You Are Already Dead
He hits you with his fingertips at five different pressure points on your body. And then he lets you walk away. But once you’ve taken five steps, your heart explodes in your body, and you fall to the floor, dead.—Bill, Kill Bill, describing the legendary Five Point Palm Exploding Heart Technique.
The Final Battle has begun. The two opponents square off, and one of them hits the other with a series of mighty blows that would fell a mountain. But what's this? Nothing seems to be happening! That's when your opponent tells you that You Are Already Dead, right before your head explodes, your body separates in two, or you disintegrate into a fine mist. If you're lucky, only one of those happens. Sometimes, you may also discover that you were Made of Explodium.
A common trope in martial arts series, this involves some form of Finishing Move that does not take effect immediately. When used with martial arts, it may involve Pressure Point attacks or some form of Ki Attacks. Assassins may use Universal Poison to achieve a similar effect. In video games, Damage Over Time abilities often have this effect.
When used with swords there are a number of common variations, often shown with a Diagonal Cut. In sword duels, the two sides charge each other and attack. There will be a pause as the two pose, then one (or both) will fall down. Another one is for a Master Swordsman to perform a series of lightning-fast slashes, and then slowly and dramatically sheath their sword (with an audible *click*) before their attacks take effect.
This trope is not necessarily limited to martial arts, either. In more modern settings, gunshot wounds can often have this effect, since getting shot typically feels like getting punched hard and it is not uncommon for victims to take some time to realize it. This can be exploited for dramatic effect in war movies, where fatally wounded soldiers wander the battlefield before succumbing.
Compare Delayed Reaction for the comedy version. May lead to Died Standing Up. See Determinator or Heroic Second Wind for when it doesn't work. Can overlap with Badass Boast. A subtrope of Time-Delayed Death. Not to be confused with Dead All Along or Dead to Begin With.
As a Death Trope, all Spoilers will be unmarked ahead. Beware.
Anime and Manga
- Fist of the North Star is the Trope Namer. Kenshiro, the protagonist, used this as his Catch Phrase ("Omae wa mou shindeiru") when he made his opponent's head or entire body explode with superpowered Pressure Point martial arts.
- Even subverted a couple of times. One time a mook attempts to do this to Kenshiro, only for his own head to explode.[1] And Bat claims to be able to do this to a mook, only he was lying so he could use the mook's horrified reaction to retreat.
- Fist of the Blue Sky's protagonist does much the same thing. Only in Chinese.
- Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann does this with mechs.
- Naruto uses this often, seeing how it's a show about ninjas.
- Bleach has a lot of examples, but Aizen is particularly good at it.
- Actually referenced/Lampshaded when Love quotes it while reading manga.
- Soi Fon also deserves mention, given that her shikai actually guarantees death in two hits, which combined with her high speed leads to this trope.
- Excel Saga parodies this in their Fist of the North Star episode by having victims turn into plushies.
- One Piece has Brook who uses this as his signature attack. He is able to slowly walk ten feet, and then put his sword away before his slash takes effect.
- Zoro seems to have some attacks of this type too, especially Sishi Sonson, which he used to finish off Mr. 1; however, they aren't stated as such like in the case of Brook.
- Death Note: If no cause of death is written into the Death Note after a name is written, the victim will die of a heart attack after about 40 seconds.
- This also happens if the cause of death specified is vague. Hell, if your (true) name is in the book, and the writer had your face in mind, you are dead. No exceptions.
- No meaningful exceptions, rather. One of the rules that never factors into the actual storyline is that the Death Note does not work on anyone over the age of 124. Given the extreme unlikelihood of a human living to that age, it's not clear why they even bothered with such a rule.
- One can gain excess life-span if a Death God sacrifices themselves for you. Just how much extra time Misa gained through the course of the story is unknown, regardless of giving up half of her remaining life twice.
- No meaningful exceptions, rather. One of the rules that never factors into the actual storyline is that the Death Note does not work on anyone over the age of 124. Given the extreme unlikelihood of a human living to that age, it's not clear why they even bothered with such a rule.
