIMustScream completely aware of what's happening]] and unable to stop it.
67* ''Literature/TheMinistryOfUtmostHappiness'' has Major Amrik Singh, a military officer who has committed multiple crimes and human rights abuses. When his senior officers catch wind of his activities, they give him the option of 'escaping' to the US so they do not have to investigate him and tarnish the army's reputation. However, the relatives of his victims follow him to the US and keep running into him apparently at random. [[spoiler:He is slowly driven mad and ends up killing his family and then himself.]]
68* How the final victim dies in Creator/AgathaChristie's ''Literature/TenLittleIndians''. Distraught and mentally unbalanced by the events of the book, she walks into a room to find a noose prepped and waiting. She uses it.
69* ''Dreamweaver's Dilemma'' by Creator/LoisMcMasterBujold, part of the Literature/VorkosiganSaga, has an artist specializing in creating custom dream simulations and her retired military friend investigating a custom job the former was hired for, a spectacularly nightmarish piece. Eventually, the friend works out that the customer's intent is to replace his wife's usual dream cartridge with the one he commissioned, targeted to her own traumas and insecurities with the intent of trapping her there long enough that she would be instantly DrivenToSuicide the moment she awoke. It would have worked had the mediator not gotten greedy and tried to kill the titular artist to steal her paycheck.
70[[/folder]]
71
72[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
73* ''Series/TheBarrier'': The exact variant of the trope is unclear, but a flash-back to the suicide of a character shows him hanging himself while the policeman investigating him is watching him do it, indicating that the suicide was coerced to an extent.
74* In one episode of ''Series/DeathInParadise'', a man with a terminal illness kills himself and makes it look like a robbery gone wrong for an insurance payout, but it's later revealed to be this trope: the man's doctor faked the diagnosis hoping this would happen. (He was a {{Yandere}} after the victim's wife)
75* ''Series/{{Dexter}}'': In the first season episode "Shrink Wrap", the [[MonsterOfTheWeek villain of the week]][[labelnote:*]] and VictimOfTheWeek; [[PayEvilUntoEvil it's]] ''[[PayEvilUntoEvil Dexter]]''[[/labelnote]] Dr. Emmett Meridian has this as his MO. A {{Psycho Psych|ologist}}iatrist who is intimidated by his high-powered female clients, he: 1) prescribes them antidepressants they don't need until they become addicted, 2) abruptly takes them off again, plunging them into a dark depression, and then 3) [[ManipulativeBastard fills their heads with thoughts]] about how suicide is noble and admirable and brave. He manages to convince at least three of his patients to shoot themselves.
76* ''Series/LawAndOrderCriminalIntent'': Mentioned by Capt. Deakins, when Detectives Goren and Eames discover a radio shock-jock committed suicide after someone replaced his antidepressants with placebos.
77--> '''Capt. Deakins''': Murder by suicide.
78
79* One killer in the first season of ''Series/{{Psych}}'' tapped into a depression helpline and forced callers to commit suicide at gunpoint.
80* In the first episode of ''Series/{{Sherlock}}'' "A Study in Pink," a black-cab driver causes the deaths of a series of his passengers, using the two-pill choice (one poison, one not). He is eventually known as a serial suicide murderer. Sherlock first hears the name "Moriarity" as the patron behind the cabbie's actions.
81[[/folder]]
82
83[[folder:Video Games]]
84* In ''VideoGame/TheCatLady'', Susan is supernaturally tasked with killing several serial killers. The last one is "The Eye of Adam", who frequents suicide-prevention web forums and uses private messages to subtly push users into giving in to their suicidal urges.
85* In ''VideoGame/CriminalCaseSupernaturalInvestigations'', Theresa Rosenthal is "killed" by being injected with [[TruthSerums truth serum]] then painfully [[MindRape mind raped]] by a demon until she shoots herself to escape from the agony.
86* In the ''Franchise/DeadSpace'' franchise, the presence of the Markers (or the [[spoiler:Brethren Moons themselves]]) tends to brainwash any organic beings into a cult which eventually commits mass-suicide, has their dead flesh converted into Necromorphs, and then proceeds to kill and infect others.
