Drains Their Youth Making Her Young Again Folklore

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"How many years must I accept from you before you tell us what I wish to know? Or shall I take them all?"

This character maintains immortality past consuming some vital force from their victims. This is often Life Energy, simply can also be their souls, or youth or blood. If such an immortal doesn't feed, they volition eventually die.

There is often some sort of conservation of lifespan where the victim's life is added to the immortal's and the victim dies so that the immortal tin can continue to keep living. This class of immortality normally grants eternal youth and the feeding process may cause the victim to grow older because the victim's youth is being tuckered into the immortal. Sometimes, it might extend the drinker's lifespan on a ane-to-1 ratio for the number of years stolen from the victim, but oftentimes it's quite inefficient and draining a victim who could potentially have another thirty or forty years of life only provides an extension of months or even weeks. No Immortal Inertia is often the upshot when this type of immortal is destroyed. May overlap with Vain Sorceress if it's used to restore their beauty as well.

Although this type of immortality could be described as vampiric (and indeed it overlaps with Vampiric Draining), only sometimes does information technology apply to actual vampires. Vampires usually won't die from a lack of blood - at most they will become weaker and endure from Horror Hunger. May overlap with Blood Magic (especially Blood Baths) and Liquid Assets. Might also involve an Artifact of Doom or Evil Weapon.

Subtrope of Soul Eating and Immortality (and also Immortality Immorality). Dissimilarity The Ageless, in which the immortal doesn't age to begin with and doesn't accept to bother with taking others' lifeforce, just tin usually nonetheless be killed conventionally.


Examples:

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    Anime and Manga

  • Shinigami in Death Note. When a Shinigami kills a human, that human's remaining lifespan is added to the Shinigami'due south. Shinigamis who don't kill regularly will die. (Note "regularly" could exist equally little as v humans a century, if each human being has at to the lowest degree twenty years left on the clock. The Shinigami have gotten so lazy that fifty-fifty that is too much endeavour for some of them to carp with.)
  • In EDENS ZERO, Drakken Joe uses Alchemy to drain the lifeforce of everyone around him to sustain his own life. This has the event of shortening their lives, with some especially unlucky people falling ill and dying outright. However, even this method has its limits and won't sustain him forever. He wants Rebecca'due south Mental Time Travel powers because he thinks that'southward the only mode he can avoid dying for real.
  • Kurobara Alice: Vampires tin can drink each other's blood to extend their lifespan, only it will shorten the blood-source'south life by the aforementioned amount. Becomes a vehicle for some serious Angst when a sympathetic character is revealed to be short-on-time.
  • In Psychic Squad, both Fujiko and Kyousuke accept bodies of salubrious adolescents while they are actually in their 80s. Fujiko accomplishes this by energy-drinking kissing (information technology'southward implied that she doesn't practise whatsoever long-term impairment to her "victims"), while Kyousuke (who is, paradoxically, at least initially perceived as the Large Bad of the series) explicitly says that he detests doing something like this, and then he accomplishes this in another means (probably biochemically).
  • Yaiba has Kaguya, a Really 700 Years Erstwhile Eldritch Abomination whose body is fused with the Dragon Shrine Maiden and after sealed later a failed attempt to invade and take over earth. 1000 years later (in the story's present mean solar day) she awakens and tries to re-launch her attack. But because she's stuck in a mortal body, she will rapidly historic period and deteriorate unless she continually drinks life essences from other human women, turning her victims into sometime women in the process.

    Comic Books

DC

  • Robin: After being forced to host a demonic entity Johhny Warren, who was already an unrepentant mob hitman, gained flying, healing and other abilities that were powered by his draining the life out of nearby humans.
  • Superboy (1994): The Mo'o has to constantly drain people of their life force to stay alive, when Kon grabs her away from potential victims she ends up quickly Reduced to Grit despite having tuckered a man within the hour.
  • Wonder Woman Vol one #222 had a theme park mogul named Wade Dazzle who was existence kept live past life force tuckered from visitors to his theme park and fed into his preserved body.

