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Hungry Menace

 Hungry Menace
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 Hungry Menace
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Hungry Menace
 Hungry Menace
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HungryMenace
 Hungry Menace
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They commit acts of evil. They kill and torture. Why? Not for fun, not for profit, not because they hold any grudge against their victims. Nope, it's because their very existence and survival depend on it. Maybe they actually need to eat some specific food like vampires, maybe they feed on your pain, maybe they feed on your brain, maybe some supernatural curse demands human sacrifices from them in exchange for sparing their life.
This, similar to introducing Always Chaotic Evil people, is an easy way to create conflict that can be resolved only with violence, as you clearly can't negotiate with someone or something that needs to kill you to survive. A Hungry Menace can be depicted in several different ways — from the horrible abomination that must be slain for the good of everyone to a Non-Malicious Monster or even a natural part of the universe that is not evil at all.
If such a being kills and tortures to extend its life beyond its natural span, it's Immortality Immorality; the tropes have a similar, but different, dynamic, as Immortality Immorality presents not doing amoral things and dying as the natural and only good solution for this problem, while the Hungry Menace is more ambiguous. See also; Horror Hunger, One-Track-Minded Hunger, Face–Monster Turn and Phlebotinum Muncher. For a typical hero response, see Guilt-Free Extermination War.
 Hungry Menace
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2023-07-14T11:44:23Z
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2023-07-14T11:44:23Z
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DBTropes
 Hungry Menace / int_1c1ceec7
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Hungry Menace
 Hungry Menace / int_1c1ceec7
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Monster Hunter:
Monster Hunter 3 (Tri) introduces the the Deviljho, a monster that is ruthlessly overpowered, and is known for wiping out all of the local fauna because it is constantly HUNGRY! Other large monsters run from this menace, for fear of being eaten. If it runs into the corpse of a monster you killed, it will eat it to regain stamina. 3 Ultimate introduces the Savage Deviljho, a specimen that's gotten so hungry it's undergone apoptosis because of it, and the resulting pain has sent its body into overdrive, spurring into a hunger-driven frenzy until it dies.
Monster Hunter Generations has the Nakarkos, a cuttlefish-like Elder Dragon that drags prey to its lair from far and wide, leaving the areas closest to its nest for last so they have the most food. Though it does use bones and carapaces from some of its prey to armor itself, it's a different case than the above Deviljho. It doesn't eat because it's hungry or has a juiced up metabolism; it eats because it wants to.
On a lesser level, many quests also come from farmers, traders, or the lake asking you to hunt a monster that's making their livelihoods difficult. Not out of malice, but because it thinks their pack animals or possessions make good eating. None of the monsters are evil, just eking out their own existence.
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Hungry Menace / int_1c1ceec7
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Hungry Menace
 Hungry Menace / int_1cc09117
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Bleach has Hollows, the hate-filled souls that survive by either eating other souls or, should they be advanced enough, cannibalizing other Hollows. It's only passed this trope if the Hollows keep personalities (take Shrieker, who used a boy's soul to hunt those he was owned by. Long story). So far, the Arrancars' diets are unknown, but all the ones with their past revealed when they were hollows ate others. It could be inferred that Ulquiorra survived off absorbing the spirit-filled particles in the air since he didn't have a mouth, but hey.
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 Bleach (Manga)
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Hungry Menace / int_1cc09117
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Hungry Menace
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Destiny: the Hive have spent the past several billion years crusading across the galaxy exterminating every advanced civilization they encounter, partly for ideological reasons (they're social darwinists cranked up to Omnicidal Maniac levels), but also because they're all infected with spiritual parasites that feed on violence. They get Reality Warper powers out of the deal, but if they fail to cause enough bloodshed to satisfy their worms, their worms will start eating them instead. The worms only grow hungrier as their hosts grow stronger, compelling them to perform ever-greater massacres to stay on top.
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 Destiny (Video Game)
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Hungry Menace / int_1cc8e29f
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Hungry Menace
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Fringe: The episode "The Same Old Story" has a Monster of the Week who harvests prostitutes for hormones which will stall his Rapid Aging.