- Light literally says "He's already dead" in episode 24, at 10:30.
- This also happens if the cause of death specified is vague. Hell, if your (true) name is in the book, and the writer had your face in mind, you are dead. No exceptions.
- Parodied in Lucky Star:
Soujirou: (pointing at a mosquito on his arm) You are already dead.
Konata: You are already bitten.
- Actually Truth in Television, as mosquito bites include an anesthetic and most people don't realize they've been bitten until the mosquito is almost done feeding.
- That's not the point here. Soujirou was demonstrating how tensing up the arm muscles could result in the mosquito getting its proboscis stuck. Naturally, if the mosquito gets stuck long enough it would die of starvation, which is the reason for the above quote by Soujirou.
- Not to natter, but if you pull the muscle trick, the dear lady explodes due to your Blood Pressure rather than dying of starvation.
- Actually Truth in Television, as mosquito bites include an anesthetic and most people don't realize they've been bitten until the mosquito is almost done feeding.
- Said almost verbatim in Burning Hell - a Villain Protagonist Deadly Doctor can use this trope with his sword... for Flaying Alive his opponent.
- Very common in Saint Seiya, to the point where people can receive an attack, wax philosophical, and suddenly get flung across the room, usually through some pillars.
- Digimon Adventure: At the climax of the 50th episode, Agumon warp evolves to WarGreymon, slices up Machinedramon, makes a Three-Point Landing and reverts to Koromon before Machinedramon falls to pieces. It only happens after a brief debate over the effectiveness of WarGreymon's assault, where Koromon reminds Machinedramon of the special power of WarGreymon's claws. This trope is dub-only - in the original, Koromon instead responds to Mugendramon with a touching World of Cardboard Speech.
- Mahou Sensei Negima: Kuu Fei and Mana's fight in the fighting tournament ends with one of these (in a non-lethal way). Kuu's palm is on Mana's abdomen as Mana believes she has bested Kuu, but that Kuu put up a remarkable fight. And they have a brief exchange before Kuu informs Mana that that wasn't all. Then the back of Mana's shirt explodes from the attack. Even if the attack was released after the exchange, Kuu clearly landed the strike at the start of the conversation. This is the first time Kuu ever uses a ki technique.
- Happen once in Claymore, with a slight variation : the victim had his hand immediately cut off, complain because of it, then the Diagonal Cut kicks in.
- Happens to Seiryu in Yu Yu Hakusho. Sliced 16 times by Hiei, and he wonders what happened before the camera (meaning he) starts dropping to the ground in pieces.
- And again (though not a killing blow this time) against Makintaro in the Dark Tournament. Hiei flashes his sword, Makintaro tells him to bring it on—and Hiei pulls out his severed arm, saying he already did.
- Umineko no Naku Koro ni has this happen during a fight between Virgilia and Beatrice. One of the combatants makes an illegal move which means that she lost the fight automatically, as she did not successfully counter all attacks. The soon to be loser is about to kill her opponent when she informs her of this. This causes all attacks made after that point to be illusory because she was already dead. The previously checkmated opponent is therefore left completely unharmed.
- In the final episode of Katanagatari, Shichika hits an opponent who is wielding a sword that is meant to keep people from dying with an attack that kills him several times saying "You've now died 272 times" before said opponent collapses to the ground.
- Done on a fairly regular basis in Samurai Deeper Kyo, especially during the beginning chapters and/ or when a new enemy is introduced. As the series progresses however, this becomes rather rare as the Mooks and Red Shirt Armies are gradually replaced with Quirky Miniboss Squads, various Dragons and the Big Bad, who's power levels range from Charles Atlas to Made of Iron to Physical God.
- Happens at least once in Samurai Champloo, when Jin is stabbed in the back by Kariya, only for Kariya to wince in pain and have the camera pull back to reveal that Jin left himself open so he could fatally wound Kariya.