Marvel

  • Prior to the Soft Reboot that updated his family history, Shang-Chi's male parent Fu-Manchu concluded up this way towards the finish of the original Master of Kung Fu series. Having built upwards an immunity to his own 'elixir vitae', the simply way to retain his Long-Lived status and avert Rapid Aging was to consume his own children's claret.
  • Morlun from Spider-Homo belongs to a clan chosen the Inheritors that maintain immortality by draining life energy from people, especially people who are animalistic totems.
  • Zarda, aka Power Princess, from Marvel's Supreme Ability comic is able to exercise this via an energy blast from her optics. She does this to restore her youth later on sleeping for thousands of years.
  • X-Men villainess Selene, the Black Queen, who provides the folio image. A millennia-old mutant who can drain the life out of others to keep herself young. Every bit an added bonus, said lifeforce also fuels her sorcerous powers.
  • The living island Krakoa is another X-Men example. Information technology specifically feeds off of Mutant lifeforce. This is still the case in Dawnof X where it serves as The Promised Land for Mutants. It avoids killing its inhabitants past merely taking a pocket-size bit of lifeforce from each person. Ironically plenty, Selene is one of the Mutants who took upward the offer to alive on Krakoa, significant she's on the receiving end of this trope.

Other

  • In Magic: The Gathering (IDW), the villain Sifa Grent drains the life from her victims in social club to maintain her youth and beauty.
  • Heavily implied to be washed past Mysterius himself in Mysterius The Unfathomable. They try to justify it past proverb they only take a piddling at a fourth dimension. Delfy is not tickled.

    Fanfic

  • In Medico Who fanfic "The Worm from Space" the Worm Kings can heal themselves by consuming other life forms. The championship villain, King Wurzin, was wounded by fourth dimension travel then needs to keep eating people.

    Picture — Alive-Action

  • In The Night Crystal (an animatronic-based fantasy film directed by Jim Henson and Frank Oz, with puppets designed by Brian Froud), the Always Chaotic Evil Skeksis extend their lifespans this way. Plainly Gelflings provide the best nourishment, but the Skeksis hunted them nearly to extinction and have to make practice with Podlings even though those don't sustain their youth for very long.
  • Fright Night 2: New Blood: Gerri/Bathory needs blood to restore her youthful appearance or she'll apace wither abroad into an old hag.
  • The witches, a.thou.a. the Sanderson sisters, from Hocus Pocus. They lure children to them, give them a spelled potion, then suck the life out of them until they're dead (not just prematurely anile, similar with Ravenna) in order to stay alive and not go on to age.
  • Howling Ii: Stirba: Werewolf Bowwow: Stirba'southward rejuvenating technique requires a young victim, from whom Stirba magically steals her youth.
  • The Infinite Vampires in the movie Lifeforce.
  • Speculated as the cause of immortality in The Man from Globe. Instead of taking all the life from any one person though, they propose he takes ambient life force from everybody effectually him. Unknown if this is truthful though.
  • Mythica: Necromancers proceeds power this way, forth with raising the dead.
  • The Fountain of Youth in Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides restored a person'due south life this fashion.
  • In Shandra: The Jungle Girl, Shandra 'feeds' by forcibly having sex activity with men and draining their life energy during the human action. It is not articulate how much this is under her command.
  • Queen Ravenna in Snow White and the Huntsman drains the Life Energy of unfortunate women to restore her magic and youth.
  • The three witches of Stardust retain their youth and immortality by devouring the hearts of stars, who appear as golden-haired women. It seems that this power is not unique to witches, but anyone who has the center of a star. The protagonist of the moving picture lives forever considering the star in question falls in dearest with him. Thus he "possesses the heart of a star, and lives forever. The shut of the film sees him and his star wife teleport off to the heavens to live eternity as two bright stars.
  • Sweet Sweet Lonely Girl: It turns out Beth is one, taking Adele's youth in the terminate, having washed this to her aunt earlier as well.
  • In The Witch Files, Jules is a 300 year old witch who returns to Brunswick every 17 years and forms a coven and drains the life forcefulness from the other members to maintain her youth and vitality for some other 17 years.

