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My only consolation is that true death comes closer with each dying.
The Alien Inventor, The Dig
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Let's face it: Death Is Cheap. If you die, there's always some alien artifact or magic spell or wish-granting being of immense power that's ready, willing and able to bring you back. Coming back as a shapeless, soulless horror? Never heard of it.

Sometimes, though, this nigh-Immortality has other, no less dangerous caveats. If the number of times you can come back is limited, then you will eventually run out, and when that happens, you're as mortal as anyone else.

See also Living on Borrowed Time, where a character is already technically dead, but has had their life artificially extended.

Examples of Out of Continues include:


Anime[]

  • Once you use one of the Dragonballs to resurrect someone in Dragon Ball, you can't use them to come back again. They eventually work around it by getting a bigger dragon.
  • In Naruto, each method of resurrection only seems to work once. Unlike other Dangerous Forbidden Techniques, these are actually very likely to kill the user.
  • In Inuyasha, Sesshomaru's sword (the one that brings people back to life) can only resurrect a person once. This became an issue when Rin died again.
  • In Fate Stay/Night, Berserker has quite a few lives, Rin takes one, Archer takes 5, and Saber takes the rest at the same time. Hax.
  • In Higurashi no Naku Koro ni, Hanyuu's ability to send Rika back in time when she dies is each time less effective than the last, so the second season's final chapter cranks up the drama when it's revealed that there's only one more chance to get things right.
  • In Fullmetal Alchemist, the homunculi do a good job making themselves look invincible (and mostly act as though they were, even Greed who cut himself off from the one way of recharging his stone), but there is a limit on the number of times they can heal themselves before they run out of juice. Good luck burning through it all in one sitting, though. Unless you're Colonel Mustang and incredibly pissed.

Comic Books[]

  • One EC horror comic from the fifties (later adapted into a Tales from the Crypt episode) had a doctor discover that a cat does have nine lives thanks to a special gland, and also that he can transfer it into a human. He performs the process on a man, and they then go into show business. (Cause you know, that's the only possible use for it.) The man becomes "Ulric the Undying," and does things like leaping over Niagara Falls and getting the electric chair. For his grand finale (his eighth life) he'll be sealed into a coffin and buried alive for three hours. As he lies there, he reflects on the whole experience...and then realizes that the process of transferring the gland killed the cat, thus that one life had already been spent. Oops.
  • We'll see if it sticks, but supposedly this is the case for the entire DCU in the wake of Blackest Night; according to Dan DiDio, Death Is Cheap, which had been taken to absurd levels in recent years, no longer applies.
  • In the second part of Star Wars Legends‍'‍s Dark Empire comic series, Palpatine has run out of viable clone bodies to jump into. It's why he's so eager to pull a Grand Theft Me on the young Anakin Solo.

Film[]

  • The Crow suffers this in the movie, while his bird is being held by the Big Bad's sister. He got better, and then he didn't.
  • Slightly related: in the John Travolta movie Michael, Michael is using his very last trip to Earth.
  • In Wreck-It Ralph, as long as a character dies in their own videogame, they'll come back. If they die outside of it, then die forever.
  • Puss in Boots: The Last Wish opens with Puss using up his eighth life. His quest for most of the movie is trying to find a way to get nine more lives before he comes to accept that it's the relationships you have, not the length of your lifespan, that gives life meaning.
  • In Guillermo del Toro's take on Pinocchio, the titular puppet has a form of Resurrective Immortality but the more times he dies, the longer it will take him to heal himself back to life. Sebastian J. Cricket implies that one day, the wait will be so long that Pinocchio will be functionally dead. It's also shown that, if so wished, Pinocchio could break the Resurrective Immortality and die a permanent death.

Literature[]

  • One of the purported uses of the Philosopher's Stone is granting eternal life. Many a tale involves the consequences of its destruction; modern examples include Fullmetal Alchemist and Harry Potter and The Philosopher's Stone. In the latter, it is revealed that Nicholas Flamel successfully created the eponymous artifact and has kept himself and his wife alive for over 600 years with it. However, since Voldemort seeks the Stone as a means of resurrecting himself, Nicholas Flamel and his wife agree that the Stone must be destroyed, and they accept the consequences of doing so.
    • Another example from Harry Potter would be Voldemort's Horcruxes, a set of Soul Jars he created to ensure his immortality. By the end of the seventh book, they've all been destroyed through the efforts of Harry and his friends.
      • Rowling stated that Voldemort ultimately wouldn't have used the Philosopher's stone to maintain his immortality as he would've been dependent on constantly drinking the elixir of life which he'd need the stone to produce, thus having a serious weakness. The horcruxes were a better alternative in his eyes.
    • The titular objects from Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows can, in theory, allow someone to evade death indefinitely if they have all three. But in the story that speaks of the hallows, all three result in death eventually, though the Invisibility Cloak prolongs life the longest.
  • Saash in The Book of Night with Moon by Diane Duane is a cat on her ninth life.
  • In the Chrestomanci series by Diana Wynne Jones, several characters have nine lives. Only one story in the series, "Stealer of Souls", deals with an Out of Continues situation.
  • The Cat (an assassin who can transform from cute little tabby into a vicious anthropomorphic killer) in The Looking Glass Wars was made with nine lives- by the end of the first book he's been killed eight times, both by the heroes and as punishment for failing his mistress.
  • Riverworld: Everyone respawns at a random location whenever they die. One character takes the "Suicide Express" trying to reach his destination (and evade pursuit). He kills himself so many times that he is eventually informed that he's reached the upper bound of lives and is very likely to not come back with each following death.