- Dragonball Z: In the seventh movie Future Trunks battles Android 14, their fight comes to an end when their blows collide with Trunks using his sword, Android 14 comes out seemingly unscathed he runs out at Trunks and his body splits in half just before he reaches him.
- Parodied at one Martial Arts Tournament, when Mr. Satan and Android 18 are fighting. 18 says she'll throw the match if he agrees to pay her double the prize money. He does, and throws a heavy punch to knock her out of the ring. 18 just takes the punch to the face without moving, asks if that was really the best finishing move Mr. Satan could come up with... then throws herself backward out of the ring. Mr. Satan then tries to pass off this bizarre chain of events as this trope to the confused audience: a "delayed reaction" punch.
- In the dub of Dragonball Z Kai, Future Trunks says "You're already dead." to Cyborg Frieza just before their fight. If you can it a fight.
- In Lupin III, Goemon does this frequently, though usually not against actual people. Nevertheless, most things he cuts only fall apart after he has sheathed his sword.
- In The Slayers, Gourry rushes between two rows of would-be bounty hunters. Reaching the end, he clicks his sword in his scabbard. Cue the bodies dropping to the ground. (Amelia: "Make that eleven...")
- Shows up in Baccano!, when Ladd Russo slits the throat of an underling in his uncle's office. He has time to turn away and close his switchblade before the High-Pressure Blood kicks in.
- In the 2003 Fullmetal Alchemist anime, Kimblee's favourite trick is to use alchemy to turn people into delayed time bombs by transmuting their bodies' sulphur and phosphorous into a slow-oxidising explosive. He eventually does this to Al.
- Subverted in Ranma ½, where Ranma spends half an episode dodging Ryoga's Bakusai Tenketsu, which can supposedly shatter anything by exploiting natural weakpoints. When Ranma finally beats Ryoga, he is casually hit with the technique by Cologne. A look of horror spreads across his face... only for Cologne to reveal its true nature - a mining technique designed for use against rocks (which it had been used on every other time) and inert against humans.
Comic Books
- This happens to assassin Evelyn Cream in Miracleman when he's decapitated by a monster dog but doesn't realize it until the end of the issue.
Film
- Kill Bill has this with the Five Point Palm Exploding Heart Technique, which is delivered to Bill at the end of the film.
- Used for dramatic effect in Saving Private Ryan during the Normandy scene, where severely injured soldiers in the throes of shellshock wander the battlefield before succumbing.
- In Ghost Ship, a thin wire rips through everyone on the dance-floor of the ship, instantly cutting them all in half; and yet they remain standing perfectly upright... and slowly all fall apart (when in actuality they'd obviously fall immediately).
- In one of the Pink Panther movies, a ninja-master gives a demonstration where he strikes a rock, and nothing happens; then he leaves, and the entire room collapses.
- Wagons East: During the gunfight at the end of the movie, Julian and Slade have a stand off during which Slade is shot but doesn't notice until Julian points it out to him.
- Darth Maul takes a second to realize he's been cut in half at the end of the climactic fight scene in The Phantom Menace.
- V for Vendetta: I killed you ten minutes ago.
- In Kiss of the Dragon, Jet Li hits the bad guy with the titular attack, paralyzing him. Jet Li then has time to describe what is about to happen, right before starting the process of death by yanking the needle out and walking out of the room. The bad guy then starts to have extreme pain and blood starts leaking out of every possible opening until he dies.
- In the obscure horror film Skinned Deep, the Surgeon General takes a swing at a kid with his knife. Nothing seems to happen, and the kid remarks that he missed. Cue kid splitting in half.
- Pirates of the Caribbean: Barbossa takes a few moments to realize that Jack didn't waste that last shot.
- The guy who challenged Kyuzo to a duel first with sticks, then with swords in The Seven Samurai. Kikuchiyo's death could also qualify.
- Spock's Heroic Sacrifice to repair the Enterprise in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.
Kirk:"He's dying!"
Scotty:"He's dead already."