    Literature

  • The villain, Carmody Braque, in The Changeover. The main character defeats him by turning his own nature against him.
  • In Tanith Lee's Death'due south Principal, there'south a wizard who takes on an amateur and charges only one fee for his lessons: he gets to bugger the child every night. When the apprentice finally quits, the sorcerer reveals that the sex was draining off years of his life (which were transferred to the wizard); and that to add insult to injury, for the few years left of the boy'due south life, he will deed more like the lustful one-time sorcerer himself.
  • The villainous cult in Dinner at Deviant's Palace turns out to have been fix so that its leader can siphon off the life energy of his followers.
  • The Dresden Files: The White Courtroom Vampires are this; they blot life energy through lust, fear, or despair.
  • The Elric Saga Elric: Elric will apply his sword Stormbringer to drink the souls/lifeforce of the beings he attacks.
  • Lord Voldemort in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone stays alive by drinking unicorn blood.
  • Journey to Chaos: Necrocraft empowers someone to bleed the Life Energy of others. Withal, this power comes from Lord Death, the head Grim Reaper, and he doesn't like being cheated. So the stolen energy can just brand the user more powerful. In fact, since necocraft is Bandage from Lifespan, the user will instead die sooner then they would have otherwise. The monkey beastfolk, Caffour, finds this out in Looming Shadow. He drains many the citizens of Deimos to make himself more powerful and earlier the twenty-four hour period is over he'due south looking like a sickly corpse.
  • Medusa'south Spider web features a form of Geometric Magic that mostly involves creating connections between ii people to produce i of a diversity of effects. Ane of the less savory effects is to connect to somebody younger and/or healthy and steal some of the their youth and heath.
  • The twins Jonah and Norah Grayer in David Mitchell's Slade Business firm keep themselves alive past arresting the souls of telepaths.
  • James in The Southern Book Club'southward Guide to Slaying Vampires is implied to exist this on top of beingness a vampire. His victims kill themselves either because they are addicted and go through hellish withdrawal, or because he has drained so much of their lives away anyway.
  • The Lord of Night in The Sword of Good keeps a Wormarium, full of worms that he drains Liquid Assets from to artificially extend his life. This is seen as a sign of cracking evil. A merits which is nix but blatant hypocrisy coming from a realm full of people who eat meat (whether this was merely a rhetorical indicate or the Lord of Dark is actually vegetarian is never clarified). Even eating plants is also taking life as well.
  • In This Is Not a Werewolf Story, Tuffman has lived for centuries past eating other shapeshifers.
  • The Kurians of The Vampire Globe drink life force through their vampiric avatars, who live off the claret of the victims.
  • Villains by Necessity: The willowisps, who drain life free energy from people equally sustenance. It's also possible for them to transfer it into someone else, healing wounds or rejuvenating them.
  • The Returned from Warbreaker are a variation: they require one Breath per week to survive, simply due to a quirk of the magic arrangement, Breath a) can be detached from a person every bit easily as a alter of clothes, with no ill furnishings across an increased vulnerability to mental and biological illness (and a cosmetic loss of color) and b) must exist given voluntarily.