87%% --??? need more info
88* In ''VideoGame/DeusExHumanRevolution'', Jensen finds an augmented hacker trying to break in and steal Sarif Industries' latest top-secret military project. When Jensen tries to confront him, the man pulls a gun and puts it to his own head. His terrified expression, though, makes it clear that his body is being controlled remotely by the real hacker; all he can do is whisper "Help me!" to Jensen before he's forced to pull the trigger and end his own life.
89* ''VideoGame/Hitman2016'': The Patient Zero campaign revolves around Obyek Nabazov, a leader who's been known to start cults and have them all commit ritual suicide while he leaves to found another.
90* In the ''Franchise/MassEffect'' universe, various forms of MindControl may force this on a person. Most noticeably, in the first game, you run into what's left of a machine cult that impaled themselves on spikes and converted them into mindless zombie-like bio-mechanical Husks that did the machines' bidding.
91* In ''VideoGame/MasterDetectiveArchivesRainCode'', it turns out that while [[spoiler:Yomi Hellsmile is responsible for sending Yakou Furio to his death by SuicideAttack on Dr. Huesca in Chapter 4]], it would not have happened otherwise [[spoiler:had [[BigBad Makoto Kagutsuchi]] not introduced Fink the Slaughter Artist to Yakou in the first place, as it was Fink who gave Yakou the means to cover up his involvement in Dr. Huesca's murder by being hired to kill him to cover up the truth. Since Yakou would not have otherwise followed through with his plan without the means to cover up his involvement, Makoto is ultimately the one responsible for leading Yakou into his SuicideAttack, and not Yomi.]]
92* ''VisualNovel/PhoenixWrightAceAttorneyTrialsAndTribulations'': This is how [[spoiler: Dahlia Hawthorne]] has [[spoiler: Terry Fawles]] taken care of to cover their tracks. [[spoiler: Years before the trial, she persuaded Terry (who was [[LoveMakesYouDumb lovestruck]] and mentally impaired) to join a suicide pact with her; they'd both kill themselves if they could no longer trust each other. She invokes it when Terry is set to testify against her, and he drinks the poison she gave him. Dahlia, of course, doesn't uphold her end.]]
93* ''VideoGame/PokemonMysteryDungeonExplorers'' works with an implied version (since it's still an E-rated game) of this trope in the post-end plot.[[spoiler: [[BigBad Darkrai]] tries to convince the hero and their partner that after saving the world via time travel, their mere existence is now threatening the space-time continuum. Thus, in order to restore balance, they have to [[NeverSayDie "disappear"]] and let themselves be willingly assassinated. Needless to say, his plan doesn't work out and he ends up getting defeated by the good guys in the end.]]
94[[/folder]]
95
96[[folder:Real Life]]
97* Cults that commit mass suicide might fall under this. The mass suicide of Jim Jones' People's Temple congregation in Guyana would be a RealLife example -- aside from the manipulations of a very charismatic cult leader (and his warnings -- possibly with some truth, as visiting U.S. Congressman Leo Ryan was recently killed by Jones' men there -- that their "enemies" were about to invade the commune), there were some members who did try to sneak away rather than drink the poisoned Kool-Aid (or rather, [[MemeticMutation "Flavor-Aid"]]), but many of these were caught and killed by Jones' goons. Similarly, survivors have said some victims with cold feet were forced to drink it with the threat of being shot.
98* There have been a few interesting court cases on the subject of encouraging people to take drugs with suicide as a potential side effect. While one isn't too suspect, sometimes people have have pressured others into taking dozens.
99* The [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Conrad_Roy death of Conrad Roy]] was an example of this, in which his girlfriend--Michelle Carter--sent him text messages encouraging or commanding him to kill himself, knowing that he had a history of mental illness. During his (sadly soon-to-be completed) suicide attempt, he called her, looking for reassurance, and she commanded him to go back and finish the attempt; the courts would later find her responsible for his death and she was convicted of involuntary manslaughter.
100* Cases of people playing RussianRoulette that result in death have been charged as murder even if the person who died was the one pulling the trigger; on the grounds that willingly participating demonstrates a depraved indifference to human life (which typically qualifies the participants for FelonyMurder statutes in jurisdictions that have them).
101[[/folder]]
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103%% This page has been alphabetized. Please add your examples alphabetically by series.
104%% And please make sure your examples don't belong in a subtrope instead.
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