Literature
- By Ciaphas Cain's account (in Emperor's Finest), he give an ork an injury that was a little short of bisecting it. Then the ork tried to attack him, realized it's severe injury, and fell to the ground. Ork's are pretty robust creatures and Cain didn't say explicitly say it died, but the ork was obviously (at the very least, temporarily) neutralized.
- In Sergey Lukyanenko's Line of Delirium, this is the favorite tactic of the Bulrathi when fighting humans during the Vague War. They would strike the liver with a special move then let the prisoner go. The victim would feel perfectly fine for several days before the liver would suddenly fail, and the person would die. The main character ends up on the receiving end of this strike at the beginning, during his Training from Hell, but gets better. He later accidentally hits a guy the same way during an interrogation, but reasons that the guy probably deserves it.
- Several such attacks are described in the book against aliens. The Bulrathi themselves have a gland that, when punched hard, causes them to die of intense pleasure. There are also the unexplained "reflexive points" that can also be used to kill within seconds. The Bulrathi, being obsessed with hand-to-hand combat, also develop a technique for taking down a Silicoid (a hovering column of rock) with singing and a single punch. The main character is the first human to use this technique.
- Gar Quithnick from Roger Zelazny's Forever After practices Tian-shi-sheqi, a martial art that demands that death be a summation of life, rather than a mere cessation. To that end, he employs the kuo-tak strike to set up a sort of psychic resonance that kills the victim upon experiencing a certain stimulus. With it, he causes a predator to die the instant it pounces, tells a deposed despot that he will die the moment he considers himself greater than another man (though he can still live a long life of humility), and even turns one enemy into a MacGuffin Delivery Service.
- David Langford's fractal basilisks infect the human mind with an image it cannot process, producing this effect. In the short story "BLIT," a vandal is Hoist by His Own Petard when he accidentally looks at a stencil of "The Parrot" while using protective goggles (the cops who arrest him die instantly). The effect doesn't kick in later, and can only be countered with strong drink to ensure short-term memory loss.
- Jack Vance's The Demon Princes series has cluthe, a microbiological agent delivered by needle (usually fitted to a protective glove) which has a progressive paralytic effect. Essentially an extremely accelerated case of tetanus, except that you're dead in minutes instead of hours to days. The onset seems to be able to be varied, from instantaneous to something like twelve or more hours later.
- A number of creatures in the Aiel Waste are known for this, by name. They are also apparently a snack. This is one of the many good reasons to not mess with the Aiel.
- In Mid-Flinx, Teal concludes her contemptuous tirade at the mercenaries' inability to survive the jungle by announcing that one of their party is already dead. Within moments, the native woman's words are proven true, as the tuft of flowers one of the group has been wearing in her hair sprouts parasitic tendrils that spread rapidly throughout the wearer's body and reduce her to a lump of nurturing compost.
Live-Action TV
- In Power Rangers Operation Overdrive, Kamdor, one of several major Big Bads, and Black Ranger Will charge at each other, and strike in passing. Will falls, and Kamdor, thinking he's won, turns to leave... and then goes kaflooey. Will pulls himself to his feet a little later.
- In Kamen Rider Den-O I'm Born, Den-O Sword form and Kamen Rider Gaoh have one final showdown. After the two have an exchange of slashes, Gaoh suddenly starts being reduced to sand after a few moments.
- In Ultraman Tiga, Tiga and Evil Tiga have a midair attack exchange. Tiga falls to his knees, causing Evil Tiga to turn and laugh before suddenly clutching his chest in pain and falling to the ground. While it doesn't kill him in the series, it gives Tiga the oppertunity to finish him. In Ultraman Fighting Evolution 3, this is how he kills him.
- Xena: Warrior Princess had a move where she could cut off blood flow to a person's brain. It required precise strikes to the underside of the chin, and could be reversed with a different series of nerve strikes. She mainly used it for interrogating Mooks, though, before her Heel Face Turn, she used it more like this trope.
Xena: I've cut off blood flow to your brain. You'll be dead in two minutes.
Mook: ...what...do you want to know?
