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Self-Poisoning Gambit

 Self-Poisoning Gambit
type
FeatureClass
 Self-Poisoning Gambit
label
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Self-Poisoning Gambit
page
SelfPoisoningGambit
 Self-Poisoning Gambit
comment
Poison has always been a useful and versatile tool for when you want to kill someone. Whether you put it on your weapons, the food someone is eating or even in the very air that someone must breathe, there are all sorts of ways to use it, and that's before we get into some of the more creative things you can do with it, such as forcefully recruiting someone for a job.
There's just one problem: no matter what Perfect Poison you use supplied to you by a Master Poisoner, there's always the issue of actually getting your target to take it. And if they're safely hidden away and cautious about what they eat or drink, that doesn't leave you with a lot of options. One ploy, however, is to consume, (or appear to consume) some of the poisoned substance yourself, thus convincing your target that it's safe for them to eat or drink whatever you've prepared for them.
Naturally this tends to work best if you have Acquired Poison Immunity, a Magic Antidote, or an Improbable Antidote on hand to take in order to negate the poison, otherwise it tends to result in a Mutual Kill. If killing your target is important enough to die for, however, then Taking You with Me might not seem like such a bad outcome.
When someone using this is immune to the poison in question, it also counts as Exploited Immunity. Another way of pulling this off is with two substances that only become poisonous when mixed together. Compare and contrast with the Deliberate Injury Gambit and False Reassurance.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit
fetched
2024-02-02T18:00:59Z
 Self-Poisoning Gambit
parsed
2024-02-02T18:00:59Z
 Self-Poisoning Gambit
processingComment
Dropped link to CleanFoodPoisonedFork: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Self-Poisoning Gambit
processingComment
Dropped link to HonestAdvisor: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Self-Poisoning Gambit
processingComment
Dropped link to IKnowYouKnowIKnow: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Self-Poisoning Gambit
processingComment
Dropped link to PlayedForLaughs: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Self-Poisoning Gambit
processingComment
Dropped link to ProfessionalKiller: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Self-Poisoning Gambit
processingComment
Dropped link to PsychicPowers: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Self-Poisoning Gambit
processingComment
Dropped link to TheCaptain: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Self-Poisoning Gambit
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_10a1d047
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_10a1d047
comment
Fear of You: At one point, Keigo's mother attempts to trick her husband into one of these, running the risk of accidentally killing her son in the process.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_10a1d047
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1.0
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_10a1d047
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 Fear of You (Fanfic)
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Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_10a1d047
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_135f4195
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_135f4195
comment
In Dune, Dr. Yueh Wellington put a poison capsule tooth on Duke Leto Atreides's mouth and told him that when he gets captured by the Harkonnens and delivered to Baron Vladimir Harkonnen himself, he must bite the capsule when the Baron goes near him in order to ensure that the poisoned gas would be released. Since they're both aware that Leto would not make out of this alive, Yueh reassures to him that Jessica and Paul are safe and out of the Harkonnens' way. The plan nearly worked except Leto only got to kill the Harkonnen's mentat, Piter de Vries, and several soldiers while the Baron was lucky to step out of the distance.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_135f4195
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 Dune
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Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_135f4195
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type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_1869a077
comment
In one episode of Samurai Jack, there's a scientist (presumably working for Aku) who poisons a well in an attempt to kill Jack. Jack seems to realize that something is up at the last second before drinking, but then appears to drink from the well, and afterwards he falls down and seemingly dies. When the scientist goes to check the body, Jack suddenly turns towards him and spits out the poisoned water into the scientist's mouth, and because the scientist inadvertently swallows, it ends up killing him instead.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_1869a077
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Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_1869a077
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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Redwall:
In Marlfox, Queen Silth is offered wine by her daughter Lantur. After a round of I Know You Know I Know Poisoned Chalice Switcheroo, a panicking Lantur drinks the wine from her own cup and collapses, Silth drains the wine from the remaining cup... and dies, as Lantur reveals the poison was in Silth's cup the entire time.
Crossing over with Clean Food, Poisoned Fork, in Outcast of Redwall Swartt Sixclaw gets rid of a rival warlord by offering him wine and an ornate cup to drink it from, taking a swig from the wineskin first himself to prove it's safe. The warlord has his Giant Mook drink first before drinking, both enjoying the wine. The next morning, the latter two are found dead, and when the captain interrogates Swartt, he drinks the rest of the wine to prove it isn't poisoned (the wine wasn't poisoned, but the cup was).
