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- Cyberswine: On the bitter side, Lieutenant Sarah Lee is implied to be dead, along with a huge percentage of the human race, and Cyberswine is either dead or deactivated. On the sweet side, Vice-President Bryce Gets, the scientist and the Cyberbird are implied to be dead and their plans have been completely foiled. Also, Zak, his sister and the street people are still alive, and they will do their best to restart their society.
- Deadeus: The Loved One Ending, Push Ending and the Jump/Final Ending. The Loved One Ending shows the boy and the girl sitting together to watch the end of the world, while making peace with the fact that there is nothing to be done. The Push Ending shows the boy waking up to find out that everybody is still alive, but he knows that he will have to deal with Deadeus again 15 years later. The Jump/Final Ending shows the boy dying, but he meets Deadeus, who is so impressed with his selfless sacrifice that it decides to spare the human race for the moment and make the boy the new Deadeus.
- House of Rules:
- "Ending No.19: Notorious Serial Killers." The woman successfully fulfills Lady Jane's last wish, killing off Pam, Greta, Ruth, Colin, Alexis and Lady Jane. She goes home, gets better and tries to put it behind her. One day, she hears on the radio that an investigation has been conducted in the mansion, turning up hundreds of bodies. Not only that, but the police are convinced that Alexis, Pam, Greta, Colin and Ruth are serial killers who have killed all of these people, including Greta's husband and Lady Jane. They urge anyone who knows their whereabouts to step forward and tell them. By the way, it turns out that the woman did not tie up all the loose ends.
- "Ending No.20: Eternal Silence." The woman successfully fulfills Lady Jane's last wish, killing off Pam, Greta, Ruth, Colin, Alexis and Lady Jane. She goes into the laundry room and finds the thirteenth and final work rule, talking about incinerating the garbage every weekend and also mentioning that fire purifies everything. So the woman sets the entire Mansion on fire and goes home. She gets better and tries to put it behind her. One day, she hears on the radio that an investigation had been conducted in the remains of the Mansion. The police believe that it was an act of arson, and that Alexis, Pam, Greta, Colin, Ruth and Lady Jane have gone missing. They urge anyone who knows their whereabouts to step forward and tell them. There is an epilogue that shows Alexis waking up at the entrance of the eternal abyss. Lady Jane appears to her, and Alexis tells her goodbye and prepares to go. However, Lady Jane reveals that she intends to come with her to the eternal abyss, because they did promise that they would be together forever. So Alexis takes Lady Jane's hand and transforms back to her younger self. They walk into the eternal abyss together.
- In Famous:
- The good ending to the original game sees Cole having stopped Kessler, but having to prepare for The Beast alone, what with his girlfriend dead, his best friend turned a traitor, and the whole disaster pinned on him by Moya.
- The good ending of the second game is even more bittersweet. On activating the RFI, Cole stops The Beast once and for all, at the cost of his own life, and the lives of every other conduit on Earth. However, the plague that would wipe out humanity is gone, and the town of New Marais hails Cole as a patron saint. Also, the very last moment of the good ending implies Cole might not be dead.
- Nobody's Home:
- The ending in which the Party-Goer sits on the toilet qualifies. Yes, everyone is dead, including her, but she gets to take her first step towards home (in other words, the afterlife).
- The ending in which the Party-Goer talks to the player on the phone could be this. The screen smashes to black when she ends the call, but she gets to have one last conversation before the game ends.
- Trinity Souls of Zill Oll: In order to defeat Lord Balor, the only sword that can defeat him will wipe Areus from existence and no one will remember him.
- Many of the Final Fantasy and other Square games attempt this.
- Final Fantasy I ends with the undoing of the Stable Time Loop that necessitated the quest of the Light Warriors—and as a consequence, nobody, even the heroes themselves, ever remember their deeds. Also, the main villain gets everything he ever wanted. He's alive, and apparently near to the Princess.
- Even worse than FFI, Final Fantasy II ends with Leon leaving the heroes, saying too much had happened, and that things couldn't go back to the way they were. Dawn of Souls furthers this by showing off all of the dead characters from the game watching over the still living characters. Not to mention most of the world population has been killed off due to two superweapons. Lest we forget: the world is not irreparably damaged, and the population isn't all that bad off (only one city is well and truly destroyed). Sure, the psychological scars won't heal easily, but they never do.
- The original Final Fantasy Tactics ends with Delita becoming king, but he kills Ovelia in self defense after she attacks him and stabs him. He is left wondering if his friend, Ramza, came off better because he was free, while Delita is Lonely At the Top. Meanwhile, Ramza is still considered a heretic, and he and his sister are apparently dead. Olan attends Alma's funeral and thanks Ramza for all he did, and muses why he did all that despite he would always be considered a heretic by history. The extended cinema answers that by showing him riding in peace with his sister. Hundreds of years later, Olans writings are discovered, and Ramza's name is finally cleared, and his deeds are finally known to the world.
- Final Fantasy Tactics Advance ends with an ambiguous ending where the characters aren't sure if they've succeeded or not. Rather, they've succeeded, but the question is whether they did the right thing. The ending makes it seem like Ivalice and the real world are two separate universes, rather than having them replace each other. Also, post-game content makes it seem like only Mewt went back to the real world.
- Final Fantasy Tactics a 2 ends with the hero, Luso, leaving Ivalice for good, with all his friends behind. However, it's not explicitly stated that he can never return.
- At the end of Final Fantasy VI, Kefka is defeated, but his death means the end of magic forever AND the deaths of every single surviving Esper (if there even are any surviving Espers by that point), and this is all after Kefka ruled the world for a year while destroying cities left and right with a magic laser beam. Not to mention that Shadow is left inside Kefka's tower as it collapses and is never seen again.
- Final Fantasy VII doesn't clarify anything in the ending, save that Red XIII survived to father children. The Compilation has clarified this, but only by making it even more bittersweet. The world is saved, but it's still a screwed-up place, Cloud is still mopey, Aerith is still dead, and Sephiroth is still lurking in the wings and probably always will be. Advent Children ends with Cloud and his Nakama going into Lifestream-purified water for redemption. They seem to end up okay, as well (Cloud being not mopey anymore, for example).
- Subverted in Final Fantasy X. The ending is heartbreaking: Sin is permanently defeated, thus saving Spira, but both Auron and Tidus vanish. However, a scene after the credits reveals the possibility that Tidus is still alive.
- The ending of Final Fantasy XIII-2 goes all over the place with its ending. At first, it is a Happy Ending with the timeline fixed of all paradoxes, Hope managing to get the New Cocoon to float in the sky, Fang and Vanille's crystal rescued out of the Crystal Pillar before it collapses... and then Serah sees the changes of the timeline and dies in Noel's arms, making this bittersweet... and then things got worse.
- Secret of Mana ends with the world saved, but at the cost of the source of the world's magic, one of the three companions, the living Global Airship, the life of the female character's love interest, and most of the other connections to the world's deities. The world itself even splinters. Legend of Mana spends most of its time trying to simply repair the damage.
- Seiken Densetsu 3 ends happily for everyone except your Exposition Fairy, who was killed by the Big Bad...but because she died at the base of the Mana Tree, this means the Mana Tree will grow back and someday she'll be given life again.
- The three main story arcs Legend of Mana all have bittersweet endings: The Jumi are restored to life by the Player Character's tears, and learn to cry themselves to un-petrify you, but it's highly suggested that the same tragedy that drove them to extinction will repeat themselves eventually down the road; Matilda dies and is restored to her youth, but her demon BFF Irwin rejects their relationship because he believes them to be fundamentally incompatible and she becomes a Wisdom for all eternity instead, and along the way one of your childhood friends went insane and you were forced to put them down; and the Dragon Crystals are restored to their rightful place, but Larc is condemned to wander the Earth until Draconis' curse wears off; he does reunite with his sister eventually, though.
- Dawn of Mana ends with the Big Bad defeated and a new Mana Tree created, but at the cost of the life of your Unlucky Childhood Friend.
- Sword of Mana also ends with the Big Bad defeated, but it is revealed the the Mana Tree is the Heroine's mother, and she in turn becomes the next tree.
- Bahamut Lagoon ends with one third of the story's principal Love Triangle dead and another mentally scarred and wandering the world alone.
- Front Mission loves these: In the first, for example, sure, a couple rogue squads from the universe's two key supernations have uncovered and shut down a plot to make computers for Humongous Mecha from human brains - doesn't mean the third party occupying Huffman Island as a peacekeeping force will make the information public. Or that they'll let the island govern itself free from the corruption of all the military forces that have come through. Or that the player character gets to get his wife back, as he chooses to detonate his wanzer that contains her mind.
- In the third game, Alisa, Kazuki's adopted sister, dies at the end of Emma's scenario. She stayed behind to ensure them enough time to escape the Ocean City before the MIDAS bomb vaporized the island. Kazuki and Emma are devastated, but a final email sent by Alisa before her death gives them the strength to move on. Emma and Kazuki are then seen in the field of flowers where Emma and Alisa used to play in, planning to start a family together. Alisa's scenario ends happier, as Emma and Alisa survive. However, at the end a pair of unseen scientists are discussing how they will breed the "new" set of Imaginary Numbers, and the door shuts behind them...
- Fatal Frame lives and breathes this trope. All of the endings are designed to twist your heart, because no matter which ending you get – even the happier ones – someone has still lost or had to do something that has either contributed to their death or given them lasting scars. It's made even worse in that the canon endings to the first two games border on Downer Ending: neither Miku nor Mio have completely moved on from the events of the previous games, and Mafuyu and Mayu's deaths have left them with either Survivor Guilt in Miku's case, or with These Hands Have Killed and My God, What Have I Done? in Mio's case.
- The ending of the first game has Mafuyu remaining behind with Kirie to keep her company as she keeps the gate closed to prevent the Calamity from happening while Miku escapes, leaving her beloved brother behind.
- Crimson Butterfly ends with Mio strangling Mayu and her turning into a crimson butterfly. While this calms the Hellish Abyss and also frees the ghosts who have been trapped because of the Repentance, the fact remains that Mio killed her sister and has to deal with the fate of being a Remaining.
- Mask of the Lunar Eclipse continues the tradition. Ruka remembers her father's face and sees him again one more time before he crosses over, but Misaki's fate is left up in the air, Choushiro comes back and places the complete Mask of the Lunar Eclipse on Sakuya which allows everyone to pass over. That does not change the fact that he's still dead along with pretty much everyone in the game.
- Halo trilogy: The remainder of humanity has been saved, the Covenant has been disbanded, Gravemind and the Flood are toast, but at the cost of every named human we see in the games, except for Lord Hood. Including Sgt. Johnson(SAD SAD dirge music). The protagonist and his Ninja Butterfly are stranded at the edge of the galaxy, presumed dead.
- In a presumably canon Halo novel (because they rehired the author, thrice), The Fall of Reach had a way to bring back people who weren't too dead via Applied Phlebotinum.
- Given that Johnson and Keyes were completely incinerated in the center of a blast that was supposed to eliminate all traces of life in a radius of many lightyears far outside the galaxy, it's rather unlikly to work.
- The first Halo had this as well. The ring is blown and the galaxy is saved. Too bad nearly everybody in the game was on the ring at the time, and Master Chief had to kill Captain Keyes himself after the latter was turned into a Flood monster. Sergeant Johnson made it off in a Pelican, but we didn't know this at the time.
- Adding to the bitterness of the ending, billions upon billions of people are dead on both sides, a good majority of Human colonies have been glassed, and it may take decades to rebuild.
- And by "good majority" we mean "virtually everything but Earth itself". By this point, the total human population in the galaxy is estimated to be around two-hundred million, down from tens of billions at the begining of the war. Word of God suggests that 23 billion (out of 30-40 before the war) humans have died.
- Mother 3: Lucas was forced to fight his reanimated, mind-controlled, twin brother, Claus, who he hasn't seen in four years. He and his dead mother are able to wake him up, and he promptly kills himself. And then, Lucas pulled the final Needle and woke up the Dragon, which ended the world and either created a new one or killed everyone in the game. The game isn't very clear on which.
- In Betrayal at Krondor, the Great One Makala and real Big Bad is not evil as much as doing his best to fulfill his duty to protect the Empire of Tsuranuanni from what he misguidedly believes a threat, while being rather colourfully pragmatic in typical Tsurani Great One fashion. And the moredhel (dark elf) Gorath, the Noble Demon/Anti-Hero who's lost and sacrificed the most without even the barest complaint, even going as far as joining the sworn enemy of his people in an effort to protect them, and arguably the actual hero of the story, has to be wastefully killed in a heartwrenching Kill Us Both moment by the very human he has befriended against all odds. Had he survived, he would have been free to live the rest of his days peacefully in Elvandar with the light elves, or return to what still remains of his clan and try to put the pieces back together, and perhaps even start to lead the moredhel people to adopt less murderous, saner ways. It's a loss alright.
