I’m not just talking cruelty in terms of their goals, but also how they went about achieving their goals

  • PlzGivHugs@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    First thought is that its almost certainly something from Warhammer 40k. Probably one of the Dark Eldar (or just their civilization as a whole). They’re a super-advanced, post-scarcity civilization that basically worships torture and uses their technology to “perfect” it.

    Edit: spelling

    • slazer2au@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Na, the C’Tan is the cruelest. You Necrons want to be free of cancer riddles bodies we caused by consuming your sun and become immortality? Sure, here is a metal container for your brain while we consume your essence because it taste better than solar winds.

      Got what they deserved though.

  • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    There was an old Captain America comic where the Red Skull had a glass floor in his dining room so he could look down on the torture chamber underneath.

  • bighatchester@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    The reverse flash . Goes back in time to kill the flashs mom just because he hates the flash and to inflict as much emotional damage as possible.

    • satanmat@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I disagree… but you’re close… the ancients.

      Not only do they see all the horror and suffering that Anubis and the goa’uld inflicted on the universe; the could have done anything… not even helping; rather they never even hindered Anubis

      • Agent641@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        They didnt do shit until he halfway ascended and became a threat to them. And how did he halfway ascend? Oma fucking Desala meddled with the mortals, again. And when a mortal gave up everlasting life and power to un-fuck their mistake, they un-ascended him!

        They really took a nosedive in the public relations there.

        • Zorque@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Oma did all those things. They did none of it. She was literally the only one who ever did anything. All they did was ignore Oma and Anubis and Daniel.

          Now when Morgan LeFey was trying to help the gang with the Ori, they gave her a proverbial bitch-slapping.

          Though, really, their non-interference was basically an application of the Star Trek Prime Directive. Basically the same kind of thing we recommend when dealing with nature, make as little impact as possible. Its only as cruel as nature itself is cruel.

          • Mnemnosyne@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            There’s a huge difference with the Prime Directive - although I think it can be horrible too.

            The Federation doesn’t go around leaving super advanced technology to be found and abused by primitives everywhere. When the Ancients ascended, they just left everything behind, for good or ill, and then refused to interfere when others found their old stuff and used it.

            The Ancients meanwhile not only did that, but also abandoned friends and allies, like the Asgard. They could’ve fixed the Asgard genetic problem, and pre-ascension, they’d been allies, but despite that they were just ‘nah, fuck y’all, we’re out.’

  • constnt@lemmy.world
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    The Crippled God from Mazalan Book of the Fallen. I should probably spoiler this. And trigger warning.

    spoiler

    The High King Kallor once ruled an empire. And he did so with a cold hard iron fist. Some Elder Gods decided that he was to be dethroned, and set off to confront the High King. Kallor had gotten wind of this before the confrontation and so had all his mages begin a ritual. One that would summon an alien force from beyond the known universe. They were successful and pulled an entity of such power that it destroyed Kallor’s entire empire. As the Gods approached the High Kings throne they found him there, emporer of only ash.

    The power Kallor summoned was so alien and anthemic to the universe it needed to be destroyed. But they found it couldn’t be done. So instead they crippled and chained the power. This power came to be know as the Crippled God.

    It’s hard to pinpoint exactly the cruelty that the Crippled God did himself. See, the crippled god worked in the shadows from his tent on the beach. He lifted others up to enact his broken visions. Granted them slivers of his alien power, and whispered promises of power or revenge into their ears. One such figure was the Pannion Seer.

    The Seer was a holy figure who led an massive army, the Pannion Domin, on a crusade against the world. This was a holy war and such his followers where blindly devoted. His most devoted where called Tenescowri. The Tenescowri where purposely starved. Given no rations, no water, no food. They had to subsist on what they were able to find. And what is the most common thing found after a battle? Dead bodies. The Tenescowri was an army of forced cannibalism.