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_22d74b2e
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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comment
A variant of this shows up in The Expanse. When their complicity in the Protomolecule scheme is about to be exposed U.N. Undersecretary Errinwright invites Korshunov, the Martian Defense Minister to a private dinner where they watch an opera performance, share a bottle of expensive scotch, and talk politics and conspiracies candidly, without involving anyone else in their respective governments. When Korshunov suddenly collapses with intense chest pain, he shoots a horrified look at the glass of scotch, obviously suspecting poison. Errenwright reveals the truth is slightly more complicated; he used an outlawed bioweapon intended to act only on Martians (because it interacts with a drug used by Martians to counteract the effects of Earth's higher gravity), that was absorbed through Korshunov's skin when Errenwright handed him a description of the opera that they were going to watch. As a result Errinwright is able to pass Korshunov's death off as a heart attack, and is unharmed after handling the same substance.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_22fa3992
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 The Expanse
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Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_22fa3992
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_2372359
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The Belgariad: A Tolnedran politician killed another by sharing with them a poison that kills the drinker if they get angry.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_2372359
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1.0
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_2372359
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 The Belgariad
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Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_2372359
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_256b47e5
comment
In Curtain, Hercule Poirot uses his own sleeping pills to render another man unconscious, putting them into both his and his victim's cups. As he had been taking these pills for years, he has a degree of immunity to them himself.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_256b47e5
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 Curtain
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Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_256b47e5
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_2d165a50
comment
In Ōoku: The Inner Chambers, O-Shiga sacrifices her own life in an attempt to kill the sociopathic Harusada by sharing poisoned food with her. She was intending to slowly poison Harusada without killing herself, but was driven to desperate measures when Harusada decided to kill Ienari. Harusada just survives, but is left completely paralysed and forced to helplessly watch all the good people she worked against succeed.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_2d165a50
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 Ōoku: The Inner Chambers (Manga)
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Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_2d165a50
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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Nobunaga no Chef: Kennyo serves French macaroons to Oda Nobunaga, and demonstrates that they are harmless when he and his staff begin nibbling on some themselves. However, he then encourages Nobunaga to eat three macaroons at once, whereupon the high concentration of nutmeg sends Nobunaga into overdose and almost results in his death.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_31f1a5f4
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 Nobunaga no Chef (Manga)
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Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_31f1a5f4
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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comment
Scrubs played this trope for laughs. The Janitor takes a bite of a pie he offered to J.D. to prove that it's not one of his pranks. Unlike most versions, Janitor has no immunity, and the next shot is both of them sitting in the bathroom due to the stolen laxatives he put in the pie. J.D. asks, "Who would do this to themselves?!", to which Janitor replies, "Worth It!"
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_3e5de40b
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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In some versions of Snow White, the Queen only poisons one side of the apple, and eats the safe half to tempt Snow White into eating the poisoned half.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_4ab60cf9
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Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_4ab60cf9
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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The Twilight Zone (1959) episode "The Jeopardy Room". A Soviet commissar tricks a defector into drinking wine mixed with a sleep drug by drinking first. He built up an immunity to the drug by repeatedly taking increasing doses over time.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_53a0bd32
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 The Twilight Zone (1959)
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Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_53a0bd32
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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Star Wars: The Clone Wars: In "Dooku Captured", Anakin and Obi-Wan are partying with Hondo's crew of pirates, and are savvy enough to discretely swap drinks with two of the pirates. But then it turns out all the drinks were drugged, and they wake up in a cell at the beginning of the next episode.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_53a73ca0
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Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_53a73ca0
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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In a prequel story, a Dragon Rider named Ulf the White turns into The Starscream in the middle of a civil war and opts to try to crown himself king. A knight from the side Ulf was fighting for comes to talk with him bringing poisoned wine, but Ulf suspects something is up and won't drink until the other man does. The knight quaffs a whole glass, after which Ulf drinks too and they both die.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_53bb9c0f
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 Archmaester Gyldayn's Histories
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Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_53bb9c0f
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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A variation is used in an episode of American Dad! In that episode it's revealed that Barry acts the way he does because of the pills he takes every day, pills that Stan convinced him to throw away. Off his medication, Barry becomes smarter as well as meaner, manipulative and even talks with a British accent. Things go back to normal after Steve prepares some drinks and dares Barry to guess which one contains a dose of the meds, and leads to Steve revealing to Stan that he spiked both drinks, and consequently Steve acts like Barry until the medication wears off.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_60f02ddb
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 American Dad!
