How Does Glenn Die In The Walking Dead, And Who Kills Him?

2025-10-31 14:07:27 198

4 Answers

George
George
2025-11-03 09:05:14
Watching the scene unfold live, I felt my jaw drop and my cheeks go hot. In both the comic run and the TV adaptation of 'The Walking Dead', Glenn is ultimately killed by Negan, who uses his bat Lucille to bludgeon him. On TV, the Season 7 premiere shows Negan first deciding to kill Abraham and then turning to Glenn, delivering the fatal blows in front of Rick’s group. It’s meant to be total domination — a lesson in fear. For folks who followed only the show, there was also that earlier near-death trick where Glenn seemed to die in a dumpster at the end of Season 6 but was later revealed to be alive — which made his later death feel even crueler. The scene is infamous because of how sudden and savage it is; I couldn’t help but replay it in my head for days, even though it was painful to watch.
Zane
Zane
2025-11-03 10:21:48
That scene still stings every time I watch it, probably because it’s one of those TV moments that refuses to let you look away. In the TV version of 'The Walking Dead', Glenn dies in the Season 7 premiere when Negan executes him with his barbed-wire-wrapped baseball bat, Lucille. The moment is brutal and staged as a power play — Negan kills Abraham first and then smashes Glenn’s skull, doing it right in front of the group to break them. It’s traumatic on purpose and plays as a devastating punctuation to the cliffhanger the show set up.

There’s an extra layer of cruelty in TV continuity because Glenn had already gone through a fake-out at the end of Season 6: he appeared to have been impaled and left for dead in a dumpster, but was revealed to have survived. That survival made his eventual death at Negan’s hands feel like an even harsher betrayal to viewers. In the comics Glenn’s end is similarly violent — he’s also killed by Negan with Lucille — but the exact beats differ. I still feel a pit in my stomach thinking about it.
Tessa
Tessa
2025-11-04 00:16:36
Seeing Glenn go down was one of those moments that made me hate the villain in a way that lasts. In both the comic and the TV show 'The Walking Dead', Glenn is killed by Negan with his bat Lucille — a blunt, filthy instrument that becomes a symbol of cruelty. On-screen it’s especially cruel because Glenn had survived a separate near-death bit earlier (that dumpster sequence), so the audience had hope, and then it all gets ripped away.

It’s not just the physical act but the theatricality: Negan is performing dominance, and the group is forced to watch. I still think about how the writers used that to change the tone of everything that followed.
Chloe
Chloe
2025-11-04 17:10:10
In the pages of the comic and on-screen in 'The Walking Dead', the perpetrator is the same: Negan. He kills Glenn by bludgeoning him with his signature barbed-wire-wrapped bat, Lucille. The comic’s depiction is graphically harrowing and serves as a major turning point, and the show mirrors that brutality in its own way when the Season 7 premiere stages the murders as public executions to cow Rick’s group. If you follow the TV continuity, remember there’s a misleading moment at the end of Season 6 where Glenn seems to have been killed and thrown in a dumpster — that was a narrow escape then, but his eventual end at Negan’s hands is real and irreversible.

Beyond the mechanics of the death, these scenes function narratively to show what Negan’s rule looks like: theatrical, personal, and meant to traumatize. Reading the comic and seeing the show back-to-back gives a fuller sense of how the creators adapted the shock value; both left me unsettled and oddly impressed by the storytelling nerve.
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