Xena: Nothing. I just thought I'd tell you.
- On the Homicide episode "Subway", a man is pushed into the path of a subway train and winds up lodged beneath the car from the waist down. Medics rush to the scene, but quickly realize there's nothing they can do to prevent him from bleeding out internally as soon as the train's weight is removed. Needless to say, the pinned man is not pleased with this prognosis.
Stand-up Comedy
- On David Cross' CD, Shut Up You (lift flap for dirty word) Baby! he launches into a long tirade mimicking the puffed-up threats rednecks make when they're about to start a fight:
"I just take my eyelash, man, and then you fuckin' put it in your eye, and you're fuckin' dead, man, you're dead for an hour, you don't even know it, man. You'll be walkin' around, thinkin' you alive, but you been dead for an hour, man."
Tabletop Games
- In 3E Dungeons & Dragons, this is basically what the Quivering Palm ability of the Monk does. Once per week, a high-level Monk can declare an unarmed strike to be a Quivering Palm attack. Any time within the next several (at least fifteen) days, the monk can simply will the target to drop dead (although he gets a saving throw to survive).
- In the Feng Shui fan supplement Out For Blood, the fu power "Harmonious Fist" from the Path of the Harmonious Chord, a fu path for those adept in both Martial Arts and Sorcery, allows its user to launch a Martial Arts attack that doesn't deliver its damage until you make a Sorcery check, and among other things can be used to deliver many strikes that only take effect when the Sorcery check is made to activate them all. Omae wa mou shindeiru indeed.
- The Ninjas And Super-Spies RPG from Palladium Books contains the dreaded Dim Mak technique. Only a few Martial arts allow you to learn it and one must be of the most evil (Diabolic) of alignment. A successful infliction of this technique destroys one's ability to recover the positive chi required for healing, leading to one slowly wasting away and dying from the incurable breakdown of the body over the following weeks. It can even be delivered with a finger poke where the victim never knows what happened, and an advanced version can even work (with more difficulty) through phone lines!
Theatre
- Older Than Steam: In Hamlet, Act V, Scene 2, Laertes pulls this on Hamlet:
Laertes: Hamlet, thou art slain. No medicine in the world can do thee good. In thee there is not half an hour of life. The treacherous instrument is in thy hand, unbated and envenom'd.
Video Games
- A common tactic among feral druids in World of Warcraft is to land your bleed attacks when the opponent is fairly low on health (40%) and instantly move to another target, knowing your original foe will die in seconds.
- Gen from Street Fighter Alpha 2, whose martial art style is classified as an "assassination fist" like Kenshiro's, has a Super Combo called Shitenshuu or the "Death Point Attack". When Gen performs the Lv. 3 version on his opponent, it will cause a timer to appear above their head, which will cause an instant K.O. Unlike other examples, the effect can be canceled if the opponent manage to strike Gen before the countdown reaches zero. His other Super Combo, Zan Ei is a lesser version of this. He dashes forward hitting his opponent once, but after the pass, the opponent receives multiple mysterious hits.
- The Fist of the North Star fighting game gives Kenshiro two attacks with "the line." One is his Fatal KO, the Hokuto Hyakuretsu Ken. The other attack is the Zankai Ken, a Super that gives the opponent three seconds before being defeated. Just like in the original series, however, this attack doesn't work on Souther.
- Dragon Age Origins has the Walking Bomb spell, which causes whatever it is cast on to explode after a set amount of time. Its upgrade, Virulent Walking Bomb, turns anyone else in the blast radius into bombs themselves.
- The Final Fantasy series has the various spells and attacks that inflict the Doom status effect. This places a timer above the victim's head, counting down to zero. When the timer hits zero, the character dies.
- Some enemies have a doom-like ability that is un-dispellable. Essentially, you're already dead, you've just been given a short grace period.
- This also appears in the Kingdom Hearts series.
- One of the Metal Gear Solid comics shows a High Frequency Blade-d guard's head slowly sliding apart in mid-sentence.
