Most Bad-ass way that a character has died.

Madara XIII

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Jennacide said:
Xiado said:
Whitebeard from One Piece. That BAMF had half his head blown off and kept fighting, in addition to being stabbed, slashed, shot, and hit by cannons hundreds of times. (He was half-giant)
You know, when I first saw this thread, I instantly thought of Luca Blight. Then I saw this post. Fuck Luca, going with Whitebeard as well. Pike in his chest, half his face blown off, and STILL MURDERING GUYS WITH EASE.

Goddammit I love One Piece.
Agreed. White Beard was a character I didn't want to die. Plus Ace's death didn't make that arc any easier to watch.

DAMN YOU WHITE BEARD! You died not laying down, not on your knees, but standing firm like a rock.
Secondly LOL at your name. well played
 

imnot

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Off the top of my head, the gravemind from Halo 3, I mean they had to kill him with what can be described as a giant ringey hyper death machine.
 

Shoqiyqa

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The end of The Fionavar Tapestry. Overall, the trilogy has a lot in common with The Lord Of The Rings, but that ending beats **** out of tossing a ring down a volcano.

The end of Cowboy Bebop.

Also:
Sergeant Ian Mackay [http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/ian_mackay.htm]

During the night of 11/12 June 1982, 3rd Battalion The Parachute Regiment mounted a silent night attack on an enemy battalion position on Mount Longdon, an important objective in the battle for Port Stanley in the Falkland Islands. Sergeant McKay was platoon sergeant of 4 Platoon, B Company, which after the initial objective had been secured, was ordered to clear the northern side of the long east/west ridge feature, held by the enemy in depth, with strong mutually supporting positions.

By now the enemy were fully alert, and resisting fiercely. As 4 Platoon's advance continued it came under increasingly heavy fire from a number of well-sited enemy machine gun positions on the ridge, and received casualties. Realizing that no further advance was possible, the platoon commander ordered the platoon to move from its exposed position to seek shelter among the rocks of the ridge itself. Here it met up with part of 5 Platoon.

The enemy fire was still both heavy and accurate, and the position of the platoons was becoming increasingly hazardous. Taking Sergeant McKay, a corporal and a few others, and covered by supporting machine gun fire, the platoon commander moved forward to reconnoitre the enemy positions but was hit by a bullet in the leg, and command devolved upon Sergeant McKay.

It was clear that instant action was needed if the advance was not to falter and increasing casualties to ensue. Sergeant McKay decided to convert this reconnaissance into an attack in order to eliminate the enemy positions. He was in no doubt of the strength and deployment of the enemy as he undertook this attack. He issued orders, and taking three men with him, broke cover and charged the enemy position.

The assault was met by a hail of fire. The corporal was seriously wounded, a private killed and another wounded. Despite these losses, Sergeant McKay, with complete disregard for his own safety, continued to charge the enemy position alone. On reaching it he dispatched the enemy with grenades, thereby relieving the position of beleaguered 4 and 5 Platoons, who were now able to re-deploy with relative safety. Sergeant McKay, however, was killed at the moment of victory, his body falling on the bunker.

Without doubt Sergeant McKay's action retrieved a most dangerous situation and was instrumental in ensuring the success of the attack. His was a coolly calculated act, the dangers of which must have been only too apparent to him beforehand. Undeterred he performed with outstanding selflessness, perseverance and courage. With a complete disregard for his own safety, he displayed courage and leadership of the highest order, and was an inspiration to all those around him.
Also a character in version of Seven Samurai (and no, not The Magnificent Seven) called
... Battle Beyond The Stars, who's recruited in his palace full of gold and jewels he's collected as payments over the years and can't spend because he's now a wanted man in every system in the galaxy and whose price is "a hot meal and a place to hide."

... and
a scene pretty much at the end of Deep Impact in which the crew of the spaceship change their now-pointless landing course into a slingshot manouevre, meet the incoming giant comet head-on and trigger the second nuke inside their own ship at the last second to shatter it ... too late to prevent it doing quite a bit of damage, but in time to stop it doing an Alderan number on the Earth.

k-ossuburb said:
This one little Hellion.
Oh, if we can do that I'd have to nominate the assault force I abandoned in Age Of Conquerors. They'd fought well and achieved a lot, but they'd lost numbers in the process and when I saw the size of the counter-attack I just drew the remaining 20 or so into a hollow square formation, sent the one remaining trebuchet to do what damage it could unescorted off to the side and started making another army.

When the replacement army was ready to move up, I scrolled over to see how far up I dared march them in one go ... and found five Janissaries (hand cannoneers) and a monk in what was left of a hollow square formation, surrounded by a wasteland of bones ... and off to one side, a trebuchet still gamely slinging rocks at anything with the wrong colour on its eaves and gables.

In Dog Soldiers, one of them spends a couple of minutes battering the stuffing out of a werewolf in the kitchen before another werewolf joins in. His last words: "I hope I give you the shits, you f______ wimp."
 

Soviet Heavy

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Ollanius Pius from Warhammer 40000. One man, armed with nothing more than a glorified laser pointer, put himself between the mortally wounded God Emperor of Mankind and Horus, the champion of Chaos. One man stood up against a GOD.