- Tales of Phantasia ends with the heroes defeating the Big Bad... but then finding out that rather than being evil, Dhaos was just trying to keep his world alive. In which case the heroes are feeling slightly less heroic than they'd thought.
- Terranigma ends with a real Tear Jerker - hero Ark manages to restore the world and defeat all the baddies... in the process destroying his hometown and himself as well. The final credits sequence shows Ark, in one last gift, flying the skies as a bird. On the other hand, the game's emphasis on reincarnation keeps this from being more of a Downer Ending.
- Zelda examples:
- The Legend of Zelda Twilight Princess ends with Link and Midna (who have become rather close friends after spending the bulk of the game practically inseparable) separated when the bridge between their worlds is permanently destroyed, and the populace at large is nearly totally unaware of the struggles the two went through. In this case it was done on purpose by Midna, apparently to make sure the two worlds remain separate and nothing like what happened with Zant ever happens again. This was a very unpopular move among Midna's many fans.
- In The Legend of Zelda Links Awakening for the Game Boy, the entire island turns out to be a dream that vanishes when the Wind Fish awakens. (You know this will happen, but it has to.) By completing the game without dying there's a scene where the closest thing to a love interest is shown flying off with the wings of a seagull like she always dreamed.
- The Legend of Zelda the Minish Cap: Vaati is defeated, but Ezlo returns to the world of the Minish as the door that opens only once every hundred years is about to close.
- The Legend of Zelda the Wind Waker too: The ancient Kindgom of Hyrule is finally and completly rendered Lost Forever, despite it originally being one of your (unknown) goals to revive it. Also, King Daphnes rejects his grand-grand-[...]-grandaughter Tetra's pleas to go and search for a new land along with her and Link, resulting in him saying what may be the most touching line in the whole franchise, before finally drowning in the waters of the Great Sea, which crash down on the ruins of ancient Hyrule. Even Link tries to reach out for his hand once again, but he refuses to take it.
- The Legend of Zelda Skyward Sword ends with the sealing of Demise, bringing peace to Hyrule and the Sky. However, after his defeat, Demise curses Link and Zelda by encasing them and their descendants into an endless fight between good and evil, effectively setting up the existence of Ganon in the other games. Later on, there's the farewell between Link and Fi, then between Impa and Zelda in the past, and then the physical departure of Impa in the present.
- The Legend of Zelda Ocarina of Time ends with Link defeating Ganon in one timeline and it is implied that he stops Ganondorf's plan before it can start in a second, but he is left with the memories of his battles and a hellish world ruled by evil that only he remembers, none of his friends in Kokiri Forest remember him anymore, and his best friend, who stood by him in every battle, leaves him for parts unknown as, having no memory of the alternate timeline, she feels that she is not needed anymore.
- Klonoa: Door to Phantomile ends with a Tomato in the Mirror reveal where Klonoa's best friend Huepow reveals that he faked all of their memories and pulled Klonoa into save the world from another universe, and that he has to be kicked out to fully repair the world.
- Klonoa 2 isn't much better. Sure, the main antagonist is killed and the world is saved, but the main antagonist turned out to be an Anti-Villain who only wanted to save his dying kingdom, and despite forming a close romantic relationship with the lead female character, Klonoa can't stay in this world either, and has to leave in an ending almost at heart-wrenching as the first game's.
- Shadow of the Colossus
- Although the girl is brought back to life, Wander dies just before she wakes up, and his body is "borrowed" by Dormin as part of the terrible price Dormin warned him about in the beginning of the game. Lord Emon (the "bad guy, I guess") casts a spell that sucks Dormin into a giant pool of light, and because part of Wander is in Dormin, he gets sucked in as well. The girl wakes up to find a crying baby (which is implied to be Wander), and goes up to the Secret Garden to live happily ever after, maybe. Or she dies again, who knows.
- It's worse than that. The baby, according to the director, is a direct ancestor of Ico, hero of the previous game by the same company. That girl? She's implied to be the White Queen from Ico. The White Queen was the game's Big Bad.
- It's entirely possible that she just becomes Ico's great-something-grandmother, which I admit gets a little squicky considering Wander had devolved into a baby by the end. But still, it's nice to know that Wander's quest wasn't in vain and he gets the girl, and Dormin probably revived him out of gratitude.
- Or to piggyback on his body. Remember the horns?
- It's entirely possible that she just becomes Ico's great-something-grandmother, which I admit gets a little squicky considering Wander had devolved into a baby by the end. But still, it's nice to know that Wander's quest wasn't in vain and he gets the girl, and Dormin probably revived him out of gratitude.
- Shadow Hearts 2 ends with the hero finally deciding to let himself die rather than allow the curse he's under to take his soul and memories. Not to mention the team is split up, they have just taken the life of the sympathetic Necessarily Evil Big Bad and the world is a decade or so away from WW 2. Though there is an upside—Yuri is sent back to the beginning of the first game by his dying thoughts, and it's implied that this time he'll be able to save Alice from the curse of the Four Masks.
- The first game ended sadly as well, though not quite so finally. Simply put: "she" (you know who) dies to save his soul from being devoured. Yuri's soul sure comes under fire a lot...
- Hoo boy. Shadow Hearts 3 ends with the heroes discovering that the Big Bad "Lady" is actually the main character's sister, Grace, resurrected in body but not in soul. Contrary to RPG conventions, there is no way to actually save the sister, and in the bad ending (yes, there's one worse than being forced to murder the main character's sister) the Malice that powers Lady and her cohorts - and that she used to resurrect Killer, Edna Capone, Shania, and Johnny - corrupts the main female character. The Shadow Hearts series doesn't go for happy endings.
- Neither did its spiritual predecessor, Koudelka. In the official ending of the game, one of the three main characters sacrifices his life to defeat the Big Bad, and the other two (who have spent most of the game flirting) wind up going their separate ways. And, of course, the central character from the game shows up again in Shadow Hearts, having been captured by witch hunters and locked away in an asylum, where she is tortured for years, which effectively orphans her only child. And then Yuri rescues her.
- In the Left 4 Dead downloadable mission "The Sacrifice" (and the comic tie-in), the original surviors escape to the Florida keys. However, it comes at a great cost: they lose one of their team members (canonically, Bill dies in the tie-in comic and the Left 4 Dead 2 mission of the same name; you can choose which survivor stays behind in the first game).
- In Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare, the British SAS manage to stop the nuclear missiles headed towards the Eastern Seaboard and kill ultranationalist leader Imran Zakhaev...but at a great cost. Most of the SAS team is executed seconds before Loyalist reinforcements arrive, and it isn't immediately clear whether your commanding officer or you, the player character will even survive (though the sequel reveals they pulled through). In addition, Al-Asad was captured and killed, but not before he detonated a nuclear device that killed 30,000 American soldiers and leveled an entire city.
- In the sequel, Modern Warfare 2, things go from bad to worse. Soap and Price manage to disable and kill General Shepherd, but it's a hollow victory at best. The chain of events that started with an undercover agent posing as a Russian terrorist (and subsequently dying after being found out) led to a ground invasion of Russian forces in Virginia and Washington, hundreds of troops being killed, sweeping military powers being authorized and virtually an entire task force of elite troops being decimated before Shepherd was finally brought down. Soap and Price may still be alive, but the U.S. is on course for a major world war with Russia.
- In Modern Warefare 3, by the end of the game the war between U.S. and Russia ends at a heavy cost with Soap dead by Makarov; Sandman, Grinch and Truck of Delta Force KIA and during the final mission to kill Makarov, Yuri is gunned down by Makarov, but Price manages to strangle Makarov to death with a steel wire and leave him hanging on the roof. The Good News is that all the evil men responsible for this are dead, Task Force 141 has been cleared of the bogus charges of treason and terrorism, and relations between the US and Russia finally evolve into peace.
- The "good" ending of Persona 3 results in the sealing away of a life-extinguishing Cosmic Horror that saves all life on Earth... But the main cast—with one exception—lose all of their memories of the Dark Hour and the year you spent exploring it, which takes with it all their significant Character Development, their memories of each other, and a whole lot of ugly—but necessary—truths. The cast are rendered casual acquaintances with little familiarity with each other; unaware of the struggles and personal victories they went through to save the Earth, save for flashes of Wistful Amnesia. In addition, the main character had to perform a Heroic Sacrifice to perform the sealing and dies just as the game ends—mere moments after the rest of the cast recover their memories and rush to his side.
- This is only vaguely implied in the normal game, but the expansion, Persona 3: FES, explains it outright. The story of FES otherwise revolves around one of the party members being unable to accept this and deciding to Screw Destiny.
- In The Answer, the team is shown what really happened during the final battle—they witness the protagonist's soul being sealed in stone, becoming the seal that blocked the death monster Erebus from carrying out the fall of the world. After the battle with Erebus, the Abyss of Time dissipates, and the seal locking the party within the dorm disappears. The game ends with Aigis deciding to return to school with the others. However, they have realized that the protagonist has to remain as a seal for eternity, because they can never get rid of humanity's desire to die. He can never return to them, and they can only help him bear the burden by making the most out of their own lives.
- The 'bad' ending is even worse. You decide to kill the avatar of Death's mortal body at his own request, but that won't stop him causing the end of the world, it will merely make you and everyone else forget long enough to enjoy the last few months of life. The game ends on the same day as the good ending, except everyone still doesn't know each other, have separated into their own cliques, and are enjoying a silly afternoon of fun, when the screen slowly fades to black...
- Persona 4 has a certain scene where Magaret informs the party that she's there because Elizabeth went off to find a way to rescue the hero of Persona 3. Considering how ridiculously powerful Elizabeth is if you break the rules of engagement, there's a good chance she'll manage just fine in that regard.
- In The Answer, the team is shown what really happened during the final battle—they witness the protagonist's soul being sealed in stone, becoming the seal that blocked the death monster Erebus from carrying out the fall of the world. After the battle with Erebus, the Abyss of Time dissipates, and the seal locking the party within the dorm disappears. The game ends with Aigis deciding to return to school with the others. However, they have realized that the protagonist has to remain as a seal for eternity, because they can never get rid of humanity's desire to die. He can never return to them, and they can only help him bear the burden by making the most out of their own lives.
- This is only vaguely implied in the normal game, but the expansion, Persona 3: FES, explains it outright. The story of FES otherwise revolves around one of the party members being unable to accept this and deciding to Screw Destiny.
- Persona 3 is downright joyful compared to the ending of Persona 2: Innocent Sin ends as a pure Downer Ending, and Eternal Punishment is cleaning up after Innocent Sin. Which leads to less dramatic results, but still ends with the same tragedy of the close knit friends of Innocent Sin losing their memories and friendship. The final scene is of Maya and Tatsuya, the characters who loved each other the most and whose tight-knit relationship was the entire crux of both games, acting as total strangers. All of this is necessary - if they ever remember each other, the world will end again.
- Psh, the original Persona pulls this off before any of its predecessors. Even in the...mess...the original translation was. When the main heroine has to disappear in order for the world to go back to normal, it says a bit about the ending (albeit the bad one- made worse that it isn't so much as a on-her-own-will sacrifice as it is forced).
- Oni ends when you kill Konoko's brother, Muro, and interrupt his plan to poison the Earth's atmosphere, killing everyone who doesn't have a Daodan Chrysalis... by only poisoning most of Earth's atmosphere, giving humanity (now decimated) enough time to adopt the chrysalises. Whether this actually succeeds or not is left hanging.
- In Fallout, the Vault Dweller may have saved eight settlements from a race of genetically-engineered super mutants, not to mention single-handedly fixing most of those settlements' social problems, but the Overseer of Vault 13 banishes him from his home because his time outside has changed him, and he's brought ideas and stories that endanger their peace and serenity. If the Vault Dweller got the Berserker or Childkiller karma traits, or you took the "Bloody Mess" trait at character creation, he shoots the Overseer in the head before leaving. You can also actively choose this by initiating combat and firing before he gets all the way into the Vault again.
- The canonical first ending of Drakengard is bittersweet: the protagonist's sister and best friend are dead, and the dragon pact-partner he had grown close to is now the new seal. The third ending could also be considered bittersweet since the dragons have decided to exterminate humanity, but the protagonist has just killed the strongest dragon in the world (his pact-partner) and can probably take them. He certainly looks forward to it.
- In the sequel's first ending Legna reveals to Nowe that he is just a tool of the dragons, created from the bone casket as "the new breed", who will rise up and destroy the nameless (the Grotesqueries), thus allowing the dragons to take over the world and sentencing humanity to a gruesome fate. Nowe, deeply saddened by the betrayal of the one who raised him practically since birth, decides to Screw Destiny and kills Legna in the final battle, out of love for Manah and his desire to live as a human. But, to restore order to the human world, his former knight partner Eris gives up her normal life to become the new Goddess Seal, like Angelus and Furiae before her. The second ending has Manah offering herself to the bone casket and becomes possessed by the gods again, and Nowe kills her, as Manah will no longer be a puppet of the gods. However, Nowe and Eris decide to follow with Legna's plan to battle the gods. The third ending is the happiest, although Nowe kills Legna like in the first ending, but Manah fights off the power of the bone casket, freeing her from the gods' possession, and now the world has no need for the Goddess Seal, the dragons, and the gods.