- In Diablo III, one of Monk class' skills, Exploding Palm, causes the target to explode if it is killed by Damage Over Time. Omae wa mou shindeiru, indeed.
- Taokaka's Astral Heat has her (intending) to finish the opponent after saying this, word for word. Considering the nature of Blaz Blue, it is very likely that it's a Shout-Out.
- Hakumen even has an achievement named this in Continuum Shift. Its objective is to deal 10,000 damage in one combo, which is such an absurdly high amount that if you're not dead, you're probably one good poke from dead (unless the opponent is also Hakumen or Tager, who are the only characters that can withstand such a combo at whopping 12,000 and 13,000 health respectively).
- In Shinobi for the PlayStation 2, Hotsuma can attack multiple enemies in a chain, and after the chain attack is completed, they all fall to pieces.
- Mortal Kombat: Deception: One of Li-Mei's fatalities involves this.
- Vergil's Signature Move in Devil May Cry 3 is Diagonal Cutting his opponent, then waiting several seconds before sheathing his sword (with an audible CLICK), and only then the enemy goes asunder.
- Beowulf actually managed to speak to him before his head went in pieces.
- The original Ninja Gaiden for the NES opened with this happening to Ryu Hayabusa's father in a Cut Scene.
- One of the Nekomata's attacks in Disgaea 4: A Promise Unforgotten is a dead ringer for the Hokuto Hyakuretsu Ken. After delivering multiple blows, the opponent becomes irate and walks up. Cue the explosion about halfway there.
- At the beginning of Shadow's story in |Sonic '06, Shadow briefly pulls this with several robots by simply running through/by them.
- The No Moment sword tech and Fist fighting tech in SaGa Frontier.
- Reiji and Xiaomu in Super Robot Taisen Endless Frontier when they perform their Shinra Banshou overdrive. After Reiji wails on the enemy with his guns and swords, Xiaomu finishes with a slash from her sword staff. As soon as she clicks it into her staff, the enemy gushes out blood in the air.
- In a really wrong way, the game Prototype makes it impossible to let someone go after grabbing them without killing them. So they are pretty much dead once you get your hands on them.
- In Prototype 2 gives us the BioBomb. Where you insert into an victim a variation of the virus that incubates for a short time, enough to leave the scene, before exploding them into a mass of tentacles impaling everything near him.
- Evie's Drain attacks in Vindictus have this effect, particularly the Mark of Death and Bloody Thread attacks. You can hit an enemy with a smash and then hit them with the Drain attack, which you can then explode later for extra damage.
- Ukyo Tachibana from the Samurai Shodown series inflicts something like this as his special and his finisher. He runs up to his opponent, walks "through" him or her a few times, stops behind him or her, twirls his sword, sheathes it aaaaaand..... one torso less attached to it's legs.
- Played with in Kingdoms of Amalur:Reckoning with said Reckoning move. When this Rage mode is active, everything turns blue and time slows down, allowing your character to deal massive damage with room for error. Any enemy whose HP drops to about zero enters a near-death mode signalled by their supposed "fated death" erupting out of them in the form of blue strings of fate. If the player can successfully execute one of these characters (how they were supposed to die happens now, supposedly) before Reckoning runs out, the rest suddenly die from the chain reaction. Otherwise, they somehow regain a small percentage of their HP.
Web Comics
- The Adventures of Dr. McNinja used this trope along with Diagonal Cut against ninja mooks in the first Franz Rayner arc.
Dr. McNinja: Aaaaand the split...
- Aldran does this in this Anti-HEROES comic by magically force-feeding an opponent some "berries".
Evil Druid: While I appreciate the snack [cough], you didn't have to shove 'em down my throat!
Aldran: Actually, I did. See if I had given you the time to actually taste them, you might have noticed that not all of them were, in fact, berries.
Evil Druid: ...What he hell did you just feed me?
Aldran: Are you familiar with the spell "Delayed Blast Fireball"?
Evil Druid: ...Oh Gods.