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Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_60f02ddb
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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In Peril at End House, Nick eats chocolates she poisoned herself to keep up the ruse that someone is trying to kill her as part of an elaborate plan to make her murder of her cousin Maggie look like an Accidental Murder by someone who wanted Nick dead instead.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_6173e1cb
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 Peril at End House
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Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_6173e1cb
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type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_672918ae
comment
Fear Itself: The episode "Eater" contains a variation. The last surviving cop, having been disarmed, wounded and cornered in a closet with no escape route, makes the decision to eat and powder herself in rat poison. Thus when the unstoppable cannibal serial killer-Voodoo sorcerer kills her shortly after by biting her throat out he is poisoned and dies.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_672918ae
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 Fear Itself
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Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_672918ae
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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comment
Gold-Tree and Silver-Tree demonstrates this trope is Older Than Print. Gold-Tree learns that her wicked mother Silver-Tree is visiting for what she can reasonably conclude will be a third assassination attempt. However, this time, she, her husband, and the woman her husband married when he believed Gold-Tree to be dead are prepared. The two princesses meet Silver-Tree as she arrives, and the second princess explains that it is regional custom for the guest to take first drink, thus compelling Silver-Tree to drink the same potion she intended to give Gold-Tree. From there, the princesses and their prince live Happily Ever After.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_6f669e17
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Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_6f669e17
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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comment
In the Lord Peter Wimsey novel Strong Poison, the villain shares a poisoned omelette with the victim after building up a tolerance to arsenic. note Arsenic does not actually work this way. Unless you have a rare natural immunity, there is no way of creating a tolerance for arsenic, and taking it in small doses will simply cause it to build up in your body, (which cannot process or remove the arsenic) until you hit the lethal dose level and it suddenly kills you.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_72e7d7f6
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 Lord Peter Wimsey
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Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_72e7d7f6
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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comment
In The Great Ace Attorney, the first case's culprit tries to clear themselves of the crime by drinking from the allegedly poisoned bottle and surviving. They were able to do this because the poison only works if it enters the bloodstream via an open wound. The victim had dental surgery earlier that day, which is why he died. Once the exact workings of the poison are known to the courtroom, this act only makes the killer look more guilty, as not only were they the only one who knew how the poison worked, they also knew about the victim's surgery.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_7dcdbde1
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 The Great Ace Attorney (Visual Novel)
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Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_7dcdbde1
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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A variant shows up at the end of the film Fallen. Detective Hobbes attempts to get the better of the demon which has been taking cruel revenge on him ever since Hobbes caught a Serial Killer that the demon was possessing. The only weakness the demon has is that it cannot spend too long outside of a body, and being forced to do so will permanently destroy it. So Hobbes drives to a remote location deep in the woods, lures in the current host, shoots him, then takes some poison. You see, while Hobbes is normally The Immune to being possessed, with no other host around the demon would overwhelm Hobbes and take control of his body. However if Hobbes dies from the poison quickly enough and nobody else is around to possess, Hobbes's death will become a case of Taking You with Me. Sure enough, as Hobbes is dying the demon manages to gain control of his body, but before long Hobbes's body starts succumbing to the poison, and it seems like Hobbes has won. Unfortunately, before the demon can be reduced to a bodiless spirit and die, it possesses a nearby cat and starts walking back towards civilization. The narrator then engages in some Evil Gloating about how at the start of the movie he said that this was the story of the time that he almost died, revealing that the narrator was the demon all along. The End.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_8268c95e
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 Fallen
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Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_8268c95e
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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In Sad Cypress, the murderer consumes the same amount of poison as the victim but has an injection of apomorphine ready at hand and is able to throw it all up at time.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_899a5aa4
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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Taoist Gogyo uses the binary poison version in Iron Wok Jan. After Jan serves a dish that included durian, Gogyo drinks a glass of wine and then offers glasses of it to the judges, supposedly as a pallet cleanser before his next dish. He knows that durian has chemicals in it that interact poorly with alcohol, and is counting on his drinking of the wine (and Jan's poor reputation) to allay suspicion and pin the blame on Jan's cooking. Fortunately, Jan recognizes the ploy and stops all but one judge from drinking; even more fortunately, he knows an antidote that works on the one judge who gets poisoned.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_8b87e538
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 Iron Wok Jan (Manga)
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The eponymous Carl of Dungeon Crawler Carl poisons himself twice at the end of the circus quest in the second book. The first time, he poisons himself to kill an otherwise nearly unkillable plant thing that has a horde of mind-controlled minions, then he negotiates a deal with the people who wrote the quest in order to keep himself alive and stay part of their story. Having done so, he heals himself, heals the Vine, then deliberately infects himself with the Vines mind-controlling worms (having used a spell to protect himself from most of the effects, then walks outside to craft a different end to this episode of the quest.