- Silent Hill games often end on a bittersweet note, depending on what you did during the journey.
- Silent Hill 1: Even the Good+ Ending is bittersweet. Sure, Harry has defeated the Big Bad and saved the cop, but the little girl he worked so hard to save is gone, having been reborn AGAIN in the form of an infant. The third game reveals that Harry contemplated killing said infant to prevent Alessa reawakening on several occasions, but held back due to his love for Cheryl. And apparently his love for Alessa/Cheryl kept the cult's god within the girl's body in stasis for over ten years, as it feeds upon pain and hatred.
- Silent Hill 3: The Good Ending has Heather finally defeating the cult's summoned god...only for her to break down crying afterward because her adoptive father Harry is dead, and while she's avenged him, he will not come back.
- Silent Hill 4: The "Death" ending shows Henry stopping Walter's 21 Sacraments from being carried out, and the apartments return to normal. It appears that Henry is the only tenant still alive, and he is deeply saddened, as he could not save Eileen during the final battle.
- In Sonic Unleashed, after Dark Gaia is stopped, Chip/Light Gaia seals himself along with the beast in the Earth's core.
- And back in Sonic Adventure, Sonic got Perfect Chaos to calm down and stop being the destroyer of worlds... but by this point, Station Square was already flooded and in ruins. And it gets worse, with some Fridge Horror: the city was flooded/destroyed over the course of a few minutes, so it's likely that most, if not all, of the people living there couldn't get away in time.
- Nippon Ichi is fond of this trope.
- In Disgaea, you get different endings based on how you beat the game. In the default ending, which assumes you accidentally kill at least one teammate—pathetically easy to do due to the large area of effect attacks in the game, — Laharl, Flonne, and Etna show up to warn Seraph Lamington of Vulcanus's plan, and talk about Demons. He agrees that Demons are capable of love, but because Flonne has "betrayed" Celestia by fighting angels, she has to be punished, so he kills her (by transforming her into a flower). Laharl, enraged at this, attacks. Up to this point, the endings are the same. In the "normal ending", Laharl kills Seraph Lamington, only to have Mid-Boss appear and reveal that it was a test to see if Laharl would forgive Lamington, because he did not, Flonne is doomed. Laharl, distraught, either picks up Flonne's flower and exiles himself (asking Etna to rule in his place) for the rest of his life, or sacrifices his own life to restore her (On a slightly happier note, he comes back as a Prinny). In the good ending, which is considered canon, Laharl knocks Lamington out, but decides that Flonne would not have wanted him to take revenge. As such, Flonne is restored to life as a Fallen Angel—but is still her ditzy self. As a fallen angel, she can stay with Laharl and Etna, whereas as an Angel, she would have to return to Celestia.
- In Phantom Brave, yes, you save the world, but Castile's brother Walnut sacrificed his life to beat the Big Bad, and Ash is still dead. A phantom, yes, but dead.
- Well, Walnut isn't dead. As Soul Nomad and The World Eaters reveals, he is instead shunted through the Nippon Ichi multiverse with some help by Lujei and ends up on Haephnes, where he makes a full recovery... And as Makai Kingdom reveals, Castile and Marona are out looking for him. (although Walnut/Endorph ends up possibly dying again when he goes all-out on Raksha, and Castile has an unfortunate run-in with Zetta and ends up stranded on his netherworld.)
- Lujei could be considered making the ending somewhat more of a downer since As well as sending Walnut/Endorph to the Soul Nomad world, she sent Sulphur back to Ivoire for fun, who becomes a Bonus Boss and rendering the sacrifices involved somewhat pointless.
- In La Pucelle Tactics, even though the world was saved, as was Croix, it is not unmixed with sadness since Allouette died to save Croix and, even though Croix and Prier finally confessed their love, they go their separate ways.
- Some of the endings of Tactics Ogre The Knight of Lodis are quite the Downer Endings. In one of them the hero's lover sacrifices herself to kill the Big Bad, the hero's best friend dies thanks in no small part to the hero, said best friend's father, a duke, sends his army after the hero, forcing him to go into hiding. The game's secret ending (who is also the canonical one) is hardly any better as all of the above happens and the hero is rewarded by the pope for killing the Big Bad with a new name, Lans Tartare, which reveals to fans of the series that this game was a prequel, and that the hero is an antagonist in Tactics Ogre: Let Us Cling Together
- But then again, Alphonse Tartare (the original name of Lans Tartare) and the Lodis side are designated heroes since the Empire of Lodis itself is an evil conquistador seeking global domination, no matter how The Knight Of Lodis romanticizes Alphonse's actions.
- The Grey and Gray Morality of the world this story is set in makes you (the player) have to choose between an empire that is trying to conquer the world, and a Fallen Angel trying to DESTROY the world. Also, your character (at the time) truly believes in the goals of Lodis. He doesn't see Lodis as evil at the time of the game, so why wouldn't he follow it? You'd only know Lodis was 'evil' if you had some sort of future sight, which Alphonse lacks. Despite turning into a antagonist, he still saved the world, and only went evil after losing Eleanor in the canonical ending.
- But then again, Alphonse Tartare (the original name of Lans Tartare) and the Lodis side are designated heroes since the Empire of Lodis itself is an evil conquistador seeking global domination, no matter how The Knight Of Lodis romanticizes Alphonse's actions.
- Also in Tactics Ogre Let Us Cling Together, the endings wind up this way. If Denam becomes the ruler of Valeria, then it's because his sister (The rightful heir) is dead. He unites Valeria...but depending on your chaos frame, is either defeated by Lodis when they invade, or assassinated by a terrorist. It's better if Caitua/Kachua is still alive, then she becomes the ruler of Valeria. But in a thousand years, the Hittites invade Valeria. The PSP version tones this down a little by instead saying they "united" with Heth (Likely where the Hittites came from) and it sounds like the union was more consentual.
- Super Robot Wars Original Generation ends with the heroes defending the Earth from both the Divine Crusaders, and the alien invasion of the Aerogaters. Nobody playable even dies, only losing the two Anti Villains. The problem? The Aerogaters were only one of the fleets of the Balmarian Empire, meaning that the Balmarian Empire might attack again, and even worse, The Guest, aliens that tried to conquer earth by forcing Earth to surrender that caused the Divine Wars in the first place, were not the Balmarian Empire, meaning a second alien menace is out there. Even worse, due to the nature of the Original Generation series, they had only scratched the surface of wars.
- Super Robot Wars Original Generation 02 actually kills off an important playable character. The kind and good Earth Federation was secretly overthrown and replaced by jerks. Also the Inspectors where only a part of an alien menance starting with "Zu-" that the Guest are a part of meaning they will be back. Even Worse? Banpresto made some more Super Robot Wars games meaning that they will adapt even more games into Original Generation games.
- No, the "even worse" part is that Sony's policy of requiring games released in America to have English audio tracks has stonewalled all effort to bring the sequels to the United States. The conflict does get resolved, but Dark Brain is only letting the Japanese be privy to the truth.
- Super Robot Wars Original Generation 02 actually kills off an important playable character. The kind and good Earth Federation was secretly overthrown and replaced by jerks. Also the Inspectors where only a part of an alien menance starting with "Zu-" that the Guest are a part of meaning they will be back. Even Worse? Banpresto made some more Super Robot Wars games meaning that they will adapt even more games into Original Generation games.
- Planescape: Torment's best ending is as follows: you have regained your mortality, learned your true name, and brought your friends Back From the Dead... And now all your hard work pays off, as you get to die and go to hell to be punished for the crimes of the First Incarnation. (Of course, the entire point of the game was to figure out a) who you are and b) how to die... Which you just did. Just too bad the person you are is overall an irredeemable bastard.)
- Any other ending is much worse, though. The worst is you learning nothing of yourself, killing the Big Bad, leaving your friends' dead bodies behind in a lifeless fortress stuck in an endless void...And then going to hell to be punished for the crimes of the first incarnation.
- Fire Emblem: The Sacred Stones ends up with Eirika and Ephraim defeating the Lord of Terror with the help of their companions, but not before the twins' beloved friend/bitter antagonist Lyon dies in front of them. The last CG of the game has the twins recalling the day they met Lyon. Not to mention the whole issue of Grado falling victim to a catastrophic natural disaster... just as Lyon had predicted and fell into darkness trying to stop. Several charas have to stay behind and help reconstruct the Empire.
- And in "Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance", there's even a freakin' song called Bittersweet Victory that plays whenever you win a mission but a character dies.
- Maxi's ending in Soul Calibur. He dies in Kilik and Xianghua's arms. True, it was ret-conned later with Maxi barely surviving but becoming amnesiac, but still...
- Pikmin does this to the player. Get all of the parts for the dolphin and Olimar will be able to fly back home safely, but has to abandon his pikmin in the process. This isn't so much the Bittersweet aspect of it (especially with the sequel and the fact the pikmin are shown to be much braver to hunt on their own) as it is the fact getting all the ship parts allows you to save your high score on how many pikmin were lost during your 30-days-or-less task total. Unless you're a natural god at pikmin or spoiled yourself silly on how to play it via walkthroughs or videos before touching the game, your score the first time around will probably be pretty high...
- In Lufia II: Rise of the Sinistrals, the four Sinistrals are defeated, saving the world from their rule, with the heroes able to withstand one last attack from them in their dying breaths... with the exception of Selan, who soon dies in Maxim's arms. After his companions teleport away, Maxim dies after exhausting his energy to stop Doom Island from crashing into Parcelyte. The game ends with Maxim and Selan's companions celebrating their victory and anticipating the two's return, unaware of (or, depending on interpretation, unwilling to accept) their fate.
- Made even more bitter by the fact that Maxim and Selan had a son in Parcelyte, who will now live to see his future, thanks to Maxim's sacrifice... but will never know his parents.
- Though if you've played the first game, this comes as no surprise, as the Downer Ending is the prologue of the first game. In fact, you have to play through the entire sequel knowing that Maxim and Selan will die. And that the Sinistrals will eventually return, despite their efforts.
- If you don't find the all the pieces of the title artifact in Neverwinter Nights 2: Mask of the Betrayer, you have a choice between staying forever on the Fugue Plane to seal away the Spirit Eater or curing yourself and returning to Faerun, but leaving the Spirit eater free to ravage Rashemen.
- There's an additional one if you got One of Many instead of Okku, and you romance Zafiya. It generally follows the good one, but with one major difference: After you marry Zafiya and return to Faern, One of Many kills her and consumes her soul. In revenge, you hunt him down and eventually kill him as he pleads to spare his life in Zafiya's voice.
- Mega Man Zero 4: Neo Arcadia is destroyed with heavy casualties, finally freeing humans and reploids of its tyranny. Its leader Dr. Weil is killed as his Kill Sat burns up in the atmosphere. The war is also over, with the humans and Reploids finally reaching an understanding, breaking the boundaries between the two races. But Zero couldn't escape Ragnarok in time, because he chose to stay behind to finish off Weil instead of evacuating the satellite. With Zero's tendency to come Back From the Dead, we're treated to a scene of his helmet lying broken on the ground signifying that this time he's really gone.
- In Mega Man Battle Network 3, MegaMan.EXE sacrifices himself to stop the Big Bad of the game, although the post credits show him returning to Lan/Netto. Of course, since everything was back to normal in the next game, it's obvious this one didn't stick, and was obvious even at the time of release because Battle Network 4 had already been announced with the same cast.
- Megaman Star Force
- In 2 at the alternate ending unlocked through the game's completion where Solo took Geo to Whazzap Ruins to have their final showdown, Geo came out victorious though the rivalry would still continue no matter what due to Solo's opposition against Geo's friendship.
- In 3 during the Black Hole Server storyline where Apollo Flame and Sirius are fought, Apollo Flame despite being destroyed by Megaman again guarantees that Megaman will be the one to defeat him as he allows him to proceed which he did but Sirius pulls off a last act that allows Geo and Solo's rivalry to extend to an everlasting one.
- If you ignore the stuff that happens after the credits roll in Pokémon Mystery Dungeon 2, it's pretty depressing. Your character basically gets erased out of time because the planet didn't go into paralysis (so no one from the future could have come back, including you) and after your companion returns and tells everyone, the last shot you see is them crying on a friend's shoulder at the place you first met, in pretty similar circumstances too. Except he's all grown up. Considering everything you went through, and the fact that this scene takes place a good couple of months after everything's restored, it's pretty jarring.