    Alive-Activity TV

  • Angel did it in the tie-in brusque story collection "The Longest Night". A man was killing people by using a demon'south help to steal their youth, because he was desperate to see his son abound up. He tries it on Wesley, and when Angel gets there, it's the male child who's growing older while Wes becomes an old human being, at least until Angel manages to break the spell.
  • The Arrowverse version of Vandal Brutal retains his immortality by periodically killing and absorbing the life forcefulness of Hawkman (originally Prince Khufu) and Hawkgirl (originally Priestess Chay-Ara), while those 2 periodically reincarnate, although they typically have to regain their original memories before Savage can kill them. Vicious has likewise learned that feeding the blood of 1 of the "hawks" to his followers grants them an extra 100 years of life, which is how he maintains their loyalty.
  • Ampata, from Buffy the Vampire Slayer'south "Inca Mummy Girl". She was an Andean mummy who sucked living humans' life forces dry to stay live herself.
  • Javna, a demon from Charmed. He needed to regularly steal the youth of his victims, crumbling them into onetime people, in guild to retain his youthful form. If he doesn't, he ages quickly.
  • Doctor Who:
    • "The Savages": The Elders seem to have an idyllic civilization of Crystal Spires and Togas, but they sustain information technology and themselves by draining the life force from the titular Savages that live in the wastes beyond their city. Their leader even absorbs the life essence of the Doctor, along with his conscience, leading him to help the Savages overthrow the Elders.
    • "The Talons of Weng-Chiang": Magnus Greel attempted to stay live by draining the life essence out of young women. Leela only only avoided suffering this fate.
    • "The Lazarus Experiment": Richard Lazarus turns himself into a gigantic monster who drains people's life force to survive.
  • Variant in Highlander: The Serial. Immortals will remain youthful without any life-sucking, just if they decollate some other immortal they absorb their knowledge and skill. Since in the end There Can Be Merely One, the ones who don't resort to killing tend to fall to the ones who do.
  • Kolchak: The Night Stalker episode "The Youth Killer". Helen of Troy has survived to the present twenty-four hour period past sacrificing perfect human victims to the goddess Hecate. The cede is fabricated by magically causing Rapid Aging in the victims, which in turn gives Helen eternal youth.
  • Motherland: Fort Salem: The centuries-old Alder keeps herself physically young through draining the youth from "biddies"; these witches consider their sacrifice to be a great honor.
  • The Outpost: Two can gain ability by arresting what appears to be the life energy of someone afterward they die (even if she doesn't kill them personally).
  • The Wraith from Stargate Atlantis, who feed on something from their victims that causes them to historic period rapidly. Information technology'southward implied to be life force, but never actually spelled out.
    • "Todd", for example, has been going about it for at least x,000 years when the Atlantis squad beginning meets him. Even accounting for hibernation periods, he's probably fed on hundreds or thousands of people by that signal.
    • The fact that the Wraith can only feed on humans and other Wraith has forced most of them to go into decades-long periods of hibernation while the humans in their galaxy repopulate between cullings. They're desperate to get to our galaxy (and Earth in detail) once they learn how many people live in that location.
    • Later in the serial, it's revealed that Wraith tin can actually give dorsum life energy, which they refer to as "the gift of life". Information technology's described as existence an addictive sensation, and the Wraith can use it to convert humans into Wraith-worshipers.
  • Supernatural:
    • In "Something Wicked", an immortal creature called a shtriga drains the life forcefulness from people, mostly children.
    • In "The Curious Case Of Dean Winchester", a 900-year-old Irish witch uses an enchanted bill of fare game to "win years" from his opponents, and used them to extend his own life and that of his wife, who had become tired of living forever and wanted to die later on outliving her own daughter.
  • The Twilight Zone (1959):
    • One episode featured a man who constitute that he could obtain abstruse or otherwise normally not-transferable attributes from other people by simply making the bargain with them. Among other attributes, he restored his youth by "buying" it from younger men who thought him to be a kook giving them money for zip. He but took a year from each man, but was able to become young again. Incidentally, he was only an old human being because he had previously sold his own youth to an elderly millionaire (he came out financially ahead after the exchanges were complete).
    • "Queen of the Nile". A woman uses a scarab beetle to drain the life strength of men then she tin maintain her eternal youth. It'due south implied that she'due south the actual Cleopatra of Arab republic of egypt.
  • The Twilight Zone (1985): In "Our Selena is Dying", the elderly Selena Brockman grabs her niece Debra's paw tightly when she comes to visit her on what is ostensibly her deathbed. The side by side morn, a mark appears where Selena touched Debra. Dr. Burrell tells her that information technology is a liver spot, which is highly unusual in someone her historic period. Shortly later on, he is shocked to observe that Selena has gained a new lease on life. Dr. Burrell receives a call that night from Debra, who has apace anile in the hours since he last saw her. She now appears to exist in her 70s. From an old diary supplied by the handyman Orville, Burrell learns that Martha burned her arm in 1940 in the same identify as her daughter Diane has a prominent burn scar. He then determines that Selena drained Debra's Life Energy and that Martha did the same affair to Diane and so assumed her identity. Selena tells him that information technology is the way of their family for the older generation, when nearing decease, to drain the energy of the younger one. Afterwards Selena is killed in the fire accidentally started by Diane, Debra's youth is restored.

