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  • Watchmen: Veidt has killed half of New York to force everyone into world peace and the rest of the heroes have to agree to keep their silence or otherwise kickstart World War Three. Rorschach is the only one who doesn't agree to the scheme and to make sure he doesn't tattle Dr Manhatten turns him into a smear on the antarctic snow.
    • Turned into a Bolivian Army Ending because Rorschach also wrote his knowledge of the truth into his diary, which he sent off to a radical newspaper. The comic ends with someone from the newspaper reaching for their pile of "junk" material which they use for filler. The diary is in the pile.
  • The "Going Sane" Batman arc, in which the Joker has been sane for six months while Batman has been recovering in a small town two hundred miles from Gotham. As soon as Batman reappears, Joseph Kerr runs out on the love of his life, sinks into the water, and emerges with a maniacal grin...
  • Also Batman: A Death in the Family: Good God. The Joker and his gang thrash Jason Todd (Robin) into a bloody pulp after Jason gets one lick in on the Joker. Then they tie up Jason's mother and leave a bomb to blow up the warehouse into which Jason and his mother have been lured. Miraculously, Jason is still alive - but he's far too weak to disarm the bomb, so instead he unties his mother and they attempt to make their getaway. It looks like they will just barely escape....but, just to make absolutely sure of things, that grinning, white-faced bastard had locked the door! Jason and his mother are both blown up, with Jason being killed instantly and his mother lingering just long enough to implicate the Joker in their murders to Batman. Following Jason's funeral (which is attended by only four people), Batman is pushed nearly to the brink and seriously considers violating his most sacred principle by "terminating" the Joker's "vile existence" - which he indeed ends up indirectly doing when he chases the villain onto a helicopter and another criminal with a gun panics and fires wildly, shooting the Joker in the chest. Batman escapes the copter just before it explodes, but he can only reflect bitterly that, somehow, he knows that the Joker isn't really dead.
  • Batman: War Games. Spoiler dies after being tortured by Black Mask. Batman alienates himself from the rest of the Batfamily, from the police and from the Gothamites. Orpheus is dead, Leslie Thompkins who is Batman's mother figure is disgusted and tries to teach him a lesson about using teenagers. Several hundred people were killed and The Bad Guy Wins. Black Mask becomes the leader of the unified gangs of Gotham. Afterwards, Batgirl, Robin, Nightwing and Oracle all leave Gotham. It is practically a tragedy and the lowest ebb for Batman since at least Knightfall or A Death in the Family. Perhaps even the Darkest Hour for Gotham, since things cannot get any worse, except then there are the Red Hood and Infinite Crisis storylines.
  • The Punisher MAX arc The Slavers. All Frank's really achieved is a few more corpses and a little more of his own humanity chipped away. The horror still continues, no one is redeemed. And the worst part? It's based on real-world crimes.
    • He managed to rescue some of those enslaved, and they go on to live relatively normal, if psychologically debilitated, lives. By the standards of Punisher MAX, altogether this is a happy ending.
  • Jeff Smith's Bone has sort of a bittersweet ending, but Thorn saying her goodbye to Fone Bone, which almost seems like a permanent goodbye, makes people tear up for sure.
    • The prequel miniseries, Rose awkwardly tries to disguise the downer aspect, but the ending is sad because Rose must kill the first living being she sees after killing Balsaad and has every reason to kill Briar, her sister, but instead, Briar tells Rose that she does not serve the Locust and the Locust was controlling her. Thus, Rose spares her sister's life and instead kills one of her own beloved pet dogs. Cue the townspeople cheering on Rose for killing Balsaad. Plus, the fact that Rose spared Briar allows Briar to continue to help out her charming friend the Locust in emerging into and destroying the physical world. This also allows Briar to kill Rose's beloved daughter and son-in-law in the future.
      • Though, in a Fridge Logic kind of way, Briar's life being spared is a good thing, because if Briar was dead, Thorn would become the Locust's new helper, the Bones would most likely have never traveled to the valley at all, and overall, the events of Bone that would lead to the destruction of the Locust wouldn't happen and it would instead stay alive and have more chances to escape the spirit world.
  • Warren Ellis' Zombie Apocalypse miniseries Black Gas ends with every protagonist dead, New York City nuked, and the titular zombifyin' gas implied to spread across the entire world.
  • The ending to the second volume of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen can be seen as this. The Martians are defeated, but with a deadly disease hyrbid that wipes out many citizens in London (which is covered up by the government). Griffin and Jekyll/Hyde are dead, Nemo leaves the group in fury of the government's methods, and some time later Mina leaves Quatermain to stay at a women's colony. The last panel shows us Quatermain, sitting alone in Hyde Park.