- The first game in the PMD series is equally so. When you and your partner are recovering with your good friends, everyone is happy to have you back with them and that the world is saved... until Gardevoir shows up and informs you that your time in this world is over. The last few shots we have of the Pokemon world before the end credits is of everyone moping over your departure, and your partner sobbing uncontrollably.
- Max Payne 2 ends on a bittersweet note (at least in the ending you usually get). Max has solved the case, taken down the Big Bad, and finally gotten over the deaths of his wife and baby girl. But this victory came at the cost of Mona Sax, the woman he loved, along with Alfred Woden, Vinnie Gognitti, and most of the others on his side.
- Mona survives if you beat the game on the hardest difficulty level, so that one is at least slightly less bittersweet.
- X-COM: Terror From The Deep - Defeat the boss alien and you save the world, but the alien city explodes and takes all of your soldiers with it.
- It's even worse, because canon dictates that when it exploded, it sent a crapload of pollutants into the atmosphere and basically caused much of the world to need to be abandoned. Nice Job Breaking It, Hero.
- The trend for bittersweet endings in continued in Wild Arms XF, where victory costs the lives of Princess Katrina and King Hrathnir via Heroic Sacrifice to win the day, and Felius is missing and possibly dead after he sacrifices himself to save the world.
- Prey ends with Tommy defeating the Mother and destroying the Sphere. However his grandfather and his girlfriend, the only people he felt any connection with, are both dead. Neither seems terribly bothered by this and her spirit tells Tommy she will be waiting for him, so it's not so bad.
- At the end of the final mission in Starcraft Tassadar sacrifices himself in order to destroy the Zerg Overmind, but Auir is a smoldering ruin and the central Terran government is led by a Complete Monster. The expansion Brood War on the other hand has an outright Downer Ending.
- Brood War also, fairly early in its plot, turns the Bittersweet Ending of the original into a Downer Ending by having a new Overmind be created to rule the Zerg until Kerrigan's rise to power, basically rendering Tassadar's heroic sacrifice ultimately futile in the long run.
- Starcraft II has this; Kerrigan has been deinfested which has accomplished three feats a.) breaking the Zerg and ensuring that billions of lives will be saved b.) ensuring that Kerrigan is no longer a Complete Monster and can now start working for redemption and c.) humanity no longer has to fear the Zerg. The bad news is that Raynor had to shoot Tychus (his best friend), Mengsk is still in power, and the Dark Voice is still working to jump start the apocalypse; the only difference with his plans is that humanity has a chance to stop him rather than being wholly boned.
- Super Smash Bros. Brawl ends with Tabuu defeated and the world restored...except for the Island of the Ancients (R.O.B.'s home in this game), because Ganondorf detonated too many Subspace Bombs there. Word of God confirmed it.
- And R.O.B. is thus the Last of His Kind.
- Fable 2 in The Sacrifice route. Sure, the world is saved and everyone has their loved ones back. Except for you. The price for everyone else's happiness was your own because your spouse, children, sister and even your dog is dead. You can never get them back and you have to live with the knowledge that you choose the lives of others over theirs. It doesn't matter what you tell yourself: at the very least, you will miss that dog.
- I can't dig up items anymore. I can't complete the archeology quests. I've lost a major gameplay element. NOOOO!!!
- Castlevania: Order of Ecclesia, the good ending. Shanoa manages to defeat Dracula and reclaimed her emotions, but in process lost her home and foster brother Albus. And as the said home is evil, she then vanished into obscurity as records of her home became written out of history, probably including herself.
- Averting this becomes the main motivation (story-wise at least, completionists be damned) to obtain all 108 stars in most of the Suikoden series.
- 'Rule of Rose: If the good ending is achieved, Jennifer wanders the orphanage making nostalgic comments and then goes to the shed to metaphorically lock the puppy version of her dead dog, Brown, away in her heart forever. The game ends with her leaving as he whimpers.
- It signifies that Jennifer has finally regained all her memories, and is more or less in peace with herself.
- Metal Gear Solid 3 Snake Eater: Snake Eater: Naked Snake defeats Col. Vulgin, destroys the Shagohod, and is given a hero's welcome back in the states, but his mentor/mother-figure is forced to take the fall for it, the whole thing was orchestrated by the US Government as a part of its plan to get its hands on the Philosopher's Legacy, and Naked Snake becomes Big Boss, the Big Bad of the first two games.
- Watching that end sequence after having been through the entire game is enough to make someone cry and salute at the same time.
- Metal Gear Solid 4 Guns of the Patriots: Guns of the Patriots ends thus, although you could have seen it coming from a mile away—although Snake doesn't commit suicide, he will (short of a cure that is never mentioned) die before long of the accelerated aging and shortened lifespan given to him before his birth.
- Although Snake himself doesn't seem too bothered by the fact that he's going to die. He has a year to live his life free of outside influences, and in The Stinger, he even sounds happy that he has that chance.
- According to a Gamespot interview given before its release, Kojima's original ending for MGS4 would have seen it be closer to a Downer Ending—Snake and Otacon would have turned themselves in and been executed for crimes they committed in the process of saving the world. Kojima was, somewhat amazingly, vetoed in this decison, but the credits song Here's To You remains a thematic connection to his original vision.
- Metal Gear Solid 2 Sons of Liberty: Raiden stops the terrorists and is reunited with Rose, his girlfriend, but in the process several members of the supporting cast die, he's forced to reconfront his past as a child soldier, and he is left with the words of a psychotic AI, taunting him that everything he has done has gone exactly as planned. Meanwhile, series Big Bad Ocelot is still at large, as are The Patriots, the shadow government that has set up the game's events. If it weren't for series protagonist Snake showing up at the end to offer some words of wisdom and a lead on the Patriots, it would be a downright Downer Ending.
- Ace Combat 5 has this, along with Zero and 6: in 5 Chopper was KIA after crashing, your squadron members are declared traitors and officially recorded as being KIA, and while you gain unofficial recognition as the Ghosts of Razgriz, it will be years before the truth about the war and your achievements is known. In Zero you lose both of your wingmen, the first to treason and the second to being shot down by the first. 6 has quite a few: Ludmilla and Toscha are married in a prisoner of war camp, Viktor Voychek is presumably a POW as well (despite giving up the schematics for the Chandelier superweapon), the valiant Ilya Pasternak was KIA covering his squadron's retreat from Gracemeria only for some of them to be shot down in the final battle, Garuda Two's wife and daughter were killed before he could meet them again, and he is confined to a wheelchair after being shot down during the final battle. Oh, and the fate of the Hartman family's husband/father is left unstated.
- Zero's Assault Records have what must have been some Bittersweet Endings for some Belkan aces if you shot them down: Robert Gloden Spieler left the Air Force a year after the Belkan War and ended up running a small hotel in San Salvacion by the ocean. (Based on the "FMV" cutscenes taking place at the time of the Usean Continental War in Ace Combat 4, if the same timeframe is assumed for the Assault Records he may have been the unfortunate uncle in that game's cutscenes.) Dietmar Wolf Absender would be tried as a war criminal, although the charges would be dismissed. And Daniel Bierofka Wetterhahn would go from ace pilot to automobile salesman and ordinary citizen.
- Whether Chopper's death was actually a bad thing is a matter of opinon...
- In Mirrors Edge, by the end of the game Faith's best friend Celeste turns traitor and is helping the CPF hunt down Runners, and may have had a hand in killing her beloved mentor Mercury. On the other hand, she does rescue her sister from Jacknife (by kicking him out of an airborne helicopter!) and temporarily shut down the city's oppressive surveillance servers. Still, both she and Kate are now branded criminals, largely alone and facing down the newly-trained Project Icarus Runner-hunters.
- Xenogears ends with the defeat of the evil interstellar weapons system that created mankind to serve as biological parts. Fei and Elly are finally united after many incarnations of tragedy. However, 95%+ of the world's population is dead and civilization eradicated. The most poignant part however is Big Bad Krelian finally achieving his dream of living in a world without war or loss by ascending.
- Xenosaga, the spiritual successor to Xenogears ends with the Big Bad defeated and Shion and Allen finally together. In the process, though, we lost chaos, KOS-MOS, and Jin as well as many NPCs and most of the population of the galaxy. The UMN has been destroyed, leaving no method of faster-than-light travel or communication. However, the game ends with a ray of hope as MOMO is working to restore the UMN, Shion and the rest are on a quest for Lost Jerusalem (aka Earth), and a hint that they may find KOS-MOS again.
- Free Space 2 ends this way as the Shivans are revealed to be essentially unbeatable due to the magnitude of their warfleets. Upon realizing the futility of further struggle, the GTVA High Command forces a draw, of sorts, by severing all subspace links to Shivan-controlled space. A vital star system (Capella) is lost in the process, along with most of the Terran/Vasudan fleet. It is also heavily implied that the Shivans will eventually find a way around this obstacle.
- Halo Wars. The Covenant have been stopped, the Arbiter is dead, the Prophet of Regret has been stopped and the Spirit of Fire is safe...but then Captain Cutter pauses to lay his hand on Sgt. Forges empty cyro bay.
Cutter: You got all of us out of there, professor. |
- Not to mention that the Spirit of Fire, left without an FTL Drive, is now effectively stranded in space with no way to reach a human world anytime during the next century.
- Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind. Sure, you've saved the world from Dagoth Ur, but you've also set into motion the exposure of the Tribunal as false gods, the inevitable fall of the Ministry of Truth, and by destroying the Heart of Lorkhan weakened the metaphysical barriers enough to let the plot of the next game happen...
- Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion. Sure, you've saved the world from the Oblivion Invasion, Mehrunes Dagon has been banished, and you have become a hero. But, Martin is dead.
- And since the Empire is left with no Emperor and no heir, the Third Era of Tamriel has effectively ended. Without a leader, the Empire will probably fall.
- And also there is none of the imperial bloodline left to protect the world from another invasion. Which next time will NOT be able to be sealed off or halted as the only person who could turned himself into a stone dragon. So after all that work, all your character did was delay the destruction of the world by a couple of hundred years, which is the blink of an eye to the Daerdra. Sucks to be you.
- Mostly confirmed, in Skyrim which takes place a few centuries into the future the empire still exists but any attempts to crown a new emperor are failures and the empire is on the verge of collapse and civil war, infact many nations are, Skyrim is infact amidst one of its own over whether to secede from the empire or stay and to top it all off while Daedra aren't your issue this time dragons are suddenly returning to Tamriel and the 'only' person who can stop them is you the player.
- And Skyrim itself could be considered a bitterweet ending: When the player finally defeats Alduin his soul is not absorbed like other dragons, it's implied that Alduin will ultimately return to fulfill his destiny as world-eater.
- Mostly confirmed, in Skyrim which takes place a few centuries into the future the empire still exists but any attempts to crown a new emperor are failures and the empire is on the verge of collapse and civil war, infact many nations are, Skyrim is infact amidst one of its own over whether to secede from the empire or stay and to top it all off while Daedra aren't your issue this time dragons are suddenly returning to Tamriel and the 'only' person who can stop them is you the player.
- And also there is none of the imperial bloodline left to protect the world from another invasion. Which next time will NOT be able to be sealed off or halted as the only person who could turned himself into a stone dragon. So after all that work, all your character did was delay the destruction of the world by a couple of hundred years, which is the blink of an eye to the Daerdra. Sucks to be you.
- And since the Empire is left with no Emperor and no heir, the Third Era of Tamriel has effectively ended. Without a leader, the Empire will probably fall.
- In Breath of Fire IV, Ryu sacrifices himself to rid the world of the gods, so that a similar tragedy won't happen again. Although the Mad Scientist Yuna simply claims he can make as many gods as he wants
- Well the ending isn't as bad as Ryu actually survives, but becomes mortal.
- Breath of Fire III: Sure, you've defeated the Big Bad and showed her that the world doesn't need a nurse, but one of your best friends is dead and the world will slowly turn into a desert. Though there's hope...
- The Half-Life series never ends on a completely good note.
- In the first game, Gordon is told that his efforts were observed by some entity for an employment opportunity. He is then given a choice, either join the G-Man (the recruiter/employer), or go against a gross of Xen minions weaponless. Either choice leaves a bitter taste in the player's mouth.
- In the expansion pack Opposing Force, the player character Adrian Shepard is sealed for pretty much eternity after the events of the game, since he's never mentioned in the Half-Life universe again
- In Half-Life 2 ends with Gordon watching his efforts turn into a massive explosion with his partner caught in it. But before the explosion can propagate very far, the G-Man gets him out, saying Gordon's services will be needed again.
- In Episode 2 Eli Vance, Alyx's father, dies in her sight while Combine Advisors suck his brains out after averting a major invasion from the Combine.
- The only official Half-Life game that didn't have such a bad ending was Blue Shift, where Barney Calhoun successfully escapes Black Mesa, only to be seen in Half-Life 2.