Live Action TV[]

  • Doctor Who: Time Lords only have twelve regenerations. Once they reach their thirteenth body, they're Killed Off for Real.
    • The Master succumbing to this was the crux of "The Deadly Assassin." He eventually got more regenerations.
    • In the episode "Let's Kill Hitler," The Doctor is drugged with a lethal poison, and cannot regenerate to save himself. Fortunately for him, River cures him by burning through her remaining regenerations, depriving herself of her potential future lives.
    • "The Time of the Doctor" reveals that the Doctor has finally burnt through all twelve of his regenerations, thanks to to the retroactive introduction of the War Doctor and counting Ten's aborted regeneration in "Journey's End" as one, with the Eleventh Doctor being the Time Lord's thirteenth incarnation. He gets more regenerations by the story's end, but no one is quite sure just how many he now has. If the Retcon in "The Timeless Children" is to be believed, then the Doctor naturally had infinite regenerations and this was never a problem for them.
    • If Jack Harkness truly is the Face of Boe, then one day, he too will die.
  • Weyoun of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine is killed more than once, and brought back via cloning. In the final season, during the Dominion War, the place where his clones are created and/or stored is destroyed, and he is killed during the finale. It's stated that this was his last clone. (Do we have to say that the Star Trek Expanded Universe had more turn up the first chance it got?)

Tabletop RPG[]

  • In second edition Dungeons and Dragons, your originally-rolled Constitution stat was also the number of times your character could be brought back from the dead. To help you keep track, you lost one point of Con with each death/return.
    • In 3rd Edition and 3.5, death costs one of your character levels if you're above first level - it takes away two points of Constitution if you've only got one level to begin with.
  • A Promethean starts its existence with one free resurrection on its account... assuming it has more than one Azoth dot. Once it dies, all but the one dot burn away and it gets back up, but the next death will finish it. Osirans (and those other Prometheans willing to pay for it) start with a power called Revivification, which lets them expend their own Azoth to bring back fallen Prometheans (at an ever-increasing price), and which sacrifices itself to raise them if they fall rather than expend the "free" revival. It can be repurchased, but once you don't have the experience or Vitriol to rebuy it and have expended your resurrection, assuming you don't have any friends willing to give up their own progress for you, you've run out of continues as a Promethean.

Video Games[]

  • Sudden Death in most games where it is taken literally.
  • Unreal Tournament III uses the Hand Wave of "respawn teleporters" to explain how people can die and return; Out of Continues, in this context, means your teleporter's out of juice.
  • Eat Lead: The Return of Matt Hazard uses this at the end of the first level, where Matt is told that someone hacked the game to erase all his saves, so that when he died, he would die for good.
  • The page quote comes from the Alien Inventor from Lucas Arts' The Dig, who sealed himself away in a pyramid so that future generations who arrived on the planet could revive him (using the very same life crystals he invented) and learn of his grievous errors. Chatting with him reveals that the crystals' effect wears off with each subsequent use, until the crystals fail to resurrect the subject at all. He himself dies mere minutes after each revival, though whether it's due to the crystals failing or his own desires is left unsaid.
  • In Left 4 Dead, going down twice will result in your vision turning greyscale. If you get knocked down again without receiving medical help, you're not getting up.
  • It is implied early on that the protagonist of Immortal Defense and his fellow path defenders are a case of this: their minds may be immortal and nigh-godlike entities in pathspace, capable of raining destruction upon countless fleets of enemy ships, but destroying their original physical bodies will kill them. It's later revealed that this is an outright lie. Path defenders exist independently of their bodies: they cannot be killed, period, nor can they ever return to their physical forms. This is not necessarily a good thing.
  • The games in the Little Big Planet series give Sackboy a fixed set of lives per level. Crossing a checkpoint will reset the counter to full but it's still possible to run out of lives. The only exception is the Play Station Vita version which, barring the boss fights, has infinite lives.
  • Unlike its predecessors, Need for Speed: Unbound has a fixed number of times that a player can restart events within a game's day. And it's the same amount for all the events they do in that day, it doesn't reset for every event.

Web Comics[]

  • After Heaven burned down in Achewood, Roast Beef's next death was much less straightforward.
  • In a Captain SNES episode, it dawns on Mega Man that the building where extra lives are made has been blown up to bits.

Web Original[]

  • Khalid Shamoun from SOTF: Evolution has the power of resurrection, with the downside that each resurrection takes longer than the last. In theory, he eventually won't revive at all.

Western Animation[]

  • The Season 3 finale of The Venture Brothers, when the Hank & Dean clone slugs are used as cannon fodder.
  • There was a Tweety and Sylvester cartoon where Sylvester had used up eight of his lives, and if he died again he died for good. Naturally the world was out to kill him at that point.
  • In Drawn Together, Link Expy Xandir decides to commit suicide and does so... but re-appears with 98 lives instead of 99. He spends the entire episode killing himself until he has only one life left, at which point he decides to continue living.
    • In a later episode, Ling-Ling becomes so furious with Xandir that he begins killing him... and keeps on killing him until all of his lives are gone. The words "Game Over" appear and Xandir stays dead. For the rest of the episode, at least.
  • Spawn goes to hell when his power ends, but other than that, he can basically regenerate from near-death experiences.
  • In the ninth segment of the Animated Adaptation of Garfield His 9 Lives, the title character is on his ninth life (the one that the audience follows is his eighth). For once he's really panicking because, as he lampshades more than once, if he doesn't find a way out of this mess, he'll be gone for good. And he doesn't find a way out. He ultimately has to resort to "duping" God for a second batch of nine lives.