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In one episode of The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron, Boy Genius, Jimmy takes his friends to search for a scientist who invites them for dinner, but turns out he added a chemical into the food that would transform them into seaweed golem slaves. When Jimmy points out that he ate it as well, he simply answers that he has an antidote, and proceeds to drink it.
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 The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron, Boy Genius
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This pops up several times in A Song of Ice and Fire:
At the start of the second book, Stannis' Honest Advisor Cressen, who loves Stannis like a son, attempts to do this to the Ambiguously Evil Sorceress Melisandre, who he feels is leading Stannis astray. He expects this to be a Taking You with Me, however Melisandre is protected by her magic, (and foresaw the event beforehand and gave Cressen a chance to back out) while Cressen dies.
In a prequel story, a Dragon Rider named Ulf the White turns into The Starscream in the middle of a civil war and opts to try to crown himself king. A knight from the side Ulf was fighting for comes to talk with him bringing poisoned wine, but Ulf suspects something is up and won't drink until the other man does. The knight quaffs a whole glass, after which Ulf drinks too and they both die.
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In The Emperor's New Groove, Yzma's plan to poison Kuzco almost fails because Kronk forgot which cup had the poison, so he had to mix all the drinks together and he and Yzma only pretend to drink with Kuzco. It didn't matter anyway if they had, since Kronk had used extract of llama instead of poison, and only succeeds in turning Kuzco into a llama.
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 The Emperor's New Groove
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In Death Comes as the End, the murderer deliberately drinks poisoned wine before his brother comes to join him, being sure to only drink enough to make him sick. Because he is known as a man of moderation, while his brother tends towards excess, no one is surprised that he has only consumed a little of the wine and survives, while his brother consumes a lot and dies. And because he was the first to drink the wine, it looks like he was the killer's target and the brother was collateral damage.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_a6fef744
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Sleuth 101: In the episode "Delete Cache", the killer pulls this by poisoning the coffee pot with cyanide while hiding the antidote in the donuts, knowing that her intended victim, a vegan, will refuse because they were cooked in animal fats.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_a85f928e
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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In the climax of Airman, Bonvilain attempts this with Queen Isabella and Conor's parents while they're having a toast. However, they suspect what he's up to and refuse to have their drinks, and he's later weakened enough by his own poison for Conor to kill him.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_b2cf881d
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 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_b30ae4db
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Game of Thrones Season 5 finale, "Mother's Mercy", has Ellaria Sand poisoning Myrcella Baratheon by kissing her on the lips. After getting on board on the ship that is heading back to King's Landing, Myrcella started to nosebleed and slowly collapsed into her father's arms. Meanwhile, Ellaria also had a nosebleed after being affected by the poison but she administered herself with the antidote immediately which was provided by her daughter.
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In Red 2, when Bailey is in custody he gets rid of his captors by sliding open the bottom of his shoe to reveal an ampule of nerve gas and a syringe of antidote. He gives himself the antidote and gasses everyone else around.
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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The Princess Bride features a "battle of wits" between Vizzini and the Man in Black. The Man in Black sets up two goblets of wine, shows Vizzini a rare, odorless, and colorless poison powder then challenges Vizzini to determine which goblet is poisoned. Vizzini does a Look Behind You and then does the Poisoned Chalice Switcheroo, and makes his choice about which goblet to drink. Vizzini then waits for the the Man in Black to drink, and when the Man in Black does so with no hesitation, it leads Vizzini to believe that the Man in Black thought he was drinking from the "safe" cup, which Vizzini now has thanks to the switch, so he drinks too thinking that he has won. The Man in Black had Acquired Poison Immunity and had poisoned both cups, leaving Vizzini Out-Gambitted (and dead).
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_b65b5c91
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In Death Comes to Time, The Doctor defeats a vampire by letting it bite him after he's drank holy water.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_b65b5c91
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 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_b65b5c91
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 Death Comes to Time (Web Animation)
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_cc789117
comment
The Fairy Sapphire: In order to convince Peter Pan into drinking some wine, Rumple drinks some of it himself first, then offers it to Belle. The wine was mixed with water from the strait which is poisonous to bad parents; the childless Belle is unaffected, while Rumple and Pan are both poisoned.