- Given that the player allready knows Black Mesa is about to be destroyed with all the former coworkers that have not allready be killed by aliens or government troops, it's not really a good ending. Also, in Half Life 2 we learn, that an Alien Invasion that lays waste to earth is about to happen within the next couple of hours or days.
- Actually, the Play Station 2 exclusive game Decay ends similarly, though unlike Barney Gina and Colette have not been seen since that game.
- Portal: Assuming Chell survived, there's still the whole GLADoS is still alive with God knows how many test subjects to have fun with. If she didn't, then it's a Downer Ending.
- With the recent update, we're definitely in this territory; Chell survived only to be dragged from the ruins by a robot, presumably to undergo yet another round of 'testing' in Portal 2.
- Portal 2 has GLaDOS deciding that she's tired of dealing with Chell and releasing her to the surface, along with her Companion Cube (which apparently survived incineration). Of course, this is several hundred years into the future, where the Combine might just still be around.
- Except the Combine were actively taking Earth's resources on a massive scale.They would have rendered the planet completely inhospitable before the second game even started if they hadn't been stopped.The REAL Bittersweet part is that G La DOS may actually miss Chell.(And not in a I-get-off-on-seeing-you-get-mauled-by-deathtraps sense either.) Though she has more testers to use.
- G La DOS implies throughout both games that there's definitely a "them" out there. Either the Combine, or something. So even if Chell gets out of the facility, whatever she encounters may not be pleasant.
- Star Fox Command's nine endings included several bittersweet ones, most of which included Krystal abandoning Star Fox to join Star Wolf, her relationship problems with Fox unresolved. The most gut-wrenching of them involves Krystal saving the universe with Star Wolf, only to be shunned by the public for her double-crossing of Star Fox, leading her to leave and wonder alone, becoming a bounty hunter known as Kursed. The most bitter sting is that years later she comes across Fox, who does not recognize her. Other slightly more upbeat, yet still somewhat sad endings involve Peppy and his daughter reminiscing about their dead/wife mother while Fox and Krystal patch things up, Slippy retiring with his fiancee and years later telling tales about Star Fox while wondering if they were still out there, and one ending where Falco, depressed at not being able to rejoin Star Fox in time to rescue the universe, is convinced by Katt Monroe to start his own team called Star Falco. A variant on this ending has Fox and Falco both being depressed after Star Wolf beats them to the final boss, and they cope with it by dropping out to become G-Zero (an F-Zero reference) racers.
- Knights in The Nightmare in its "good ending". Despite beating the Big Bad, the loyal knights of King Willimgard are all dead, his son is dead, the Tiamat race is doomed, and the whole kingdom is in ruins.
- Every single ending aside from the ones that are Nonstandard Game Overs or just plain Nightmare Fuel is like this. Let's see:
- If you found Ancardia and won the final battle, Willimgard gets to come back to life, but the world is still a mess. He may or may not get his Tiamat lover back as a farewell present, and poor Maria gets damned and thrown out of Asgard despite how hard she fought to fix her mistakes as Marietta.
- If you didn't find Ancardia, Maria and the Wisp are just stuck Walking the Earth for the rest of their lives. However, since disembodied souls can only survive for so long before dispersing, this is probably going to be very short. Not to mention that the world is slightly screwed with no Arbitrator.
- In Meria's route, it's even worse, as the only way to get a reasonably "good" ending is to backstab Meria and side with Marietta despite everything you've been through together and the self-destructive loyalty she's shown you.
- And if you decide that protecting your Nakama is more important to you than textbook order, then win your battle against Marietta, Meria becomes Melod Melgis. The good news is that there's no more corrupt Asgard and no more Hector. The bad news is that the world kind of sucks now.
- Every single ending aside from the ones that are Nonstandard Game Overs or just plain Nightmare Fuel is like this. Let's see:
- Every saga in Disciples 2: Dark Prophecy has a Bittersweet Ending. Even the bad guys don't get everything they want in the end. Empire: Demon Uther was defeated, but not before he murdered his father the Emperor, leaving the Empire in ruins without a ruler or an heir. Undead: Mortis succeeds in reviving her lover, but he is so repulsed by what she had become and by what she had done to bring him back that he rejects her and abandons her forever. Legion of the Damned: Demon Uther wasn't actually their god reborn; he was a Creepy Child draining his power. The loyalist Legions manage to kill him, but their god Bethrezen is still sealed away, so they have to go back into hiding. Nobody in this game gets a completely happy ending.
- The normal ending of Tales of Symphonia Dawn of the New World. The world is saved, but Ratatosk, and by extension, Emil, has to seal himself away for 1000 years so he can repair the Mana flow. At least he'll have Richter and the Centurions (including Tenebrae and Aqua) to keep him company.
- If the right choices are made, an after-credits stinger reveals Ratatosk seperated Emil from himself so he may be with Marta. Doesn't change the fact Ratatosk, Richter and the Centurions are sealed away for 1000 years.
- Since Ratatosk and the Centurions are at least 10,000 years old at that point and have no limit to their lifespan, 1000 years shouldn't be much of an issue for them. Richter, however, is only 20. 1000 years is a long time even for a half-elf.
- If the right choices are made, an after-credits stinger reveals Ratatosk seperated Emil from himself so he may be with Marta. Doesn't change the fact Ratatosk, Richter and the Centurions are sealed away for 1000 years.
- Frontlines: Fuel of War: You just fought through the downtown core of Moscow and held a square against a seemingly endless supply of Reds. Too bad the Chinese are still in the fight, and that citizen militias and the harsh Russian winter are likely to beat you back.
- Despite the cheery aesthetic, emphasis on The Power of Love and The Power of Friendship, and the indefatigueable optimism of the main characters, the Kingdom Hearts franchise is full of these, with so far only one game out of five with a definitely happy ending. Then again, considered who made it, perhaps we should have seen it coming.
- The first game, the original Kingdom Hearts, ends with Ansem apparently defeated, and the worlds restored to life...but Kairi is now stuck alone on the restored islands that the protagonist called home, Riku, who has finally come to his senses about the darkness, has locked himself in a dark world along with Mickey, the king Sora and company have been desperately trying to find, and our heroes are left wandering and lost and on Castle Oblivion's doorstep.
- The second game, both chronologically speaking and in order of release, Kingdom Hearts: Chain Of Memories has two endings, one for Sora-mode and one for Riku-mode, and neither are all that cheerful: Sora ends up a shell of his former self, having completely forgotten Kairi, and must sleep for a year while Namine restores his mind to how it should be—that not sad to you? How about I tell you that Namine, under orders from the Big Bad, was the one who replaced Kairi in Sora's memories with herself, and now must make Sora forget she ever existed when he was the only person in her life who actually cared about her. As for Riku, it turns out that Ansem has been possessing him and while he stops him now, he'll always be lurking, waiting to possess him again, and that no matter what he will have to come to terms with his own darkness. He finally finds Sora again—but just after Sora begins that year-long sleep, and thus has to leave him while he goes on his own path.
- The third game released and also third chronologically, Kingdom Hearts II, is the one extant game in the franchise with a happy ending, but damned if didn't require a hell of a lot of work.
- Fourth game released and a complicated sort of Prequel/Interquel/whateverquel mix, spanning from just before the end of the first game, over the events of the second, and ending right before the third, Kingdom Hearts 358/2 Days ends with the "villain" protagonist running to the cessation of his existence as a separate entity that will occur in the prologue of the third game, after having had to do in his poor friend who was Doomed by Canon, setting up most of Kingdom Hearts II.
- Then there's Birth By Sleep, which is not bittersweet...it's a flat out downer.
- Kingdom Hearts: Coded, released for cell phones in Japan and later remade for the DS for the US, doesn't have a happy, bittersweet, or sad ending. It instead ends on a pure Sequel Hook.
- A possible ending to Mass Effect 2 is that the Collectors have been stopped, and the Normandy escapes the Galactic Core, but at the cost of Commander Shepard, his team and the Normandy's crew, aside from Joker. And the Reapers are still going to invade, with no-one left to stop them. This ending isn't canon, though, as the canonical ending has Shepard and at least two of the team left to defend the galaxy.
- Any ending other than the Golden Ending is going to be bittersweet, as well, and they can be imported. You could, for instance have Shepard survive, but lose the Normandy crew and all but two of your squadmates in the process, possibly including Shepard's love interest. Sucks to be you, Shep.
- Even the Golden Ending is arguably bittersweet. You've killed the Collectors, but hundreds of the most powerful star-battleships ever devised are coming to wipe out all advanced life in the galaxy:
Harbinger: Human. You have changed nothing. |
- Factor in Arrival, where the Reapers invasion is halted, but at the cost of 300,000 lives.
- Discounting the other eight potential endings, even if you did absolutely everything, complete with Hundred-Percent Heroism Rating and Hundred-Percent Completion, Mass Effect 3 gives you three final options on how to deal with the Reapers. These are given to you by The Catalyst, the controlling intelligence behind the Reapers, which lives in/as the Citadel.
- "Control", in which Shepard takes control of the Reapers to order them to leave. However, to do this means his death, as well as the destruction of the Mass Relays which will send out signal. The galaxy will be spared, but it's uncertain when or if the remaining citizens will make it back to Mass Relay-levels of technology, and it is unclear whether the Reapers will return or war between Synthetics and Organics will resurge.
- "Destruction", in which Shepard destroys The Catalyst, sending out a wave that will destroy all synthetics in the galaxy. The Reapers, as well as the Geth and EDI will die, and galactic civilization will go into a dark age with all of the Mass Relays destroyed. However, this is the only ending where Shepard seems to survive, if the Effective Military Strength rating is high enough.
- "Synthesis", the third option, in which Shepard sacrifices himself to introduce his DNA to the Crucible, sending out a wave through the Mass Relay network that transforms all life, both synthetic and organic, into hybrids of the two. Changed and with their reason for invasion gone, the Reapers retreat.
- In all three options, galactic life is pretty much guaranteed to take a hit, but as the Distant Finale shows, life will go on and the races of the galaxy will recover.
- By the end of The Darkness, you've successfully killed Paulie and Shrote. But Jenny is dead, and at the cost of your sould belonging to The Darkness forever. And you're allowed one last meeting with Jenny, before you're seperated from her forever.
- The sequel has Jackie tearing his way through hell to find Jennie and finally after two years of guilt and depression only for Jennie to become the host of the Angelus and abandon Jackie and the Darkness to hell.
- However it's worse in the other ending where Jackie decides to remain in the mental hospital limbo with the fake Jennie. This means not only does he not save the real Jennie but the Darkness will probably have complete control of Jackie's body and will continue it's mission in destroying reality with no resistance from the Angelus.
- The good ending for the "Trouble on the Homefront" quest in Fallout 3. Vault 101's tyrannical Overseer steps down in favor of Amata and the Vault is finally opened to the rest of the Wasteland, but Amata is forced to permamently exile you from the Vault because most of the Vault's residents still believe its your fault the situation got as bad as it did. At least she gives you a nice parting gift.
- The good ending for the vanilla campaign isn't without a bitter taste either. Even if you do survive the obscenely high radiation you got by activating the purifier (which you can only do with Broken Steel installed), it doesn't change the fact that your father, whom you were trying to find for the whole game, died to protect the purifier from the Enclave.
- Almost inevitable in Dragon Age Origins, depending on the decisions made throughout the game. The only way to defeat the archdemon without requiring a Heroic Sacrifice from someone is to allow Morrigan to perform a blood magic ritual that will let her conceive a child with the soul and power of an old god - with no guarantees as to what consequences this might have for the world as the child grows up. If this ritual is not performed, either the Player Character will die, Alistair will die, or Loghain will die and Alistair's faith in the PC will be so thoroughly broken that he will leave in disgust.
- If you leave Flemeth alive this may have dire consequences if Morrigan is pregnant with one of the old gods.
- Flemeth survives whether you defeat her or not.
- The happiest ending is arguable to make Alistair king then recruit Loghain and have him kill the archdemon. No one dies except Loghain who redeems himself for his past crimes and proves a true hero, and no dangerous demon babies are involved. The only thing bittersweet will be that the Warden and Alistair's friendship is more or less destroyed after all they went through. Even though Alistair is king and admits Warden was right, it's fairly clear he no longer considers him a friend.
- I would submit that executing Loghain, leaving Alistair and Anora on the throne, and romancing Morrigan leads to the happiest ending; you have left strong leaders in charge of Ferelden and since Love Redeems Morrigan is much less likely to do something stark raving mad with the child, and you don't alienate any of your companions.
- The ending is especially gloomy if you romanced Alistair and refused Morrigan's offer. Rather than let the woman he loves die, Alistair kills the archdemon and dies instead. You've ended the blight and saved Ferelden, but it's unlikely you'll be in any mood to celebrate.
- If you leave Flemeth alive this may have dire consequences if Morrigan is pregnant with one of the old gods.