    Tabletop Games

  • In Animal: The Primordial, some Heroes develop this ability either past hazard or as a event of being especially successful in their careers, perpetuating their ain lifespan each time they kill a Brute.
  • In Dungeons & Dragons, there is a prestige class that lets you do this in the book Faiths of Eberron.
    • City of Splendors: Waterdeep has a spell which does this — as well as several examples of characters who prolonged their lives with it. While the spell is inherently evil, going around murdering hapless peasants with it wouldn't work — to actually prolong your life noticeably it has to exist used against people who aren't too much weaker than you lot (consequently 1 of the examples is a neutral character who spends much of their time hunting downwards evil monsters and murderers and using the spell on them).
  • Mage: The Awakening: Masters of Death magic can steal years of lifespan off of other humans and add it to their ain. Nevertheless, this merely delays natural death; it doesn't grant health or prolong youth.
  • The New World of Darkness supplement Immortals details a number of types of people who have managed to overcome the limitations of age — generally through this trope.
  • In the fan-made New World of Darkness game Genius: The Transgression, all "manes" (creatures created in realities produced by the excess mental free energy of dis-proven theories), orphans (Mad Scientist inventions that have broken loose and gone mad), and whatsoever Genius who takes it have the "Calculus Vampire" merit which allows them to drain Mania (essentially mad scientific discipline/brainpower every bit a sort of energy), which the kickoff two groups must feed on.
  • In Pathfinder, the witch Baba Yaga set upwards Irrisen, the kingdom of Endless Winter, on Golarion to establish a regal dynasty of her female descendants. She did this because she sucks the life from those descendants to continue herself immortal, returning to Golarion once a century for this purpose. The risk path "Reign of Winter" is what happens when ane of these daughters decides she'd rather overthrow Baba Yaga instead.
  • Magic: The Gathering: A very rare power among the Aetherborn on the plane of Kaladesh, refferd to as "gifted" Aethborn, is the power to extend their ain lifespans by murdering other living beings and draining their life force; since all Aetherborn have incredibly brusque lifespans (a few years at most) those who have it tend to use it. The thing is, Aetherborn alsi have strong empathic abilities, meaning they feel the agony of everyone they kill, and not all of the gifted can stomach that like Yahenni.
  • In Warhammer 40,000, Tau Commander Farsight's magical sword the Dawn Blade claims the years its victims would have had if it hadn't cutting them down and gives them to its wielder. No ane in-universe, non even its current owner, knows this for certain. He has his suspicions, though, since he's lived far longer than the average projected lifespan of his race.

    Video Games

  • The Broken Lords of Countless Legend, having bound their souls to suits of armor to survive Auriga's collapsing climate, must sustain their bodies past consuming Grit, an almost magical substance. Unfortunately, Dust is very difficult to create under normal circumstances, simply the Cleaved Lords discovered that they tin can drain Dust from sentient beings, which is fatal. Being a club of honorable knights forced to kill in guild to survive has acquired a significant schism within the leadership; those that wish to cure their dependence on dust one mode or another, and those that wish to consume the weak.
  • Reaver of Fable Ii, who keeps his youth through the centuries by sacrificing the youth of innocents to the Shadow Court.
  • Hidden City: The plot of "Concluding Trip the light fantastic of the Blizzard" is triggered past a Vain Sorceress named Talisa who uses a magic mirror to steal the life force children who wants to grow up in society — causing them to become erstwhile men/women — in order to preserve her own youth and beauty
  • When Mega Man 9 came out, Capcom put out a press release that claimed it was so difficult considering Inafune-san, its designer, keeps himself perpetually youthful by drinking the crushed spirits of frustrated gamers.
  • Metroids practice this, using their claw/fangs to latch onto a fauna and suck the life out of it, leaving behind a withered husk that crumbles into dust at the slightest bear on. This is also implied to exist the reason that most weapons practise non affect them: they channel absorbed free energy into a natural forcefield that defends against attacks. Information technology is not made clear whether or not a Metroid ever dies of old historic period.
  • The Bat-Bat Fruit, Model Type: Vampire Devil Fruit seen in Ane Slice: Unlimited World Cherry grants its consumer the ability to bleed the youth from others and restore their own, and can even make them immortal so long equally they continue stealing youth. The game's primary antagonist, Redfield, is an elderly pirate who sailed the seas during the era of Gol D. Roger and Whitebeard, merely never managed to achieve their level of notoriety; he consumes the Fruit to be able to rejuvenate himself and get a second chance to brand his name.
  • Paper Mario: The One thousand-Twelvemonth Door has Grubba, a wrestling manager who is pushing past 60 years sometime, just has a body of someone in their 20s and no ane really questions it beyond "Huh, I wonder how he manages to await then immature despite being and then quondam?" Mario finds out that Grubba was using a machine powered past a Crystal Star to suck out the life force of fighters in their prime number so that he use said life force to keep his body in top condition without age getting in the mode.
  • Cervantes from the Soul Calibur games maintains his immortality by killing people and feeding their souls to his ain Soul Edge. If the life forcefulness runs out, he turns into a charred corpse.

