
Let’s be honest: there’s nothing that gets TV viewers more upset than the unexpected, savage departure of a beloved character. One minute you’re completely hooked on their story, the next you’re sitting in front of the TV with your mouth hanging open, wondering if you just witnessed what you think you did. Television has delivered some very memorable belly blows throughout the years. Here are 10 of the most surprising TV deaths that left viewers gasping—from jaw-dropping surprises to game-changers that altered television history.

10. Joel Miller – The Last of Us
If you weren’t up on the video game, Joel’s death in HBO’s The Last of Us was a heart-wrenching surprise. Abby’s revenge was quick, ruthless, and left fans stunned. Even Pedro Pascal had to confess he’d expected the scene hanging over the plot, but it didn’t ease the blow for fans who’d become attached to Joel.

9. Marissa Cooper – The O.C.
Marissa’s heartbreaking demise seemed like it was bound to happen in some sense, but when the car accident capped off her fate, it came out of nowhere. Seeing Ryan attempt to save her, only to not be able to, was teen drama, teen heartbreak at its finest. Creator Josh Schwartz even confessed that her demise was always planned—and yet it still didn’t make the process easier for viewers to accept.

8. George O’Malley – Grey’s Anatomy
Few television moments have shattered hearts like George scribbling “007” on Meredith’s hand after he got hit by a bus. T.R. Knight’s exit had copious amounts of back-story drama, but on screen, it was raw emotional destruction. George’s demise was abrupt, tragic, and indelible.

7. Derek Shepherd – Grey’s Anatomy
If George’s departure wasn’t enough, years la,ter Shonda Rhimes dropped another bombshell: the death of Derek “McDreamy” Shepherd. Patrick Dempsey’s character was written out tragically, leaving Meredith (and millions of viewers) in mourning. Love him or hate him, his death closed an era.

6. Ned Stark – Game of Thrones
Sean Bean’s Ned Stark felt like the show’s centerpiece of Game of Thrones—noble, upright, the one you’re sure you’ll be cheering for throughout the series. And then there was his execution during season one. For readers, it wasn’t a surprise, but for TV viewers alone, it was an earth-shattering reminder that no one’s rules apply in Westeros.

5. Glenn Rhee – The Walking Dead
Glenn’s gruesome killing at Negan’s hands (and Lucille’s barbed wire-covered bat) was as bad as fans of the comics knew it would be. But to those viewers who had been watching Glenn since the beginning, it was still among the toughest to swallow. The internet furor afterward was evidence enough of how much people cared that he made it.

4. Charlie Harper – Two and a Half Men
Charlie Sheen’s off-camera tumult resulted in one of the most notorious TV departures in history. His character, Charlie Harper, met his demise at the hands of a subway train in a wildly melodramatic sendoff. It was not so much surprising in-story as it was a show-stopping mirroring of the meltdown behind the scenes.

3. Will Gardner – The Good Wife
When Will Gardner got shot by his client mid-courtroom, viewers were left gasping—particularly because Josh Charles’s character was so central to the program. The move was bold and provided the show with one of its strongest emotional blows, especially in terms of how it rocked Alicia Florrick’s universe.

2. Joffrey Baratheon – Game of Thrones
Joffrey’s death at the infamous “Purple Wedding” was surprising for completely different reasons: fans wished him dead, but nobody expected it to happen so abruptly or so horrifically. His purple-faced death at the hands of Lady Olenna and Littlefinger became one of the show’s most satisfying yet astonishing plot twists.

1. Henry Blake – MASH
The most revolutionary death in television history was from a sitcom, of all things. Lt. Col. Henry Blake, played by McLean Stevenson, at last received his much-anticipated discharge and bid his farewells. And then the kick in the gut: Radar strode into the OR to deliver Henry’s plane had been shot down, and everyone killed. Not even the cast knew the shock until they were on set filming, so the scene was all the more unflinching. It wasn’t a death—just a shift in television narrative.

From Westeros to Seattle Grace, from sitcoms to prestige dramas, these deaths shocked us, broke us, and sometimes even redefined what TV could be. If you’re still not over them, don’t worry—you’re in good company.