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 Fringe
hasFeature
Hungry Menace / int_28fe1376
 Hungry Menace / int_3504b58e
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Hungry Menace
 Hungry Menace / int_3504b58e
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In Mortal Kombat 11, Skarlet was saved from a life of crushing starvation on the streets when Shao Khan saw her potenial, took her under his wing, and taught her blood magic. She now needs to drink blood to survive, which she gets from killing her opponents, and tells other combatants that she's constantly hungry.
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 Mortal Kombat 11 (Video Game)
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Hungry Menace / int_3504b58e
 Hungry Menace / int_35800114
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Hungry Menace
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Monster Hunter Generations has the Nakarkos, a cuttlefish-like Elder Dragon that drags prey to its lair from far and wide, leaving the areas closest to its nest for last so they have the most food. Though it does use bones and carapaces from some of its prey to armor itself, it's a different case than the above Deviljho. It doesn't eat because it's hungry or has a juiced up metabolism; it eats because it wants to.
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 Monster Hunter Generations (Video Game)
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Hungry Menace / int_35800114
 Hungry Menace / int_3ba81aa2
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Hungry Menace
 Hungry Menace / int_3ba81aa2
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In Toriko, GOD's true nature is that of a colossal, frog-like apex predator who can easily devour the 90% of wildlife on the planet in a few swings of his overly-long tongue. The fact that he's so impossibly delicious that hordes of animals gather around him spontaneously doesn't help.
In the backstory, the greatest threat the world faced was herbivores known as Death Gore. Their ravenous hunger for trees nearly reduced the entire planet to a desert before they were hunted down and wiped out by the Battle Wolf.
 Hungry Menace / int_3ba81aa2
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 Toriko (Manga)
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Hungry Menace / int_3ba81aa2
 Hungry Menace / int_43576f5
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Hungry Menace
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Supernatural: Many of the monsters that the Winchesters face off against are a threat because they have to feed on humans somehow, either by being a Picky People Eater, just finding humans tasty in general, or engaging in Soul Eating. Sometimes it's just some mindless monster that has to be stopped (werewolves, wendigo), but others (vampires, leviathans) are fully aware of their own status as apex predators. Some monsters even attempt the Vegetarian Vampire route, which sometimes saves them, though not always. On the other hand, the nastiest antagonists are typically those that don't need humans to survive per se (demons, gods), leaving them no excuse for their atrocities except to fuel their own ego and because they can.
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 Supernatural
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Hungry Menace / int_43576f5
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Hungry Menace
 Hungry Menace / int_4c095a1f
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The Insecticons in The Transformers. Their primary motivation is feeding and they have little interest in the Decepticon cause beyond whatever Megatron is offering to eat and will quickly turn on him when food runs out or they find a way to get what they want without him.
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 The Transformers
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Hungry Menace / int_4c095a1f
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Hungry Menace
 Hungry Menace / int_5dac95d3
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The aliens in The Deadly Spawn are driven by hunger, and hunger alone.
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 The Deadly Spawn
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Hungry Menace / int_5dac95d3
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Hungry Menace
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Marvel Universe:
While he might not hold any malice towards his victims and supposedly serves a few "necessary functions" within the universe, none of that changes the fact that Galactus, Devourer of Worlds has a nigh-countless number of genocides to his name. Unsurprisingly, the survivors of his feedings care little about the alleged balance of the universe, and has even tried to put Reed Richards on trial for sparing Galactus when he had the opportunity to destroy him.
The undead Fantastic Four that originated from Marvel Zombies claim that they need flesh to survive, but since they're just walking corpses, it's really just a psychological impulse that's almost impossible to ignore. Only one person is known to have resisted the hunger: Doom.
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 Marvel Universe (Franchise)
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Hungry Menace / int_62570927
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Hungry Menace
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The cannibal killer in The Forest (1982) is a crazy hermit who refuses to leave the cave he lives in, and hunts everything he can to feed himself.
