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Psychic Assaults[]

  • Ben 10 Alien Force: In the episode "Max Out," Ken Tennyson is forced by the Highbreed to fight Ben and Gwen, his cousins. It does not go over well.
  • Teen Titans: The confrontation between Slade and Raven when Slade first returns includes Slade ripping her cloak, her clothes magically disintegrating, and her hair growing as he holds her immobilized, showing her a vision of The End of the World as We Know It at her own hands before tossing her unconscious from a roof.
    • In addition, 'Haunted' is just one gigantic Mind Rape. In that episode Robin is seen relentlessly and obsessively pursuing Slade, who's supposed to be dead... but only he can see him, and his friends fear he's gone insane... It turns out he had checked on some of Slade's things, which were laced with a powerful hallucinogen drug.
    • Not to mention what Raven did to Dr. Light (implied) during the opening teaser for "Nevermore", when she went all demonic with him with the Glowing Eyes of Doom Red Eyes, Take Warning and all the black tentacles dragging him under her cloak. He came out shivering with his suit shattered, mumbling incoherently. In a later episode, Dr. Light quietly agrees to go to jail when Raven confronts him.
    • Poor Dr. Light. Mind Raped in two separate universes.
  • Tarantulas did this to Blackarachnia in Transformers: Beast Wars, hitching a ride inside her body, complete with a few creepy visuals to show his domination of her mind. Of course, she went into his brain to retrieve information first, so if you've got a sick sense of humor you could say she was asking for it. She does, eventually, free herself from his control, and she recovers a bit more fully (not to mention quickly) than most victims, but compare how she acts towards him in the first season to how she does in the second.
    • Also happened in Beast Machines to Silverbolt, by Megatron, via Jetstorm. If you doubt it, compare his description of being Jetstorm to Carrie's mom describing being raped physically by her husband.
      • But... Post-Jetstorm Silverbolt said he liked it. ;_;
      • Megatron did this to amnesia!Starscream in Energon, to get Starscream back on the Decepticon side. It was also a fairly obvious metaphor for something... else.
        • What? You mean when Megatron traps Starscream in a darkened room, then repeatedly commands his struggling and protesting victim to "say his name" while simultaneously stabbing him with his massive sword? What could possibly be suspect about that?
    • And looking back to 1986, this is what Unicron has to do to Galvatron to enforce his loyalty, because Galvatron is Megatron wearing a new body and name, and Megatron is mentally incapable of being second banana.
    • Transformers Prime introduces the Cortical psychic patch. An interrogation device used by Decepticons to extract information from captive Autobots. And judging by the look on Arcee’s face when Shockwave forcibly plugs the cable into the back of her head it’s not a pleasant experience when done against one’s will.
  • Vlad just loves to do this to Danny Phantom. Danny later on begged for it, in an alternate future after everyone he ever cared for died because of him. Vlad Masters respected his wishes and removed his humanity. What happens from there is ten years of Moral Event Horizon material. He steals Vlad's ghost half and murders his human self/shell. Luckily, it is averted.... or IS IT?
  • In the '80s Defenders of the Earth series, ex-Distressed Damsel now Hot Scientist Dale Arden is actually killed through Mind Rape by Ming The Merciless. Her mind is later put in a crystal and becomes the core of the super-computer Dynak-X.
  • Played for laughs in the episode of SpongeBob SquarePants where he tries to get Gary to take a bath.
Cquote1

  Spongebob: "[while waving hands in front of Gary] I will now assault your mind with a series of subliminal messages. [cue a few bath related pictures]. [then a picture of a strange woman with a goofy smile. (Beat) Sorry you had to see that."

Cquote2
  • The Spectacular Spider-Man: most other versions have Peter simply use loud noise to remove the symbiote, but here he also had to face it forcing him through a Journey to the Center of the Mind re-telling the story of him gaining his powers and Uncle Ben's death.
  • In the second season of Justice League, Doctor Destiny (John Dee) uses his powers in a disturbing fashion - he traps his ex-girlfriend in a nightmare. In one creepy scene, he removes his clothes in front of her, before "putting on" his costume. She ends up becoming the first person in the series to actually die by action of a supervillain.
    • Also, Martian Manhunter, in order to get some codes for a Thanagarian ship forces himself into a Thanagarian's mind. The guy obviously resists, but MM overcomes him. He's left mostly a vegetable, and the next time we see him, he's hooked up into a mech and can barely string sentences together.
      • Thinking about a hero mind raping someone just to learn to fly a ship is what Nightmare Fuel is made of.
        • It wasn't just so they could learn how to fly a spaceship. They had to use that spaceship to retake the Watchtower, so they could save the whole world.
        • Or possibly it's the way in which he went about it:
Cquote1

 Flash: I thought you said you couldn't read their minds.