- The questline that leads to Ursocs death and subsequent release from Vordrassils taint as well as removing the taint ends well, Ursoc thanks you, his spirit finds rest and Vordrassil can't corrupt any more of the environment... Only for you to discover that when you return, the druid that set you on the quest only stares blankly at you with a broken mind.
- In MySims Agents. No, really. After getting the Nightmare Crown back, Morcubus suddenly comes in and takes it and is about to open the portal to the Nightmare Realm when Evelyn suddenly comes in and stops him...by sucking them both into the Nightmare Realm. And she had just been reunited with her father. Ouch. And wait, there's more! If you complete all of the dispatch missions, you'll be able to go and save Evelyn. But to save Evelyn, you have to save Morcubus. And when you do, he escapes. Great.
- In Wrath of the Lich King: Arthas has been defeated, and the scourge has been destroyed, but many soldiers died, and Bolvar gives up his chance at humanity to contain the scourge.
- Bioshock 2. the good ending ends with you dying, but Eleanor Lamb and the rescued Little Sisters, now safe on the surface. Eleanor takes your conscience and puts it in her body, allowing you to live on inside her. It gets REALLY bad when you add in the facts Sinclair is dead, Mark Meltzer became a Big Daddy ironically assigned to protect his daughter, Gil Alexander is either incredibly mutated and insane or dead and Rapture is still fucked up, with only the fate of Eleanor and the Little Sisters being definitely good, you can only imagine how bad the "bad" ending must be.
- The final cases of the first three Ace Attorney games kinda end like this. Phoenix exposes the real killer and wins the day, but either his client or another suspect he was desperate to exonerate still end up imprisoned for lying under oath and interfering with a crime scene. The third games is even worse, as Godot will also have to stand trial for his crime (assuming he even lives that long), and Maya witnessed her own mother's death but has to put on a strong face for Pearl's benefit.
- The Neutral ending of Shin Megami Tensei I. Humanity has been freed from the constraints of both angels and demons, but the only main characters left alive are the protagonist, the Girl, possibly the protagonist's dog, and an old man who may or may not be the reincarnation of a Chinese philosopher.
- Hell, the Neutral path on any SMT game probably counts, as while you do free humanity from both sides of the Law/Chaos war, you'll also lose most of your friends because 70-90% of them will eventually join either Law or Chaos, and you'll likely be forced to fight them.
- Nocturne actually subverts the standards for SMT Neutral endings. The Demi Fiend restores the old world, and everyone that died, even Hikawa, are reborn just as they were before the Conception, and the only ones who remember the events of the game are you and Mrs. Takao. Its still a little bitter as, in The Stinger, Lucifer reminds you that you've royally pissed off YHVH, and he'll probably come after you eventually. At least you still have your demon powers.
- Hell, the Neutral path on any SMT game probably counts, as while you do free humanity from both sides of the Law/Chaos war, you'll also lose most of your friends because 70-90% of them will eventually join either Law or Chaos, and you'll likely be forced to fight them.
- Digimon World ends with Hiro still in the Digital World. He's saved that dimension from total destruction at the cost of never being able to return to the human world. Mind you, he was also taken into the Digital World against his free will in the first place by some cosmic force, so this is also a case of Being Good Sucks. And since it was such a random teleportation, his parents will come home and find him gone forever with no explanation or note explaining anything.
- I'm afraid it is quite false. Hiro DOES return to the Real world after defeating the Big Bad with a smirk in his face, and the game properly ends. However, if you load the 'beaten' save, a cutscene plays of Hiro being again called and teleported to the Digital world (in front of his friends, no less), and though you don't return to the Real world once again after that (the game was already over, after all), it's heavily implied that he can come and go at will from the Digital World. Happy Ending ensues.
- None of the endings of Devil Survivor are 100% happy. Yuzu's ending is a straight up Shoot the Shaggy Dog Downer Ending, but the rest are varying degrees of this. No matter how hard you try, everything inside the Yamamote line is more or less destroyed and hundreds of people die. The government will cover up the events of the game and God's next ordeal is inevitable unless you pick the Chaos ending (which allows the demons to overrun Earth) or the Law ending (which implies the protagonist went Knight Templar with the power).
- The ending of Don Pachi, in which the player character joins the elite Super Soldier force DonPachi Squadron...after having completed training in which he is ordered to kill a massive plurality of allies posing as enemies.
"In the end, we were not the ones who made this 'mission' a success, it was the numerous soldiers who lost their lives that contributed to the creation of these super soldiers. Thus came about the elite combat force, 'DonPachi'." |
- Red Dead Redemption. Sure, Jack gets revenge for John's murder, but that doesn't change the fact that the man he grew to admire and sympathize with is dead. Furthermore, Jack has become a wandering gunslinger and a broken shell of a man, exactly what his father didn't want for him.
- Both Act Raiser games have such an ending. In the first, The Master succeeds in killing
SatanTanzra, ressurecting the world, and banishing evil... and the people decide they don't need him anymore, and just turn their backs. The second borders on an outright Downer Ending. The Master defeats Tanzra once and for all, freeing the world from evil. Unfortunately, not only do the people dump you again, but your Sky Palace is destroyed, all your angels are dead, and you're more or less trapped in Death Heim. The last shot of the game is your statue being overgrown with plants and crumbling to dust. - The Baldur's Gate Series has a few bittersweet endings for some of the NPCs.
- Each spoiler contains the epilogue for each NPC.
- Aerie: Aerie - Normal Epilogue Aerie continued adventuring after years after leaving my company, often traveling with a larger group but sometimes striking out on her own to use her considerable power to fight against slavery in the Realms. Her compassion grew tainted by revenge, however; revenge for what had been taken from her when she was in chains and could never be restored. She might have lost herself to her vengeance entirely had fortune not smiled upon her. The tale goes that Aerie, filled with a righteous fury, destroyed a slaver enclave in the northern hills of Cormyr single-handedly. She was surprised to find a group of avariel elves that had been held captive there and quickly freed them, and was in turn invited to return to her long-lost home of Faenya-Dail. She learned much while she was there. Most importantly, she learned she was no longer truly one of avariel, and let go forever of the wings that she had lost. Faenya-Dail was no longer her home, and it was with mixed emotions that she bid it farewell. It is said that Aerie eventually became a high priestess in Understone, a gnomish village her mentor Quayle had sometimes spoken of. He had been her true family, and it was among his people that she finally found happiness and the family she had always longed for. It was also said that Aerie prayed for me, each night as the stars revealed themselves in the sky above. She sincerely hoped I had been fortunate enough to find the peace that she had...for without me, it would never have been possible.
- Anomen: Anomen – Normal Epilogue Eventually parting ways with his companions, Anomen would enter the hierarchy of Helm's church, over time rising to the rank of High Watcher. He remained restless and dissatisfied, remembering his days adventuring with <CHARNAME>...and though many friends would urge him otherwise, Anomen never felt that the church was his true home. He remained in his position for a year until finally he could bear it no more. He left active duty in the church and, for a time, wandered the new land of Maztica as a missionary. Anomen remained a troubled soul, still never content even though his prowess earned him great respect from the new friends he encountered. When the powerful evil priest Yamash summoned a horde of demons in an effort to rid Maztica of all life, Anomen would at last find his purpose. He alone was responsible for organizing the tattered remnants of the Amnish soldiers and local Mazticans into a united army that stood against the dark priest. In the great battle that followed, Anomen was seen plainly by all to plunge into combat single-handedly against Yamash. He did not have <CHARNAME> or other companions beside him: alone he stood against the tide of evil, and for once he was not found wanting. He was last seen from afar, shedding tears of joy as he engaged Yamash and shouted out to Helm while chanelling a blinding flash of power. When it cleared, both the priest and Anomen were gone. The battle was won and Maztica was saved. Anomen would forever after be regarded as a hero, inspiring the creation of a protective order of knights in his name. A new order for a new land.
- Cernd: Cernd Epilogue Cernd left the adventuring life to return to his grove in Tethyr, promising to take up his responsibility and raise his son, Ahsdale, as he believed a father should. Cernd would eventually become the Grand Druid and make a name for himself throughout the realms by not only fighting for the balance of his grove but in protecting the sanctity of life in all realms and in all peoples. Cernd would discover in time, to his regret, that in his attention to his duty he had forgotten his promise to Ahsdale. His son had left the grove long before and Cernd learned that Ahsdale had become an evil and twisted wizard in command of a power that threatened the Sword Coast. Determined that this was his burden alone to face, Cernd solemnly abdicated as Grand Druid and sought out his son. He engaged in many battles with the forces of his son, wielding the forces of nature with a great fierceness that would be regarded as legendary by all who saw it. Cernd finally confronted Ahsdale himself deep in the Forest of Tethyr, and made a final effort to convince him to turn away from his path. Ahsdale refused, and Cernd fought his only son in a long and terrible battle that eventually saw both of their deaths. With his last breath, Cernd would crawl along the ground to clasp Ahsdale's dead hand, tears flowing down his face as he begged his son's forgiveness. Cernd's spirit would enter that of a great oak within the forest, and it is believed that this immortal oak still stands, and that around it has grown a wondrous grove of great beauty that is home to the rarest of the Realm's magical creatures. Each fall the great oak and the grove around it would turn the grimmest shade of red, a reminder that even the most flawed amongst us may eventually find their balance.
- Jaheira: Jaheira – Normal Epilogue The events of the Bhaalspawn saga affected Jaheira deeply. It was her duty to protect the greater balance of things, but in the years to come she found an increased portion of that fight occurring within her own mind. Witness to great change while in <CHARNAME>'s company, she had become acutely aware of how fleeting life was, and how the loss of those she held dear ate away at her thoughts. In time she would be known as a tireless champion of balance, one that sometimes acted in concert with the Harpers and sometimes did not. Jaheira operated quietly, appearing when needed and moving on when not. Many called out to her for leadership, but always Jaheira would deny that she was capable of such and say that there was somewhere else that needed her aid more. She remained distant and guarded, never staying long in any one place. It is said that she crossed the Forgotten Realms thrice over, always wandering and always searching...until finally she began to wonder what it was, in truth, that she was searching for. What happened to Jaheira later in life is not well-known. Some say that Elminster eventually came to her and convinced her to take her place amongst the greatest commanders of the mysterious Harpers. Some say that she fell in battle against a great lich that threatened to defile the northern forests. Some also say that she went in search of <CHARNAME>, traveling to lands far beyond our own. Whatever happened to her, Jaheira never did return to either the Sword Coast or Tethyr ever again.
- Keldorn: Keldorn Epilogue Keldorn Firecam thought his travels with <CHARNAME> marked the end of his active career, both as an adventurer and in service to the Order. He retired to Athkatla, hoping to live in as much peace as an old warrior can expect, but the call to serve came one last time. It was years later, and Amn was besieged by giants. In his 60th winter, Keldorn and five knights held a strategic pass until the main Amnish force could arrive. He won the day, but his wounds were severe and the old paladin fell on the battlefield. As his knights watched, the hand of Torm descended upon the scene, and when it departed, Keldorn was gone. From that day, visions of the True God were accompanied by the stalwart ghostly form of Keldorn at his right hand
- Sarevok: Sarevok Epilogue In the years following his resurrection by my hand, Sarevok spent many years wandering throughout the Forgotten Realms, rarely spending much time in any single place. In Berdusk he is said to have routed an army of invading orcs, displaying such fearsome power and rage that terrified locals weren't sure whom to fear more... only to disappear quietly without expecting a reward. In Westgate he arrived as conqueror, brutally enforcing his will over the city only to mysteriously vanish months later, leaving his own startled men to the mercies of the angry mobs. He acted like a man that did not know himself, and all the stories agreed that Sarevok was a tortured soul, balanced between life and death, never to achieve either. Those who knew Sarevok best, which were few, said that the tormented warrior would in turn curse me for giving him his second chance...and then thank me. Eventually he disappeared entirely from the Realms, said to have assaulted the Abyss itself or even taken his own life. In truth, he journeyed to Kara-Tur to bury his one true love, the warrior Tamoko. He never returned, though the stories endure.
- Viconia: Viconia – Normal Epilogue Viconia traveled only for a short time after parting ways with <CHARNAME>, eventually starting a cult dedicated to Shar within the massive city of Waterdeep. One of her followers would eventually turn against her, precipitating a furious Viconia to slaughter the entire cult, herself. Shar did not forgive Viconia this trespass and removed her abilities. Viconia stubbornly refused to atone, however, and instead left Waterdeep to wander the Realms. The dark elf became known as an enigmatic and powerful figure as tales of her spread...and while it was known she no longer worshipped Shar, it was also known that her clerical powers were still great. Who the dark lady now worshipped, however, was her own secret to keep. She reportedly raised an army against the Vaasan Witch-King, viciously attempting to subvert rule over his Kingdom and only barely being defeated after several military failures. Viconia prevented an attempt by the Knights of the Shield to take over Calimport...only to take over the city herself days later and institute a reign of terror and cruelty which is spoken of even years later in shuddered tones. Viconia abandoned Calimport and, it is said, returned to the Underdark from whence she came. Hers was not a gentle return, however, as Viconia would become a conquering force amongst the drow to give even Lolth pause. Her mettle had been tested by both worlds, Viconia said, and proven herself worthy. She would make the drow strong whereas now they were weak. What eventually became of Viconia is unknown and shrouded in rumor...but it is said that even the great Spider Queen does not rest easily any more.