    It gets a bit darker. The most powerful of the Tenescowri where the Children of the Dead Seed. During battle the fervent women would take dying men, and force them to copulate. Filling their wombs with the seed of a dead man. These children would grow up to be unholy warriors.

    I think it was said the Tenescowri were 100,000 strong led by Anaster the Fist Born of the Dead Seed.

    • Neato@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      How is this series? I only glanced at the spoiler but some of the last bit was…a lot. Do most of the books receive that trigger warning or is that more of a endgame thing?

      • constnt@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        As Llamapacolypse said, it has it’s dark moments. What I wrote above is some of the darkest. It never goes into too much detail when it involves some of the more triggering things. Just a fade to black.

        That said it’s such an intensely human series. So much love and compassion litered throughout the whole thing.

        It’s also such a unique experience. Most fantasy books have huge massive reveals that shock and take you by surprise. Malazan has these things. But it also does it in reverse. You’ll read something and then a book or two later it changes context entirely, completely blowing your mind.

      • llamapocalypse@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The series is fantastic but it does get quite heavy in a lot of ways. Very heavy on the ways people and societies are shitty to each other, but the central theme of it really is compassion.

  • slazer2au@lemmy.world
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    C’Tan from 40K

    Causes the Necrons to be a short lived race because the C’Tan living in their sun. A series of wars happen and the C’Tan is like “oh hi, we can make you ‘immortal’”

    Turns the civilisation of Necrons into the slave machine race we know in 40K

    • Geek_King@lemmy.world
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      The worst part was, the C’tan which ended up being known as The Deceiver convinced them that they could make the Necrontyr immortal, fixing their cancer ridden short lives, and aid them in their war against the Old ones. This was accomplished by a process called bio-transference using the bio furnaces. As the Necrontyr either willingly or unwillingly lined up to burn up their bodes in the furnaces, the C’tan could be seen above the bio furnaces gorging on the souls of the Necrontyr burning.

      Yeah, fuck those things.

  • lazylion_ca@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    The Shapeshifters from Deep Space 9. They put a pox on an entire race for being disobedient.

    • nomecks@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I was gonna say that alien from TNG who wiped out an entire civilization because they killed his wife.

      • ConstipatedWatson@lemmy.world
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        This is a very interesting thought: the Dowdy alien you mention has wiped out an entire race of 50 billion beings, but is aware of his crime and lives in self exile. He’s committed an atrocious crime in a rage fit.

        On the other hand, the changelings committed a planned crime with intent to cause suffering.

        I’m not sure who’s worse: the Dowd by magnitude of the crime, but the Changelings ruthlessly command their Dominion.

      • Xariphon@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Or the guy from Voyager who erased multiple species from ever having existed in a misguided attempt to resurrect his family.

      • lazylion_ca@lemmy.ca
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        I dont remember the name of the episode, but Bashir took a leave of absence and hung out on this planet for, I’d guess, a year to work on a cure. He didn’t find a cure but managed (by accident) to make a vaccine that saved new-borns from getting infected.

    • spicy pancake@lemmy.zip
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      1 year ago

      I don’t remember all that much about Inuyasha but I remember while watching it thinking I had never hated a villain so much in any other thing I’d seen

  • Infynis@midwest.social
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    The Fleshmancer in Sea of Stars is pretty terrible. He creates giant, potentially world destroying, monsters that feed on different types of despair, and so seek to create those emotions in as many people as possible. He committed one genocide against an entire race, and then trapped them in living death, unable to be seen, or leave his lab. He seems to have committed another genocide, just to make a birthday present for his friend. And this is all on just two planets, when he is acting in the same way across the entire multiverse

  • satanmat@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Big Brother.

    The paranoia of everyone being on the watch for everything forcing everyone to be even more paranoid

    • Zorque@kbin.social
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      It was even more insidious than that. It wasn’t about self-preservation or selfish need… they were so brainwashed they considered it good to tell on others as a matter of course. One of the secondary characters is even proud of his own children for turning him in for talking in his sleep.