Martian Manhunter (eyes glowing as he reaches for Lt. Kragger's head): I'll just have to try...harder. The Thanagarian also has one of those looks on his face

Cquote2
    • And then there's Ace of the Royal Flush Gang, who can make people insane simply by staring at them. The Joker takes her out of the government containment facility where she was held, and attempts to use her powers to drive the entire planet insane with a reality show. According to Joker, his insanity protects him from her milder mind-rapes, but when Ace realizes that he's no better than the government agents who kidnapped her, she makes him so insane that he goes into a coma (those who think of Batman Beyond as an alternate timeline like to believe that Joker remained in this state for the rest of his life), and the only reason he might have recovered is because he's too crazy to be properly Mind Raped.
  • In the episode A Knight of Shadows Martian Manhunter is also mind raped by Morgan Le Fay in hopes that if she can convince him to fork over the philosophers stone for the illusion of his dead family, he's fine after the episode but for the duration of it he's quite screwed up by it
  • X-Men: Few wouldn't expect this from him considering his Mind Over Manners approach, but Xavier applied some harsh enlightenment to Magneto about his violent ways by having him relive his memories of the Holocaust (or the generic war he lived through; it was a children's cartoon so they couldn't use the H-word). It did have a point in teaching him that violence is wrong, as he spent the rest of the series reforming from his villainous ways, but it is still forcing someone to relive his darkest memories.
  • In one episode of The Powerpuff Girls, the girls face the Sandman, who wants to put everyone in the world to sleep so that he can be free from his duty of putting people across the world to sleep and get some rest for himself. The girls decide that to beat him (after being put to sleep themselves and finding that they can enter dreams) is to give him a nightmare so bad that he will never want to sleep again. What follows can only be described as Mind Rape.
  • In Adventures of the Galaxy Rangers, the Psychocrypt is shown to be a particularly nasty version. It's an extremely painful process that literally rips the person's soul out of them, shoves it in a Soul Jar, and then turns the Life Energy into a vessel through which the Queen could see and hear. Even your most intimate thoughts were hers.
    • She also created a "dream making" device, powered by Eliza's crystal, to rather casually rape Zachary (and Eliza) on a nightly basis for a while. Zach, who is normally The Stoic, was shown a couple times collapsing and screaming from the sheer pain of it.
    • There was also the Poe Mutant Sensation Doll from "One Million Emotions." It's an Artifact of Doom that was designed as a work of fine art by the culture who created it. Anyone else? Touch it, and it's "the emotional electric chair." One of the Rogues Gallery forced one of his Mooks to touch the thing. Said mook screams from the overload, and is later seen to be a gibbering wreck. Another of the Rogues Gallery is later reduced to blubbering for his mommy after making the mistake of grabbing it.[1]
    • This was also one of the many nasty tricks the Scarecrow was capable of.
    • We also had the Mindnet, a means of artificial telepathy (or enhancement of what was already there) used in "Mindnet" and "Battle of the Bandits".
  • As noted on the Quotes page, happened to Stan Smith in an episode of American Dad. A car salesman kept convincing him to buy more cars whenever Stan tried to take a car back.
  • Fantastic Four: Galactus receives an epic Mind Rape courtesy of a relatively obscure (at the time) Marvel character. The Big G, weakened after Terrax betrayed and nearly killed him, has to consume Earth if he hopes to live and the Fantastic Four and The Mighty Thor are unable to stop him. Cue Ghost Rider to appear out of nowhere, call Galactus out and deliver his Penance Stare, forcing Galactus to experience all the agony, suffering and terror of every single being that died when he snuffed out their planets (it was said to be in the billions of billions). For the first time in his impossibly long history, Galactus falls. Reed chooses to have Thor rescue Galactus from the brink of death and its implied that, from then on, he will stick to feeding on uninhabited planets. Good choice, Big G.
  • Adventure Time reveals during the episode "Holly, Jolly Secrets" that a man named Simon Petrikov was mind raped over the course of several hundred years, by a cursed artifact. He fights it, but over time, he loses all his sanity, eventually becoming The Ice King.
  • Played for laughs on Phineas and Ferb. When the super computer the kids built scans the entire Tri-State Area, Norm the robot covers his ears and says, "Get out of my mind!"
  • In Young Justice, Psimon did this to M'gann/Miss Martian by invading her mind and torturing her with the threat of revealing her darkest secret: that she isn't a Green-Skinned Space Babe, but an inhuman-looking White Martian. M'gann then returns the favor, unleashing her full psychic power to turn Psimon into a drooling vegetable. In season 2, M'gann violently rips out information from the minds of two aliens whose brains can't be read through less invasive psychic methods, leaving them drooling and unresponsive.
    • The trope backfires BADLY on M'gann herself twice. First, during the Time Skip she and Conner/Superboy were together, but she tried to erase his memories of a big fight he had; he realized it immediately and was so angry that he broke up with her, and it'd take them some time to rekindle their relationship. Later, she finds herself in front of the Face-Heel Turned Khalduram/Aqualad, who had apparently killed Artemis/Tigress; M'gann is so fucking angry at the sight of the guy that she viciously mindraped him... only to find out that he was a Good All Along Reverse Mole and Artemis was alive. Oh Crap.

