Nicholas D. Wolfwood. Also, The original Seven from GunxSword, especially the Twins and especially especially Michael and Fasalina (even though they might have survived) and Ray, who channeled pure awesome with one shot
Damn you now you brought back memories! gonna go cry now.......Kyman102 said:I present to all of you the deaths that I consider the saddest ever in fiction...
Kamina from Gurren Lagann, Hughes from Full Metal Alchemist, and...
Littlefoot's mother in The Land Before Time! God DAMN that scene! ;_;
You mean this? http://www.l4d.com/comic/AquaAscension said:Bill from Left 4 Dead...
So he's not a really a well fleshed out character, but soon to be in the Valve comic. I'm looking forward to this, but in a sad way.
Oh man, I gaped out on Frank. Yeah, I definitely agree that his was the most classically tragic. His was also the longest and slowest downfall in the entire series, I'd say. What made it tragic was not the shocking nature of it (most of the deaths were rather sudden, come to think of it) but rather how long it took him to fall from grace, especially when he was so selfless compared to everyone else.VulakAerr said:Dammit, ninja'd. I'd put D and Bodie up there with the ones that hit me hardest. I was upset about String too because he was so close to getting out but the way he got there... he needed to "get got". Let's not forget Frank Sabotka, too. Without the full social context of the show, I'd say his death/story was the most classically tragic.chewbacca1010 said:Z of the Na said:-Snip!-
In television though, watch The Wire. There are several tragic, moving deaths per season. (Spoiler alert) Stringer, D'Angelo, Omar, Wallace (probably the harshest), Bodie, Prop Joe, Sherrod, Snoop etc. Anyone who doesn't die ends up either on the streets or in jail for life, for the most part. Tragic, amazing show.
Sadly, most of the deaths are kids from the streets.
Eponine in Les Miserables and Kim in Miss Saigon also hit me hard when I see them, depending on the strength of the performances.