- Viconia: Viconia – Romance Epilogue Viconia and <CHARNAME> continued their adventuring careers for several years, gaining considerable fame after being drawn into central roles in two wars that rocked the Sword Coast. <CHARNAME>'s standing in the Realms grew considerably over time, his dark maiden always at his side. Eventually, Viconia became pregnant with <CHARNAME>'s child, an event that caused much argument and strife between the couple, resulting briefly in their seperation. The birth of <CHARNAME>'s son, however, would change Viconia forever. She would return to <CHARNAME> and convince him to settle finally in Baldur's Gate, dedicating herself utterly to raising their son and teaching him the ways of the drow as well as the ways of <CHARNAME>'s people and marvelling at the power the boy already was demonstrating. Though she delighted at the understanding in her son's eyes, she would not live to see him grow. Viconia was a powerful priestess and all but immune to common poisons, but the venom of the Spider Queen's vengeance was not easily resisted and her reach is far. Poisoned by a servant of the goddess Lolth, <CHARNAME> railed in rage as even the most powerful magics proved ineffective in curing his ailing wife. Viconia's last words were whispered to <CHARNAME>, in private, before she finally succumbed and are unknown...but the tale is well-told of how <CHARNAME> held the body of his dark maiden close to him and wept, while the entire city wept with him, suffering a loss of something precious that they never even truly knew they had. The furious <CHARNAME> left Baldur's Gate and raised his son in secret far away. Tales vary of him, some saying he began a crusade against the drow in the Underdark, some claiming he became a hero in the far-off northlands...and some even saying with surety that <CHARNAME> had waged war against Lolth herself in the abyssal Demonweb Pits...but all agreeing that the former son of Bhaal had been changed forever by his love for the dark maiden. As for the son, tutored by two of the most potent beings in the Realms? He would go on to forge a legend that would rival that of his father. That, however, is a different story...
- In the game Lost in Blue, where you are a teenage boy and a blind girl stranded on a desert island, one of the possible endings happens if go through 365 days on the island without finding a way off. Suddenly there's a cut scene where the two characters realize that they'll never get off this island, but it doesn't really bother them anymore.
- This is virtually iconic to all three games in the Thief series. And though each ending is full of subtle melancholy, they always come with an upbeat And the Adventure Continues... Crowning Moment of Awesome.
- Dragon Quest III ends with your hero defeating Zoma and saving both worlds—but the link between both worlds is sundered, stranding them in the former dark realm along with whatever friends they brought to the final battle. While recognized as their savior and raised into legend, they can never return home, leaving their mother to wonder what happened to her only child just like Ortega did. In some remakes, you can allay this a little by resurrecting Ortega after his death, at which point he reunites with his wife and chooses to stay with her rather than make another attempt to kill Zoma himself, but that doesn't solve the issue of the hero being stranded.
- Dragon Quest VI has a similar ending to III, only with the Real World and the Dream World replacing the two worlds of that game and with Mortamor replacing Zoma. However, the bitterness of the ending is compounded by the fact that Ashlynn, who is not an inhabitant of the Real World, is trapped in the Dream World forever.
- Dragon Quest IX actually has a genuinely happy ending for its main quest. The mini arcs, on the other hand, have a lot of these.
- Coffinwell: With your help, Dr Phelming was able to seal the sentient disease that place a death curse on the town, but not in time to save his beloved wife. On the plus side, the whole incident causes the originally Jerkass doctor to man up and actually work for the benefit of his town.
- Porth Llaffan: It turns out that the Lleviathan, who the townsfolk had come to rely on to the point they all became lazy, was actually the spirit of young Jona's dead father. After a tearful farewell, Jonas' father ascends to heaven, and while Jona and the townsfolk resolve to work hard again, its hard to forget just how dependent they were on Lleviathan. Oh, and the whole incident sends the mayor into an Angst Coma that he doesn't recover from until you complete a sidequest available much later on.
- Bloomingdale: You learn that the rich young girl who had mysteriously recovered from her crippling disease really did die and her doll became sentient and took her place. After the spirit of the girl rescinds her wish, the doll returns to being a doll to sit at the gravestone of her only friend for eternity as she has no soul to travel to the afterlife with her. Biggest Tear Jerker in the game.
- The Order/Academy campaign in Heroes of Might and Magic IV ends with the hero defeating the Big Bad, like all video games do. It also ends with The Hero paralyzed from the waist down, her advisor and father figure mindcontrolled and killed by their own men, and a Fate Worse Than Death for the Big Bad, who is actually a Well-Intentioned Extremist.
- Metroid, ever since Super, loves these:
- Metroid Prime -The corruption has stopped spreading on Tallon IV, but Samus' actions have created Dark Samus.
- She also mourns the destruction of the Chozo Temple, which was their last great work. The game ends with her just sadly staring at the smoking ruins of it.
- Prime 2 - Samus has destroyed Dark Aether (Sound familiar?), but Dark Samus is still about and causing havoc.
- Similar to Prime 1, the Ing have already wiped out the GF Marines and a large portion of the Luminoth population.
- Prime 3 - Samus has finally defeated Dark Samus and destroyed all phazon but, in the process had to kill three of her friends, and fellow bounty hunters.
- Though this game also renders the endings of the first two Prime games a bit sweeter, as Tallon IV is recovering and the Luminoth's civilization is thriving again. So there's that.
- Super Metroid - Samus has killed Mother Brain, but has lost the closest thing she has yet had to a child, as well as her childhood home in the process.
- Metroid: Other M: The Bottle Ship, and its evil (or misunderstood) AI are destroyed, but at the cost of the lives of Adam, and most of his men. And the people who made this bioweapons lab mostly get away with it. On second thought, that may be more of a Downer Ending.
- Metroid Fusion - Samus has destroyed the X parasite, by blowing up a space station and the planet it orbited, but openly admits she's probably a fugitive, for destroying federation property.
- Metroid Prime -The corruption has stopped spreading on Tallon IV, but Samus' actions have created Dark Samus.
- Freedom Fighters. Sure, the resistance forced the Russians out of New York. But in the process, they blew up the infrastructure of most of the city. And it's not like they won't come back with more forces.
- Mitsumete Knight : depending on how well you fared in Level Up & Medals-wise, and in your relationships with the girls you met during the story, you can get Knighted as a Holy Knight (the most prestigious title of the country you're fighting for as a foreign mercenary), and recieve the confession of love of one of the girls (and maybe even one from the Princess of the country)... But no matter what, after you win the war for the country, the ungrateful rulers of said country will pass a bill enforcing the expulsion of all foreigners, which means you're included in the lot, and neither the (puppet) king nor the aforemented princess can do anything about it. And if you scored a girl, while most of them will follow you, two of them won't be able to, one being too young, and the other too ill, so the only thing you can do for those two is to make a promise to meet again a few years later when they'll be older / healed.
- Vandal Hearts 2, in three out of four of its endings, which is including the Golden Ending, is this.
- The first is that, after you lost all of your childhood friends Yuri, Adele, and Clive, you make good on the promise you made to Clive to take care of Rosaly, your adopted sister, and the ending is that she gave birth to your child.
- The second is that, provided Clive lives, he will have a family with Rosaly, with you becoming a wandering, nameless adventurer.
- The third, arguably best one, is that you become bodyguard to Queen Adele. Despite this, she publicly renounced her intent on marrying since offsrpings will only breed violence due to inheritance and Succession Crisis (a big, big part of the story in fact) and thus will remain without spouse. Adele does however, sneak a deep kiss outside the public eye with you and while the epilogue says that she never took a consort or bore any child, you are described to be the closest she has to a husband.
- To expand a little on the "bittersweet" definition, the fourth ending has you become the King, presumably of Natra. You ruled with an iron fist like a despot, and later in your reign, gets assassinated. The bittersweet part comes that this ending is possible if you select "I want to be the King" when Nicola asks you about your dream early in your childhood intro chapter.
- While the original Chrono Trigger ends on a positive note, an additional FMV is shown at the end of the PSX and DS versions. In this scene, the player is shown a city under siege and some soldiers fighting: one of these, a city guard, ultimately falls with the legendary Masamune on his hands. You can assume that this city is Guardia - Marle, Crono and Lucca's home, thus leading into the events of the sequel.
- Even worse, the DS version has an optional bonus dungeon in which you can fight Dalton, the Zeal Army captain that previously served essentially as a comical character. By defeating him, you will learn that he's the responsible of the Fall of Guardia.
- Then again, in the DS version you can fight an optional Bonus Boss who is none other that the primitive form of Chrono Cross final boss. If you defeat it, you will unlock the 13th ending, that is practically a Downer Ending. In the "canonical" ending the heroes defeat Lavos that is sent in a Divide by Zero dimension. Here it merges with Schala, Magus's sister, creating the Dream Devourer. The player can travel to this dimension and fight the abomination with the help of an alternate-timeline Magus. At the end of the fight Schala sends the heroes back to their dimension, and the Dream Devourer (who is still alive) begins to turn into the Time Devourer - Chrono Cross' final boss. The alternate-timeline Magus is then stripped of his memories and left wandering in a forest, thus implying that the character Guile that can be recruited in Chrono Cross is Magus himself.
- Target Earth features the protagonist Rex fighting to save Earth and her colonies from an unknown assailant. Throughout the course of the game, Rex learns that the enemy are a group of cyborg humans who traveled into the outer reaches of space as pioneers. He begins to sympathize with them once he learns that they ran into severe problems but their cries for help went unanswered. The reason was that Earth had undergone an apocalyptic world war and had to rebuild from the ground up; they were in no shape to send help, even if they did receive the transmission. Rex keeps fighting the good fight, but by the time he kills The Dragon, all he can say is "Another good man dead." Once he defeats the Big Bad, he sets his Assault Suit to self-destruct and symbolically walks away from it.
- The Ultima series ends this way. When all is said and done, the Avatar and his companions manage to save Brittania one last time (hopefully for good) by finally defeating the Guardian. Sadly, the Avatar must perform a Heroic Sacrifice to do so because the Guardian is the manifestation of everything the Avatar cast aside after perform the Quest to become the Avatar of Virtue—as long as the Avatar lives the Guardian will too.
- Cave Story's normal ending is one of these. Quote, Sue, Kazuma, Itoh, Momorin, and possibly a couple others escape, but the other half of the cast dies, the Mimigas are almost certainly extinct, and it's hinted at that not even the Colony Drop would stop the cycle of the Demon Crown.
- Nie R ends like this in the A and B (and arguably C) paths.
- In ending A, Nier defeats the Shadowlord and rescues Yonah, finally ensuring her survival after a five year struggle, but the world is still a slowly dying husk, Facade is in ruins and without a king, Emil (seemingly) died in a Heroic Sacrifice, Weiss fades from existence after losing its power, and Kaine, despite her feelings for Nier, has to leave them to attend to "unfinished business".
- In ending B, not only does all of the above happen, but the Shadowlord, and the Shades in general, are given the mother of all Alas, Poor Villain moments. On the plus side, The Stinger shows that Emil is still alive...as a disembodied head. To his credit, he doesn't seem to mind all that much.
- In ending C, Nier is forced to kill Kaine to prevent her turning into a Shade. Kaine finally has the peace she longed for, and Nier finally realises he loves her, but now he's lost his one remaining companion.
- Company of Heroes ends with Able Company leading the encirclement of the Falaise Pocket, capturing a crippling percentage of the Wehrmacht. On the other hand, Captain Mackay is dead and 80% of Able Company is either killed or wounded. War Is Hell, indeed.
- Both expansion packs actually make things worse. Not only are most named characters ultimately killed by the end, in an indirect way, YOU kill them off when you play the same scenario but from a different point of view.
- In Tales of Valor, one scenario has you, the Germans, defending a town to keep the Falaise Pocket open. The same Falaise Pocket you, as the Allies, closed in the original game, effectively making Tales of Valor a doomed ending.
- Again in Tales of Valor, another scenario has you, the Allies capturing a town. At the end of the scenario, you learn that the last surviving named character later went on to take part and was killed in Operation Market Garden. But in the other expansion pack, Opposing Fronts, you play as the Germans who ultimately succeed in defeating the Allies in Operation Market Garden.