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In The Hunger Games, President Snow attempts this with mixed results, as no antidote is perfect and he suffers from mouth ulcers, giving him a permanent smell of blood.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_d31cdea
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_de723bfd
comment
French Baguette Intelligence: In The Million Dollar Puzzle - Reflection on Intention, Pixie agrees to take the take the toxin (that is non-lethal and has no long-term effects, but causes severe pain for 24 hours) on the condition that the billionaire also takes it, to deny him the pleasure of watching her suffer.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_de723bfd
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The Riftwar Cycle: A Tong assassin willingly samples each of the poisoned beverages that he's sharing with Lady Mara, knowing that he'll be able to receive the antidote from his superior later. He's been tricked — the supposed antidote is a second poison to ensure his silence — but Arakasi tracks down the real antidote and saves Mara's life.
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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there's blood on your lies: Cynthia did this once in order to win an argument, upsetting the pokémon responsible for poisoning her.
 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_e6e86617
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 Self-Poisoning Gambit / int_e6e86617
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 there's blood on your lies (Fanfic)
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
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comment
The Legend of Snow White features a variant of this trope combined with Heroic Sacrifice when Snow White is offered the poisoned apple by the disguised Queen Chrystal. Snow White sees straight through the trick and knows the apple is poisoned. But at the same time, the whole rest of the forest has been turned to stone, which only Queen Chrystal's magic staff can reverse. Seeing no other way, Snow White takes a bite of the apple, which distracts Chrystal just long enough for Snow White to grab her staff and use her last moments of life (for the time being, that is) to break the petrification spell.
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Brought up in 4:50 from Paddington: when the whole family is poisoned and the housekeeper is all right, the latter is suspected at first, until another character points out that any intelligent poisoner would have been careful to pull the gambit. As it turns out, that character, the family doctor, was the real murderer, so there was no self-poisoning after all.
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 4:50 from Paddington
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The French Dispatch: When the kidnappers of the police commissioner's son are rightfully suspicious that the food they were given was poisoned, Lt. Nescaffier eats a bite of each dish in front of them. He is luckily rescued before he fully succumbs and recovers. Roebuck theorises that the only reason he wasn't killed near-immediately was because the Lieutenant was a chef and had eaten a lot of things not pleasant to normal stomachs.
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In Versailles, the lover of Fabien Marchal, the king's chief of security, is in reality a spy from the faction who wanted to take down Louis XIV. After making fall him in love, she gives Fabien a "love potion" which both drink before making out, just to see her later vomit it thanks to some ingredients she ate previously that would throw out the poison. Later, Fabien is seen not well, including Incurable Cough of Death and Blood from the Mouth.
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Breaking Bad: This is how how Gus defeats the Juarez Cartel in "Salud". Gus brings a rare and expensive bottle of tequila (which is of course poisoned) to the meeting with the heads of the Cartel where they think Gus is going to surrender to them. Don Eladio, who is Properly Paranoid, refuses to drink until after Gus does so. Gus apparently anticipated this, as shortly before the toast he took a pill of some kind and shortly afterward he excuses himself, goes to a bathroom, and tries to vomit up the poison. Gus is still affected by the poison and would have died without prompt medical care, but he fares better than the heads of the Cartel, who drop like flies within minutes.
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In Justified season two, Mags shares moonshine with Walt. Walt is suspicious, as Mags has motive to kill him. But he is reassured when he sees her filling their glasses out of the same bottle of moonshine and she drinks first. As he begins to die and stares at her in surprise, she tells him, "the poison was in the glass..." At season's end she reverses the trick just before Raylan can take her to prison, using the same line to reassure Raylan that she had only poisoned herself.
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The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Self-Poisoning Gambit
processingCategory2
Gambit Index
 Self-Poisoning Gambit
processingCategory2
Toxic Tropes
 Better Bones AU (Blog) / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Smart Adversaries AU (Fanfic) / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 The Fairy Sapphire (Fanfic) / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 there's blood on your lies (Fanfic) / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Saltburn / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 The French Dispatch / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 The Princess Bride / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 A Clash of Kings / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Archmaester Gyldayn's Histories / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Carl's Doomsday Scenario / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Gold-Tree and Silver-Tree / int_8ba6dee3
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Redwall / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Sad Cypress / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Snow White / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 The Death of Achilles / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 The Folk of the Air / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 The Secret History / int_8ba6dee3
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Ōoku: The Inner Chambers (Manga) / int_8ba6dee3
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Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Alfred Hitchcock Presents / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Fear Itself / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Witse / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Death Comes to Time (Web Animation) / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Breaking Bad/Better Call Saul What IF (Web Video) / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 French Baguette Intelligence (Web Video) / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit
 Dead Winter (Webcomic) / int_8ba6dee3
type
Self-Poisoning Gambit