- Given the author's tendency to use and abuse shout outs for fun and profit, MS Paint Masterpieces uses this as a deliberate reference to Fist of the North Star.
- This comic in No Need for Bushido. Also counts as Killed Mid-Sentence.
- Played for laughs in this Nerf Now comic.
Web Original
- Episode 18 of Yu Yu Hakusho Abridged gives us this example:
Seiryu: Hm. Seems you're pretty fast... but not fast enough.
Hiei: Oh really? You have no idea how fast I am.
Seiryu: Oh yeah, smartass? Then how fast are you?
Hiei: You really want to know?
Seiryu: Enlighten me.
Hiei: You sure you want to know?
Seiryu: Yes I'm sure!
Hiei: Positive?
Seiryu: Positive!
Hiei: Absolutely sure?
Seiryu: Yes, goddammit!
Hiei: You've been dead for twenty seconds.
<Beat>
Seiryu: AhhhhAHHHHHH!!!
- This happens twice to Axem Yellow in Super Mario Bros Z, first it took him several seconds to realize that, after an attempted attack on Mecha Sonic, his axe had fallen apart. Later, Mecha Sonic spin-dashes him. Five seconds later, he splits in half. Both halves explode.
- Avatar: The Abridged Series did a Fist of the North Star parody, complete with the line.
- Atop the Fourth Wall gave us Pollo's Heroic Sacrifice to repair Comicron-1's engines after Mecha Kara's latest attempt at domination. This was a direct Shout-Out to Spock's death in Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.
- The internet meme of saying Candle Jack. The person typing dies before they fin
Real Life
- Frequently in boxing and kickboxing, a strike to the point of the liver has a delayed reaction. The struck fighter often feels nothing at all for two or three seconds - and then collapses.
- Also a common response to a Groin Attack when in a pressure situation; In the right circumstances, you won't realize you have been hit there by a kick hard until some time has passed. Typically, it's just a few seconds, but sometimes it can stretch to a full minute before the opponent falls to ground, writhing in pain.
- Police in China were called in when a man died from his injuries to his testicles after they were squeezed by his attacker after arguing with her over a parking lot.
- Though not necessarily a fatal instance, an adrenaline rush running as a result of or alongside some physical incident can have the side effect of deferring pain. As a result, one could be experiencing anything from a sprained ankle to much worse and not realize it, carry out various tasks, and only experience the intense pain of the incident itself much later.
- Crush Syndrome.
- Can happen with heart attack or sudden cardiac arrest victims.
- Secondary drowning.
- Take a high enough dose of hard radiation and you're guaranteed to die rather suddenly...in about three days. There's even what's known as the walking ghost phase after the exposure there are no direct symptoms and you feel fine for up to a day. What is happening is it takes time for things to die, and are normally replaced, but those replacements aren't happening now, as your bone marrow is dead.
- Being fatally shot doesn't always kill people outright. Considering being shot feels kinda like being punched really hard, it's entirely possible you wouldn't realise you were dead until it all went black....
- Shallow water blackout. Don't hyperventilate before breath-hold diving.
- If your hard drive starts clicking, it's already dead.
- Cerebral edema, which sometimes develops in the wake of a head injury, can cause compression of the medulla oblongata and abrupt cessation of breathing. This is why doctors don't let patients who've suffered a blow to the head leave the ER and go home by themselves, as undetected brain swelling can cause the victim to drop in their tracks without warning.
- Tylenol overdose. Occasionally used to attempt suicide by people who Did Not Do the Research, if you take a high enough dosage you will die...in about three weeks as your liver slowly shuts down.
- If one suffers a blow to the brain stem that is serious enough to cause absence of reflexes with pathways, the outcome isn’t good since it’s irreversible. The situation is known as brain stem death, for a reason.
- While cardiac arrest is one thing, at least it’s reversible. Brain death, on the other hand, what do you think that means?
Huh? The page ends? Does this mean that I -- HIDEBU!!
- ↑ Kenshiro hit a pressure point in his face a few moments before, making it a Time-Delayed Death