- Both expansion packs actually make things worse. Not only are most named characters ultimately killed by the end, in an indirect way, YOU kill them off when you play the same scenario but from a different point of view.
- Lunar 2 "officially" ends with Zophar defeated and Lunar safe, but Lucia is forced to return to the Blue Star, leaving Hiro behind on Lunar. The epilogue allows you to find Hiro a way to travel to the Blue Star, but this only sets up another bittersweet ending: Hiro is able to be with Lucia but at the cost of leaving his friends and family on Lunar, probably forever.
- At the end Sam & Max Season 3, the world is saved, but Max is dead. Yes, he is replaced by a duplicate from an Alternate Timeline, but that doesn't change the fact that the original one is gone for good.
- The Bad and Forgotten Dream endings of Yo-Jin-Bo. Hatsuhime is home safe, but Sayori doesn't get her guy.
- Quite a few Grand Theft Auto games end this way:
- At the end of Advance, Mike's thought dead best friend Vinnie is revealed to have faked his death in order to get away with the entirety of the money the two had heisted. Mike kills Vinnie and gets back the money, but nearly every major gang in Liberty City is out for his blood, and his only true friend, Eight Ball, has been arrested. (fortunately, those who've played Grant Theft Auto 3 know that he eventually escapes.)
- Vice City ends with Tommy Vercetti at the head of his own crime family and pretty much owning Vice City, but almost all of his friends are dead (some by his own hand), and Tommy has all but alienated the remaining survivors in his greed. To his credit, he doesn't mind at all.
- San Andreas ends with CJ and co freeing their city from the tyrannical hold of Big Smoke, the Ballas and Tenpenny, but there's still those riots to take care of...
- Chinatown Wars ends with Huang, after a harrowing journey throughout the city, finally avenging the death of his father, retrieving the stolen ancestral sword, and becoming the new leader of the Liberty City Triads. On the downside, a lot of people, many of them Huang's friends and allies, died along the way.
- The Revenge ending of IV. Niko finally kills Big Bad Dimitri and finally finds some measure of peace in his life, only to see his girlfriend gunned down by Dimetri's vengeful dragon. Despite this loss, Niko is still able to come to some form of peace after avenging his girlfriend (who was kind of a bitch anyways), his cousin Roman is alive and well (the Deal ending would've had him killed instead of Kate) and is in fact soon to be a father, which is a major step up from the Butt Monkey status he had throughout the game.
- The Ballad of Gay Tony ends with Luis nearly killing Tony. They both survive and get out of debt, although they lose the diamonds nearly every gangster in Liberty City had been fighting over. Unlike the main game, however, this is far further on the sweet end of the Bittersweet Ending spectrum.
- Tales of Rebirth: the world is saved, and Agarte can finally tell Milhaust her feelings, but suddenly she collapses and dies in Milhaust's arms. Then he realizes that he loves her too, but then again too late...
- Star Ocean: The Second Story/Second Evolution. The planet of Expel is saved, the Sorcery Globe is dealt with, and most of the heroes can go back home. But at what cost? Remember Narl/Nall, Mirage, Marianna, Noel and Chisato (if you didn't recruit them), the psynards, the buzzing Fun City, the wondrous technology, and all the random townspeople you ran into during the second half of the game? They're gone forever, and nobody other than the heroes realises that they ever existed.
- The ending of Deadly Premonition definitely counts. The murderer behind Greenvale's killings, as well as the manipulator behind all the other red seed murders are discovered and defeated and Zach is freed from the Red Room, but Emily and Thomas are both dead.
- These are pretty much the standard for the Thief franchise. In the first game, Garrett loses his eye, but ends up saving the world from The Trickster. Nevertheless, his accomplishment goes completely unnoticed and uncared for by pretty much everyone. In the sequel, Thief 2: The Metal Age, Garrett saves The City again and possibly the world from Karras and the Mechanists. Not only does the achievement go unnoticed by The City, he loses the Pagan wood nymph, Viktoria, his one true romantic interest, in the process. The kicker? He didn't realize how deeply he cared about her until it was too late, and is informed that her loss was supposed to happen.
- The recent Mortal Kombat 9. Raiden succeeded in fulfilling his future self's warning to prevent Armageddon, but in process, the majority of the Forces of Good ended up killed, leaving only him, Johnny Cage and Sonya Blade as the remnants of the Forces of Good (and occasionally Scorpion, depending where his moods swing). On the other hand, the Forces of Evil only lost pretty much Shao Kahn... and then there's still Quan Chi planning to initiate the return of Shinnok per Mortal Kombat 4...
- Even worse, Liu Kang, long considered The Hero of MK, dies firmly believing Raiden, his formerly beloved mentor, betrayed him and all of Earth Realm.
- The best ending of the Kongregate flash game Immor Tall. The alien saves the human family it befriended but succumbs to its wounds and dies in the end. The family briefly mourn the death of their new friend before fleeing the scene, and snow slowly buries the alien.
- Breath of Death VII. The undead heroes save the last human alive and return the crystals to him, which allow him to travel back and time and save the world from the apocalypse. However, this comes at the cost of the very existence of the post apocalyptic time period, including the protagonists. Notable in that unlike literally the entire rest of the game, which is a tongue in cheek, over the top parody, the ending is played completely seriously.
- The ending of The Orion Conspiracy is definitely this. Devlin found out who killed his son Danny, and the murderer is dead. The xenomorphs have been destroyed and the space station and asteroid have been blown to smithereens. Unfortunately, out of the 20 people making up the crew, Devlin, LaPaz, and Meyer are the only survivors. Their fates are left hanging. The matter of LaPaz being pregnant, and the matter of her unborn child being a human, xenomorph, or a hybrid is left hanging. There is a walkthrough that apparently aims for a Downer Ending. However, it begs the question...why was the ending described in the walkthrough not put in the game?
- Stolen has this for an ending. Breeze is (likely) dead, Richard Killian has been arrested for murdering his own goon Night. The previous mayor is back in power. Louie, Anya's partner, puts a Lampshade Hanging on the trope by saying that nobody is better off, but nobody is worse off either. Louie and Anya's apartment has been blown up, and so the two of them take off on a motorcycle, perhaps to go on vacation.
- In The Witcher series, though the first game can end on a somewhat hopeful note, the second game ends this way no matter what you do. On one hand, Geralt is reunited with Triss, has recovered much of his memory, and knows Yennefer might still be alive. Unfortunately the seeds of chaos have been sewn across the Northern kingdoms, and Nilfgaard is planning on marching in. Just about everything accomplished in both games has been rendered effectively moot.
- LA Noire has Cole Phelps drowned in the sewers saving both Jack Kelso, his not-friend-but-not-enemy, and Elsa Litchmann, his love interest. The game ends with Jack attending Cole's funeral with Elsa and Cole's ex-partner Biggs. While the Suburban Redevelopment Fund is finished, the corruption endemic in the LAPD and Mayor's office, that chewed up and spat out Cole, is allowed to continue, and Roy Earle, Cole's crooked Vice partner and SRF bagman, gets to deliver Cole's eulogy. That Noir for you.
- Prototype has Alex having destroyed the nuke to save New York City, but he is unhappy with the truth that he is the Blacklight Virus having unleashed by the real Alex Mercer, his sister is in a comatose state, his ex-girlfriend has betrayed him, and the virus is yet to be stopped.
- Dead Rising 2: Case West has good news, best news, bad news, and worst news. The good news is that Frank and Chuck escape with proof that Phenotrans is responsible for the Fortune City outbreak and evidence to clear the latter's name; the best news is that the evil company is going down. The bad news is Marian Mallon, the head of Phenotrans, refuses to release the permanent cure as she sees only the strong ones will get it, and escapes with Isabela; the worst news is that nobody will believe of what happened to Phenotrans.
- Professor Layton games are fond of this. The best example is probably Last Specter, especially when you consider Arianna. Though they find the Golden Garden, which eventually cures Arianna of her sickness, they reach it at the cost of Loosha's life. Considering Tony and Loosha had been her only friends for nearly a year when everyone, including Arianna herself, thought she was a witch, it's more than a little heartbreaking to see Arianna begging Loosha not to go.
- Baten Kaitos Origins ends this way. Verus and Wiseman are dead, Tarazed is destroyed, and Sagi and Milly elope, but Guillo is dead, Milly is orphaned, and the empire is in the hands of Geldoblame, who has apparently lost his mind. Also, if you've played Eternal Wings, you know Sagi and Milly die of a plague a few years later and their daughter is behind all the terrible things that happen in that game.
- Corpse Party: Sachiko is convinced to let go of her rage and she and the other ghost children are finally able to find peace and move on, and the surviving characters are able to escape, but they are literally the only ones who will ever remember that the dead characters even existed.
- Transformers: War for Cybertron: Optimus Prime and the Autobots have stopped Megatron's attempt to conquer Cybertron using Dark Energon. However, the planet's sentient core has been left partially corrupted by the Dark Energon and the only way for the corruption to be reversed is for the core to reboot itself, which will take thousands of years during which the planet will become unlivable, forcing Optimus to reluctantly order all surviving Autobots to evacuate Cybertron. Also, Megatron and the other major Decepticons (Starscream, Soundwave, etc.) are still alive and at large somewhere on Cybertron.
- Batman: Arkham City: Though the day is saved and Batman's cured of the toxin in him, it wasn't without a cost - a portion of Arkham City is in ruins, almost 25% of the inmates are dead because of Dr. Hugo Strange's Protocol 10 along with Strange himself, Ra's al Guhl, his daughter Talia, possibly Clayface and the Joker himself. Even more, Harley Quinn's pregnant with the Joker's child and she wants vengeance.
- At the end of Ikaruga, your ship sacrifices itself to destroy the final boss.
- Norman Jayden from Heavy Rain has not a single unequivocally 'good' ending to call his own. Instead, most of his epilogues fluctuate between bittersweet and downright depressing. His two best endings fall under the former category. In 'Resignation', Jayden gives up on the Origami Killer case and resigns from the FBI. He states that he needs time to distance himself from the murders and get in touch with 'the real world' again. He also gives up the ARI, and it is implied that Jayden is putting effort into overcoming his addictions. In 'Case Closed', Jayden saves Shaun Mars and is hailed as a hero by the press, but his overuse of the ARI has caused him to start seeing vivid hallucinations. The epilogue has no spoken dialogue by Jayden, and ends with a shot of his surprised expression before fading to black. It is not revealed whether or not this condition is permanent.
- In Star Wars Battlefront 2 you spend the entire campaign learning about an unnamed clone trooper who's been in just about every major battle only to have the last mission be on Hoth, with him declaring that the empire has won meaning he wasn't on Endor and knows nothing about the Empire's defeat or he died on the second Death Star making all the battles he's been in pointless.
- It's even worse with the Kamino mission. He and the other stormtroppers stop the uprising but having to kill their younger brothers in the process and the Emperor replaces the old cloning template with the useless incompetent stormtroopers of the original trilogy basically making the 501st the last of their kind.
- Heavy Water Jogger: The good news is Mr. Fluke, owner of the biggest, most dangerous nuclear power plant in the USA and jogger, turned the heavy water back on, saved the plant, and got out of there alive. The bad news is the No Name Given disgruntled employee, who started the whole mess in the first place, has escaped, called the police, and pinned the crime on him. The police arrest Mr. Fluke. Then again, Alternative Character Interpretation seems to suggest that Mr. Fluke may have been a Bad Boss and Villain Protagonist, while the employee may be a Magnificent Bastard who wanted to take down Mr. Fluke. Your Mileage May Vary on all that!
- Tenchu 2 ends with the Burning Dawn defeated but Rikimaru & Ayame are the only Azuma ninja still around.
- Warcraft 3 ended with the Burning Legion defeated for now, Azeroth is still infested with undead and the World Tree was destroyed forcing the Night Elves to come out of hiding. In the The Frozen Throne, peace is restored between the Horde and the Alliance but Jaina had to kill her own father.
- Syphon Filter
- Part 1 : Gabe and Lian stop Rhoemer but they are now both left in the cold after finding out that the Agency is Evil All Along.
- Part 2: The team gets the syphon filter vaccine but Teresa is dead. Also, a high ranking senator (the Bigger Bad is surveiling them.
- Asura's Wrath ends with Asura destroying the source of all mantra, and eventually ending the world's suffering once and for all, but at the cost of his own life. As long as his daughter is safe, however, That's good enough for him.
- Diablo III, for once, ends well. The prime evils have been vanquished forever, heaven is safe, and humanity is recovering the power it once had. But all of this comes with a hefty price: Many good people, like Deckard Cain and Leah, are killed, and Adria is still around.
- Dragons Dogma ends with the Arisen who became the Senechal and might continue to fight until another Arisen bests them. However, they stabbed themselves with the Godsbane sword, killing themselves. In the end, however, the cycle is broken, your pawn has a chance to live as a human being just like Serene by being you and Gransys is recovering.