He has no hope of killing Horus, but his actions stand as a beacon of hope for all around. That even the smallest person can be a hero in the darkest hour. That despite all the grim darkness of the far future, defined only by war and despair, hope can still shine through.

He was killed in an instant, vaporized by Horus. This action of killing someone was so petty, so depraved, that it gave the Emperor new resolve, and he struck down Horus, killing him and ending the Horus Heresy.

All because of one man, who died standing.






And then of course, Games Workshop had to change it to some pussy ass supersoldier who got struck down, because having hope in 40K isn't Grimdark enough!
 

Hunter15

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woods for Blops died pertty bad ass way, so did Subject Delta, Gabe Weller form Dead Space 2 severed, the black guy from dead space 1 was pretty bad ass, and........ Darth Vader and the emperor
 

smearyllama

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It's been said already, but John Marston.
Not just because he went down in a blaze of glory, but because he did so to to protect his family from harm.
If he'd decided to run, the government would hunt down both him and his wife and son, thus ruining their lives entirely.
He truly gave himself for his family.

That's probably why he's one of my favorite game characters ever.
He's just a good man.
 

The Funslinger

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Sep 12, 2010
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OneOfTheMichael said:
What i can think of for the moment is neil from halo reach as he kills like a few golden elites while getting stabbed through the chest at the same time.
You mean Emile, right? Though I imagine this has been corrected already.
 

The Funslinger

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TheRightToArmBears said:
Kendell Cambridge said:
The Boss. MGS 3. While it wasn't badass per se it was the only video game death that ever stuck with me, even years later
Got to be that. For all the complaints about convoluted storylines and such, Metal Gear games have always felt more emotional and deeper than other games, to me at least.

Not really sure if this counts, but one of my kings in Medieval: Total War II. I was playing as Denmark, and The Holy Roman Empire had basically dicked most of Europe, except for us. I was moving my King down to Hamburg alone with his bodyguard unit, and it's a two turn trip. So the Holy Roman Empire's massive army attacks, led by their emperor. Thanks to lots of my attacks and assassinations, he's their last male character over sixteen, so if we kill him the Empire is destroyed. And by lots of awesome, I managed to kill him with about 4 men left including my King, and then they were all massacred. It was awesome. Us and our allies took over the rebel regions and we all lived happily ever after (except France. We all ganged up on France).

Oh, and in the film of Sin City, Hartigan and Marv's deaths were incredibly badass. Hartigan in a selfless, heroic way and Marv's in an awesome tank way.
I have something in the Total War vein. I was playing Rome: Total War: Barbarian Invasion, as the Eastern Roman Empire. After a few turns, one of my family members defects, booting me out of a city, and holding onto a decent sized garrison. Needless to say, however that I was still able to marshal a greater force, and we stormed the city. I kept some of my forces back, and the ones that went in (with my general, the traitor's older brother at the head) was roughly equal. His bodyguard's absolutely slaying my men, but gradually he loses them, and gets surrounded with his own guys. I sent in my General's guard plus some spearmen. We wipe out the last core of his men, at the cost of that force. While the rest of my men who'd stormed the city watched, these two generals had a one on one duel. Against the odds, the traitor still hadn't fled. After this gripping clash of swords, my general won. As I'd seen him die, heroically non the less, I decided not to put the city to the sword. Brave guy, even if he was a treacherous fucker.
 

ROTMASTER

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SPOILER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!






Gears 3 Dom why did you have to die carmine was supposed to die
 

ShadowsofHope

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Nov 1, 2009
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Dom's death in Gears of War 3, driving the tanker truck smack into the horde of Lambent Locust/Humans to save the rest of the squad (diving out of the way in slow motion). I literally mimicked Marcus' "No, Dom! No!" while I watched that scene..

Damnit, why did it have to be Dom? The Carmines are the red shirts of Gears of War, damnit!

That is all.
 

Durindana

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Redlin5 said:

First part of the video.

[sub][sub]Never watched this LP, I don't know about it's quality :p[/sub][/sub]

Botzler from Freelancer wasn't very important to the story but he took out an entire fleet by himself. That was awesome.
Hats off to you for that choice. There were about 5,000,000 NPC deaths in that game, but that particular one took 2nd place for crowning death. For me, though, the best was Walker's.
 

Ambassador Kosh

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Sep 22, 2011
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Maximus' death at he end of Gladiator, having just killed Commodus, he is finally reunited with his family in Elysium.
 

Amethyst Wind

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The Vizier of planet Fire, he turns the planet around and suicides it into a planet-eater to buy time for the other planets, delivers a dying-moment-of-awesome speech while doing so.
 

Dalek Caan

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Feb 12, 2011
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This is mine:
When Dom dies by driving a truck into a fuel tanker and blowing the shit out of lambet and locut. Made me cry R.I.P Somspoiler]
 

ssgt splatter

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Oct 8, 2008
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MASSIVE FUCKING SPOILER!!!!!!!! DO NOT OPEN UNLESS YOU WANT A MAJOR PLOT TWIST RUINED FOR YOU IN GEARS 3!

Dom sacrifices himself to save Marcus and the rest of Delta from the Lambent human infestation spreading through the city of Mercy