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 The Forest (1982)
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Hungry Menace / int_691d46d6
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Hungry Menace
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Dungeons & Dragons:
Possibly the Tarrasque. While it is possibly the most feared and lethal beasts in the entire setting, it seems pretty much mindless and is driven by hunger... probably. Fortunately, it spends most of its time sleeping, only waking up every five to six months or so, devouring everything in sight for a week when it does. Spelljammer suggested that in their default environment, tarrasque are far less destructive, being relatively docile lithovores, but unfortunately, most atmospheres has something they react adversely to (or lacks something vital to stop the reaction), hence mindless hunger as opposed to mere animalistic hunger.
Illithids must consume brains or the equivalent to survive, and reproduce via parasitic transformation of captured humanoids. Individual mind flayers can survive on animals, but the smarter, stronger-willed the mind of the consumed brain was, the more nourishing it is, so an illithid that has consumed an average human brain can go for a while without feeding again, while someone that goes for a rabbit will soon be hungry again.
Dalmosh of the Infinite Maws is a unique fiend, a 50-foot humanoid with lumpen facial features over a massive mouth, and a body covered in "scars" that are actually additional mouths he grows in response to attacks. He is perpetually hungry, and usually spends his days gnawing on the Flesh Mountains of the Abyss, though some evil spellcasters will summon Dalmosh to act like a living weapon of mass destruction. Dalmosh exists only to destroy and consume, and can eat constantly without becoming full since anything he devours is deposited in a fleshy Pocket Dimension, Dalmosh's Gullet. Enough intelligent creatures have been consumed this way for ramshackle settlements to spring up in said Gullet, surviving off the random items and bits of food that occasionally rain down from above.
Hill giants have no sense when it comes to what they eat, but are usually tough enough to digest even rotten food and diseased carrion, so when a hill giant does get food poisoning, their tribe takes notice. The sick giant is kept in isolation, and priests of their patron deity Grolantor study the wretch's vomit for divine portents. Should the giant fail to recover, it is declared a "Mouth of Grolantor," kept in chains, and intentionally starved until it's insane with its god's endless hunger. During raids or in defense of the tribe, the Mouth of Grolantor is unleashed to go into an uncontrollable feeding frenzy, only to be recaptured once it's gorged itself on its enemies to the point of passing out.
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Hungry Menace
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The bone-eating monster in the Farscape episode "Bone to be Wild" is actually friendly, just very, very hungry.
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 Farscape
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Hungry Menace / int_6e1d5f36
 Hungry Menace / int_712dabeb
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Hungry Menace
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The main antagonists of The Flesh Eaters are ravenous microbes that console all flesh they can get.
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 The Flesh Eaters
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Hungry Menace / int_712dabeb
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Hungry Menace
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Played with in God Eater Burst. God Eaters who come off like this, including the Player Character, making comments during Devour attacks that suggest they feel their symbiotic weapon's desire to keep ripping chunks out of Aragami. While a bit creepy, the God Eaters do have complete control of the ability, downplaying the trope somewhat.
 Hungry Menace / int_7935de84
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 GodEaterBurst
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Hungry Menace / int_7935de84
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Hungry Menace
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Maw-mouths in The Scholomance are Nigh-Invulnerable Blob Monsters whose hunger can never, ever be satisfied. They are the one variety of maleficaria that no sane wizard will even try to fight.
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 The Scholomance
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Hungry Menace / int_7a8eea7e
 Hungry Menace / int_841dfd9b
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Hungry Menace
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Gamera films:
The Gyaos survive by feeding on human flesh.
This is subverted with Irys. We discover early-on in the film that it has a horrific way of feeding (ie. using the claws on its arms to impale and then drain the life-force of other creatures), but, its main goal is really to merge with Ayana so it can kill Gamera allowing the Gyaos to devour all of humanity.
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 Gamera
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Hungry Menace / int_841dfd9b
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Hungry Menace
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Bainlings from Legend of the Seeker made a deal with the Big Bad and had to kill people or they will be dragged back into afterlife.
 Hungry Menace / int_8459204b
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 Legend of the Seeker
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Hungry Menace / int_8459204b
 Hungry Menace / int_85a5a3b9
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Hungry Menace
 Hungry Menace / int_85a5a3b9
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Scraplets, as seen in Transformers: Prime, are wildlife from Cybertron that swarm and devour anything metal they can sink their teeth into. The sight of one can elicit panic from even the most hardened Cybertronian warriors.