"Mundane" Torture[]

  • In one episode of Transformers, a Quintesson placed a Junkion in a bare cell to see how long it would take someone accustomed to the most cluttered environment in the galaxy to break down when deprived of stimulation. Almost immediately, the Junkion starts tearing at the walls and ripping up the floor. Disappointed at how quickly his subject collapsed, the scientist turns off the monitor. Later, the trope is subverted when the scientist checks back to see if anything has changed, and sees the Junkion, perfectly relaxed, laying back on an improvised couch. The Junkion hadn't suffered a breakdown; he'd just been redecorating.
  • In Season 2 of Star Wars the Clone Wars Obi-wan, Anakin, and Mace Windu influence Cad Bane's mind in a very strong and disturbing version of the Jedi Mind Trick. And these are the 'heroes'. And the victim does reveal the information not because the trick worked, but because he didn't want them to try again.
  • Played for laughs in the SpongeBob SquarePants episode 'Big Pink Loser', Patrick decides that the easiest way to win an award for something is to copy everything that Spongebob does. At one point Spongebob began behaving very randomly, but Patrick was able to copy him. Cue Spongebob thinking "At least I'm safe inside my mind." and a horrified look on Spongebob's face when we hear Patrick's thoughts, apparently pushed into Spongebob's mind... "At least I'm safe inside my mind..."
  • The trope is referenced by name in an episode of American Dad where Stan is swindled by a car salesman... repeatedly.
  • What Megatron in Transformers Prime did to an amnesic Optimus/Opion could be considered this, given the way Megatron took advantage of the latter. Later after Optimus regained his memories but doesn't remember his time spent with Megatron, Megatron uses this to taunt him. The look on Optimus's face as he realized what he had done is uncomfortable to watch.
  • Horrifically done to Korra in The Legend of Korra by Amon. Just as she was starting to gain her confidence about facing him back, he ambushes her and has her completely at his mercy. He tells her that he can't do anything to her yet as it would only make her a martyr but makes it clear that she will see everything destroyed and that she will be his last target. Understandably, poor Korra suffers a complete breakdown afterwards.
    • Amon stripping Tahno of his bending also qualifies. Especially with the way the scene is shot, the way Amon touches him, and his reaction the next episode.
  • In the Dibo the Gift Dragon episode "Friends Like Me", Bunny has a dream turned into a nightmare, her "friends" Bunny No.1, Bunny No.2, and Bunny No.3, start to manipulate and bully Bunny, with them deceiving and tricking her, the nightmare ends, turning out that the "Mind Rape" was only a dream meant to teach Bunny a lesson.
  1. They're both okay in later episodes, though.
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