For a GGHC you need 2 sets of arms (not yours), 1 pair of legs (again not yours), and a skull (DEFINITELY not yours). None of these body parts should be yours.
Step 1: Look for 4 arms you want and chop them off someone. They'll be screaming in pain as they bleed out. You may want to put them out of their misery so they shut up! Or let them suffer not your problem. Once you do that go to some shack where you won't get caught. Leave the 4 new arms there proceed to step 2.
Step 2: Look for a pair of legs that you want. These should match your arms but it'd be funer to get all of these parts from different people. Cut this person in half horizontally and take their legs. It'd be more realistic if it were a male. But cut their dick off. You have your own so you don't need theirs. When done take this to the same shack as you did in step 1. Leave the new legs there proceed to step 3.
Step 3: This's the final/hardest step. You need to take somebody's head. This'll kill them so look for a black jewish gay man. They need to die! Once you find the BJGM kill him. Decapitate him before showing mercy. When he's dead and headless shave the head down to just the skull. Take the skull to the same shack as the previous steps.
To finish you GGHC you need to put these parts all together. So sew the 4 arms ontop of eachother. Then sew the arm set of 4 to the 2 legs. That will create the body. Finally enter the body and wear the skull like Grievous. Rule #1: Never get caught. Happy Halloween!
Step 1: Look for 4 arms you want and chop them off someone. They'll be screaming in pain as they bleed out. You may want to put them out of their misery so they shut up! Or let them suffer not your problem. Once you do that go to some shack where you won't get caught. Leave the 4 new arms there proceed to step 2.
Step 2: Look for a pair of legs that you want. These should match your arms but it'd be funer to get all of these parts from different people. Cut this person in half horizontally and take their legs. It'd be more realistic if it were a male. But cut their dick off. You have your own so you don't need theirs. When done take this to the same shack as you did in step 1. Leave the new legs there proceed to step 3.
Step 3: This's the final/hardest step. You need to take somebody's head. This'll kill them so look for a black jewish gay man. They need to die! Once you find the BJGM kill him. Decapitate him before showing mercy. When he's dead and headless shave the head down to just the skull. Take the skull to the same shack as the previous steps.
To finish you GGHC you need to put these parts all together. So sew the 4 arms ontop of eachother. Then sew the arm set of 4 to the 2 legs. That will create the body. Finally enter the body and wear the skull like Grievous. Rule #1: Never get caught. Happy Halloween!
Person A "I've built a General Grievous Halloween Costume for Halloween!"
Person B "What do you mean 'you've built'? What parts did you use?"
Person A "It would be better if you didn't know. But it looks sick!"
Person B "What do you mean 'you've built'? What parts did you use?"
Person A "It would be better if you didn't know. But it looks sick!"
by Best User On Urban Dictionary September 16, 2025
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Get the Testicular grievous bodily harm mug.Related Words
by yrgh October 5, 2025
Get the Vaginal grievous bodily harm mug.A feeling of emptiness or void after watching a show or movie that would have typically occupied your time and knowing that it ended and knowing all the characters will never be seen again.
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Get the Post-show grievance mug.A fallacy that dismisses legitimate grievances by comparing them to supposedly worse grievances elsewhere. "You think you have problems? What about X?" The fallacy doesn't address the grievance itself; it just points to someone else's greater suffering as if that negates the original complaint. It's the logic of "children are starving in Africa, so you can't complain about your job." The Fallacy of Relative Grievance is beloved of those who want to shut down discussion rather than engage with it, who would rather change the subject than address the issue. It ignores that multiple grievances can coexist, that suffering is not a zero-sum game, and that pointing to worse problems elsewhere doesn't solve the problem here.
Example: "She complained about workplace harassment. He responded with the Fallacy of Relative Grievance: 'Women in other countries can't even go to school. You should be grateful.' Her harassment wasn't addressed; it was just relativized away. The comparison didn't help her; it silenced her. That was the point."
by Dumu The Void February 20, 2026
Get the Fallacy of Relative Grievance mug.A fallacy that treats all grievances as equally valid—or equally invalid—by refusing to make distinctions of scale, context, or severity. The fallacy flattens all complaints into a single category, making it impossible to prioritize, to distinguish urgent from trivial, or to allocate attention appropriately. It's the logic of "everyone has problems, so your problem doesn't matter," of "both sides have grievances, so both are equally wrong." The Fallacy of Absolute Grievance is beloved of false-balance merchants and those who want to avoid taking sides. It ignores that some grievances are matters of life and death while others are matters of inconvenience, and that treating them as equivalent is itself a form of violence.
Example: "He responded to her account of systemic racism with the Fallacy of Absolute Grievance: 'Everyone faces discrimination. White people have problems too.' The equivalence was false, the balance manufactured. Her centuries of oppression were flattened into 'everyone has problems,' and suddenly no one had to do anything. Absolute grievance had made action impossible."
by Dumu The Void February 20, 2026
Get the Fallacy of Absolute Grievance mug.A fallacy that treats a grievance as if it existed in isolation from its context, from related grievances, from historical patterns. The fallacy presents a single incident as if it were the whole story, or dismisses a pattern by focusing on a single counterexample. It's the logic of "one minority succeeded, so discrimination doesn't exist," of "one bad experience doesn't prove systemic racism." The Fallacy of Isolated Grievance allows its user to dismiss systemic problems by pointing to exceptions, to deny patterns by focusing on particulars. It's the favorite fallacy of those who don't want to see the forest for the trees, because the forest would require action.
Example: "She presented decades of data showing housing discrimination. He responded with the Fallacy of Isolated Grievance: 'But my neighbor is Black and he owns his house. Checkmate.' One data point, isolated from the pattern, used to dismiss the whole. The data didn't matter; the exception was all he needed. The fallacy had done its work: making the systemic invisible."
by Dumu The Void February 20, 2026
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