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 Transformers: Prime
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Hungry Menace / int_85a5a3b9
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Hungry Menace
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The eponymous monster of The Blob (1958). It oozes around to feed itself, and as it grows, so does its hunger.
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 The Blob (1958)
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Hungry Menace / int_904473bf
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Hungry Menace
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In the book World War Z, zombies eat any flesh, as long as it's living or almost fresh. Of course, zombies dont actually need to feed, being walking corpses, it's because the hunger response is the only thing their brains are still capable of processing.
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 World War Z
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Hungry Menace
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Baragon from the Godzilla films, as depicted in Frankenstein Conquers the World.
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 Godzilla (Franchise)
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Hungry Menace / int_9ff4a8d9
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Hungry Menace
 Hungry Menace / int_a993be1f
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Darth Nihilus, the Sith Lord of Hunger from Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords. He's described as a black hole in the Force, feeding off the life force of others. He's the Sith responsible for the destruction of Katarr and the near extinction of the Jedi Order.
 Hungry Menace / int_a993be1f
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 Knights of the Old Republic II: The Sith Lords (Video Game)
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Hungry Menace
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Jean Jacket from Nope. It's an enormous flying saucer that has come to Earth to abduct people and animals because as it's revealed later, it's not a spaceship: it's the alien itself, and it's actions are motivated purely by hunger like an airborne version of Jaws.
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 Nope
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Hungry Menace
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This is subverted with Irys. We discover early-on in the film that it has a horrific way of feeding (ie. using the claws on its arms to impale and then drain the life-force of other creatures), but, its main goal is really to merge with Ayana so it can kill Gamera allowing the Gyaos to devour all of humanity.
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 Gamera 3: Awakening of Irys
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Hungry Menace / int_b4edcc7b
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Hungry Menace
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In That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime, this is what happens to Orcs under the effect of an Orc Lord's Unique Skill [Starvation]. They become perpetually hungry for anything they can get their hands on and tear apart with their teeth, along with the chance to gain the traits and abilities of what they eat. Interestingly, despite the hunger they can't actually die from starvation as long as the Orc Lord himself eats. Surprisingly for this trope, the current Orc Lord only became one and accepted this skill because otherwise the orc tribes would have perished to the last in a great famine, and the orcs once freed of its effects via the Orc Lord's death and absorption by Rimuru's hands after he chooses to Face Death with Dignity upon receiving Rimuru's promise to help his people are appropriately horrified by what they did to survive.
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 That Time I Got Reincarnated as a Slime
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Everyone in the Junkyard in Digital Devil Saga is infected with a virus that turns them into demons. Demons need a substance called Magnetite to live, which is commonly found in humans or other demons. If anyone infected with the virus abstains from eating other people, they go berserk.
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 Digital Devil Saga (Video Game)
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Warhammer 40,000:
The Dark Eldar inflict pain, misery, and destruction and literally get younger to achieve a degree of eternal life and stave off Slaneesh's attempts to eat their souls. Haemonculi need to do this in a twisted, creative fashion on a daily basis or they'd wither away. Wyches perform gladiatorial fights on captured prey that the Dark Eldar attend, their faces and skin noticeably younger and healthier when they leave than when they entered.
The Tyranid Hive Fleets eat entire planets down to the bedrock. Why? Because they're hungry animals with very thorough digestive processes, and need biomass to create troops to defend themselves and secure more food with.
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 Warhammer 40,000 (Tabletop Game)
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Hungry Menace
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Shadowrun and Earthdawn:
Insect Spirits. Acting in accordance to their nature, insect spirits know only how to consume and parasite. Unlike most spirits, they crave the souls of living beings and manifest by eating people's souls and taking over their bodies. Unlike with most other types of spirit (animal or elemental), they cannot be bargained away from harming people, and as such insect spirits are a shoot-on-sight enemy and any shaman deprived enough to take an insect mentor is unsuitable as anything but a villain.