    • Things get better from there - Mina and Allan reunite as seen in The New Traveler's Almanac and The Black Dossier, and eventually escape to the Blazing World with the Dossier.
    • And just as quickly, things have fallen apart again. The end of Century: 1969 mirrors the ending of Volume 2, but manages to come off as even more depressing. The villain escapes, Mina is dragged away to an insane asylum , and in a flash forward eight years, Quartermain is once again left completely alone, only this time his situation is even more dire. He's a shell of his former self, a miserable junkie once more, and completely lost without Mina, who is still, presumably, locked away. The book ends with his only remaining friend Orlando leaving him, disgusted at what he's become. Hopefully he'll find redemption in the final chapter of Century, but judging by the apocalyptic solicits that been released, I'm not counting on it.
  • "Help, God! The light has got Cerebus!"
  • The first two Atavar arcs ended on severe downers.
    • 1: Atavar and a small group of Kalen manage to penetrate to the heart of UOS node, and the UOS begin communicating with Atavar. They claim they are actually a servitor race, looking for a species to obey, and their war with the Kalen is simply an attempt to protect themselves from a hostile aggressor species. Atavar kills the Kalen with him to prevent them exterminating the UOS... only for it to be revealed that they were lying, the UOS really are evil, and Atavar has just doomed the Kalen.
    • 2: Atavar and Worldbreaker enter the heart of the Wosk's 'God', which is actually a galactic cancer. Worldbreaker is killed and Atavar's vessel is overridden by zombie Wosks; his weapons are disabled and he doesn't have enough energy or fuel to escape.
  • The original Marvel comics G.I. Joe series ran into this due to its cancellation, as it ended pretty much just as Cobra Commander had gone about kidnapping and brainwashing just about everyone who had ever worked for him, including Noble Demon Destro, The Atoner Zartan, well-on-her-way to a Heel Face Turn Baroness, and flat-out heroic characters Storm Shadow and Billy. The brainwashing method used on the last three basically involved torturing them until they gave in. Did I mention that Billy is Cobra Commander's son?
  • Rare for the franchise in general, the Doctor Who Magazine comic "The End Of The Line" features the 4th Doctor attempting to save a group of humans in a devastated England from mutated cannibals by helping them restart the Underground trains so they can escape to a station long prophesied to be an idyllic countryside, free of radiation and danger. The Doctor's own presence brings the cannibals right to the survivors' secret base, but he manages to mostly start the trains and escape in the TARDIS (a surprisingly dick move for the usually noble Doctor) as the last humans struggle to save themselves. He arrives at the station to find out it's simply a doorway to the Underground surrounded by radioactive wastes, and would serve the survivors no better than the city if not kill them outright. Still, he sits and waits for them. After some time passes, the train does not appear; noting that acid rain is preparing to fall, The Doctor turns and leaves without further comment. (And no, this story was never picked up again.)
  • Frank Miller's Hard Boiled ends with the protagonist, a robotic assassin who thinks he's human, slaughtering most of the security forces of the corporation that created him only to end up almost completely destroyed, and ends up being put back together, having his memory reset, and returning to his (fake) family none the wiser about his true nature. Also, he happened to be the only hope for a planned revolution that would have freed all other robots from slavery, a plan which falls apart with his defeat, and prompts the revolution's leader to kill herself by overloading her own circuits.
  • Secret Six ends with the entire team being taken down by an army of superheroes during their epic Last Stand, with the narrative being extremely unclear as to which members of the team even survived. Deadshot and King Shark would later appear in Suicide Squad, but the fates of their teammates are (likely deliberately) left unstated.
    • To be clear, Secret Six came to an end just before a Continuity Reboot of the whole DC Universe. The fact that it even got an ending should be considered upbeat and a testament to the series's rabid fanbase. And it wasn't entirely a downer ending: the last fight was against an army of superheroes, so everyone survived in some condition, and a long-running subplot involving Scandal Savage and Knockout's relationship closed on a high point.
  • Gotham Central. Crispus Allen is dead, his murderer gets away with it, his partner, Renee Montoya, is left a drunken, violent, mess who can't handle police work anymore, the corruption continues and all the MCU cops can do is watch it happen.
  • Ultimate Spider-Man ends with Peter Parker dying after taking a bullet for Captain America and then attempting to take on all of the Sinister Six at once before seeking out medical attention.
  • Avengers: Children's Crusade ends with the Young Avengers breaking up. Stature and Vision are dead, Iron Lad is well on his way to becoming Kang the Conqueror, the surviving kids are consumed with guilt, and Scott Lang comes back to life just in time to see his daughter die.
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