    Webcomics

  • In Daniel, Daniel Groth is a vampire that claims to drinkable claret not to satisfy hunger, but to "feel life".
  • In El Goonish Shive, in that location are onetime humans who achieve immortality past draining life from regular humans. A sufficiently powerful magic-wielding human can utilize a ritual to permanently transform themselves into a monster officially called an "aberration" (and often unofficially referred to equally a "vampire"). Aberrations are sociopaths by nature who demand to feed on humans to survive, although at that place'southward a great deal of diversity in their appearance and methods. The commencement aberration we saw mesmerized young women to beverage their blood, but we've as well seen a specially monstrous one that will devour its victim's entire torso, stealing non just their life but as well their magic. On the other end of the spectrum, there'southward Sirleck, a relatively weak Puppeteer Parasite who tin can take over a human's body for years at a time, only doesn't need to kill anyone outright, although this is more than almost trying to avoid attracting the attending of aberration hunters rather than any moral justification.

     Web Original

  • ''The Magnus Athenaeum: The episode "Toll of Living" is about a woman who survives a virtually-expiry experience past draining a md's life... then it keeps happening, and she justifies it by throwing herself into philanthropy.
  • SCP Foundation:
    • SCP-545 is a recipe that can bottle someone'due south life essence and make the drinker effectively immortal (but not immortally young).
    • SCP-776 is a ritual that can brand the practitioners de-age most 40 years, although lately at that place's been some weird side-effects like birth defects ("as well many eyes and not enough skin") and...:

      Dr. █████: What was it that your daughter said?

      276 (776 practitioner): …She said, "Papa, why did you do that to me? Why did y'all [Information EXPUNGED]. I…I didn't even notice how much she looked like my 4th daughter up until that moment…

    Western Animation

  • American Dragon: Jake Long episode "Immature at Middle" features a magical creature called the Avemetrus that feeds on the youth of others to keep itself live.
  • The Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes! has Businesswoman Von Strucker of Hydra employ the Satan Claw for this. However if the process is disrupted or the claw is destroyed soon later on the process the victim has their Life Energy restored. Information technology serves as a literal Red Right Manus until Eagle destroys it.
  • Penelope Spectra from Danny Phantom keeps her youthful appearance by feeding on the misery of others.
  • In Gargoyles, Demona once exploited Xanatos' desire for eternal life by claiming to be this. Specifically, she said that a spell would take a few minutes of life from whomever heard it, and offered to share this cloak-and-dagger with him in exchange for him broadcasting the spell on live television to all of Manhattan. This turns out to be a lie, however—the spell actually turns nigh anybody in the city to rock during the night, while her immortality comes from a deal with The Off-white Folk.
  • Justice League had an episode featuring Morgan Le Fay surviving this style.
  • In the Animated Accommodation of The Mask, we take Skillit, who is, every bit he puts it, "Over 4,000 years erstwhile, but doesn't expect a mean solar day over twelve". This is because he steals the shadows (and by extension, the youth) of his victims, which causes them to age at an accelerated rate. Thankfully, if the shadows are returned, the victims return to normal. And when Skillit loses his powers (which are rooted in his own shadow), instead of dying or rapidly aging himself, he is instead Brought Down to Normal, which means he volition age commonly, as well. Just to him, that is a Fate Worse than Death.
  • In Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island, the true villains of the story are this. Simone and Lena were the simply survivors of a group of settlers who worshipped a cat-god, the residue being slaughtered by the pirate Captain Moonscar. They prayed to the cat-god for the power to accept revenge, and information technology was granted in the form of the ability to transform into werecats and immortality, but but if they drain the life strength of living people every harvest moon. By the time Mystery, Inc. arrives at Moonscar Island, the bayou is littered with hundreds of undead corpses who take fallen victim to Simone and Lena. In the climax, the gang nearly suffers this fate - and Scooby and Shaggy actually start to go their life drained from them and begin to die on-screen.
  • Star Trek: The Blithe Series episode "The Lorelei Betoken". The women of the planet Taurus II drain the Life Free energy of men to maintain their own youth, which causes Rapid Crumbling in the men.
  • In a Totally Spies! episode, the large bad is using some kind of magic stone to absorb youth from kids, resulting in this trope. Equally soon equally aforementioned magic rock is destroyed, No Immortal Inertia is triggered.
  • In Yin Yang Yo!, Kraggler gains the power to blot youth by touch after a battle with Yin and Yang. When the youth wears off, instead of dying, he just reverts back to an old man.

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Source: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/LifeDrinker

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