The Horrors ... Possibly. As they are an Unseen Evil they appear only sparsely in Earthdawn and have yet to fully manifest in Shadowrun, but what is known is they are Eldritch Abominations from a different plane of existence. They are Emotion Eaters that subside on the pain and fear of the people they torment, and can only begin invading once the amount of mana in the environment reaches a certain threshold. However, it is unknown just how intelligent they are and to which degree they need to torture mortals to death to survive, which means they're possibly this trope or possibly just plain sadistic bastards.
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 Shadowrun (Tabletop Game)
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Hungry Menace
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The Tao Tie from The Great Wall: indeed, "taotie" is a symbol in Chinese mythology representing gluttony and greed. The swarm razes the capital of China every sixty years, devouring any meat living or dead, to bring back to their queen.
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 The Great Wall
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Warhammer: The Ogres' lives are defined by hunger instilled in them by the Great Maw, the ever-hungry god they worship. They need immense, constant supplies of red meat to keep themselves going, and are constantly at war with each other and other nations to obtain food — both through hunting rights and wealth with which to buy more food and through much more direct methods.
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 Warhammer (Tabletop Game)
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The Hiver in A Hat Full of Sky is an immortal disembodied spirit that has to live by serially possessing, and burning out, a succession of human hosts. It isn't evil; it can only live this way. It drives the host to seek power and dominance, believing that only this way can it feel safe, thus spreading misery to all around it. The character and the setting may be a Shout-Out to Alan Garner, who uses a very similar nightmare creature, the Brollochan, in The Moon of Gomrath. In both books, a possessed young Witch has to break free of the creature that has taken over her mind.
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Monster Hunter 3 (Tri) introduces the the Deviljho, a monster that is ruthlessly overpowered, and is known for wiping out all of the local fauna because it is constantly HUNGRY! Other large monsters run from this menace, for fear of being eaten. If it runs into the corpse of a monster you killed, it will eat it to regain stamina. 3 Ultimate introduces the Savage Deviljho, a specimen that's gotten so hungry it's undergone apoptosis because of it, and the resulting pain has sent its body into overdrive, spurring into a hunger-driven frenzy until it dies.
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The undead Fantastic Four that originated from Marvel Zombies claim that they need flesh to survive, but since they're just walking corpses, it's really just a psychological impulse that's almost impossible to ignore. Only one person is known to have resisted the hunger: Doom.
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Possibly the Tarrasque. While it is possibly the most feared and lethal beasts in the entire setting, it seems pretty much mindless and is driven by hunger... probably. Fortunately, it spends most of its time sleeping, only waking up every five to six months or so, devouring everything in sight for a week when it does. Spelljammer suggested that in their default environment, tarrasque are far less destructive, being relatively docile lithovores, but unfortunately, most atmospheres has something they react adversely to (or lacks something vital to stop the reaction), hence mindless hunger as opposed to mere animalistic hunger.
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The Gyaos survive by feeding on human flesh.
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In Amnesia: The Dark Descent, a large part of the reason the main setting is packed with mutilated corpses is because protagonist Daniel sacrificed people regularly to ward off a formless horror fixated entirely upon killing him, and antagonist Baron Alexander needed a substance derived from the agonising torture of human beings to return to his home. They pooled their efforts.
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In Stargate Atlantis, Wraith can only eat humans or other Wraith, or they will starve to death.
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Return of the Living Dead has an unusual example: they're driven to eat the brains of living humans because it's the only thing that dulls the pain of being a living corpse. This movie is the Ur-Example of zombies craving brains rather than just flesh.
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It feeds off the fear and pain of the victims it devours and likes to target children because their fear is more "pure" and thus more potent. Without feeding, It will starve during its period of hibernation.
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Transformers:
The Insecticons in The Transformers. Their primary motivation is feeding and they have little interest in the Decepticon cause beyond whatever Megatron is offering to eat and will quickly turn on him when food runs out or they find a way to get what they want without him.
Scraplets, as seen in Transformers: Prime, are wildlife from Cybertron that swarm and devour anything metal they can sink their teeth into. The sight of one can elicit panic from even the most hardened Cybertronian warriors.
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