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What Animal Can Chinese Vampires Transform Into

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Chinese Vampire

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"End shooting! I'chiliad not a zombie! I'm a jiang shi! I don't even eat people OR their brains!"

The monster called a 'Chinese Vampire' (Simplified: 僵尸; Traditional: 殭屍; Pinyin: Jiāng Shī) has also been translated as a hopping corpse or hopping vampire, among other names. The Standard mandarin name is romanized as jiangshi, usually. Despite the name, they are much closer in nature to the Western concepts of ghouls or zombies than to whatever common depiction of vampires.

Equally the Chinese are proud to claim, the concept of this monster developed independently of Slavic vampires — though there are similarities, such that "Vampire" has often fabricated it into the translated proper name. A typical Chinese Vampire drains life energy, similar the Slavic vamps of old, though more and more jiangshi are draining blood while they're at it due to cantankerous-cultural influence. Behaviour-wise, however, the Chinese Vampire is much more than bestial in its monstrosity than its Slavic analogue; it cannot speak, has pale skin, long claw-like fingernails, and a long prehensile tongue. In what would probably exist a particularly huge display of the Uncanny Valley, it moves past hopping and always has its arms outstretched in rigor mortis. Often a bit on the decayed side, they typically wear shabby robes of the kind worn past the nobility in times gone by — nowadays, Qing Dynasty-style robes are the affair. The modern visual depiction of the Jiangshi as a horrific Qing official may have been derived by the anti-Manchu or anti-Qing sentiments of the Han Chinese population during the Qing Dynasty, every bit the officials were viewed equally bloodthirsty creatures with little regard for humanity. Interestingly, a literal translation of jiangshi is "Stiff Corpse"; being dead, of course, the body is strong from rigor mortis and has to hop as the subtle motions of walking are across it.

In some versions, it detects potential victims by the energy fluctuations acquired past their breathing — one can hibernate, for a while, from one by holding 1's jiff. Some of these stories purport that if 1 manages to suck the creature's dying (and notwithstanding held) breath out of information technology, information technology will fall inanimate and become an ordinary corpse. Sociology may also suggest escaping it by strewing many small objects, such every bit rice, in its path, which information technology would feel compelled to count (much like another vampire, more familiar to western audiences, although this is a common weakness among Slavic Vampires in general besides). Information technology may be controlled with a parchment inscribed with runes placed on its head.

Like Slavic vampires and Anglo zombies, a person drained of life-energy will go another of its kind — minus the robes, of form. Unless they were wearing them at the time.

Typical weaknesses of a jiangshi include the blood of a blackness canis familiaris, a wooden sword made from a peach tree, a hen's egg, viscous rice (by extension of its utilize in the endeavour to draw poisons from a living trunk), and the urine of a virgin boy. In instance you lot were wondering, the archetype Kill It with Fire is unsaid by the text of Zi Bu Yu to piece of work as well. It's been suggested due to the jiangshi's lack of advanced motor function, one could pull off Flipping Helpless on it if information technology was knocked onto its back.

The myth is an out-growth of an earlier legend to the issue that a person who died far from home could be brought back abode for burying, which was greatly preferable, by a Daoist sorcerer or priest'south affixing a parchment with an effective prescription to its forehead and leading it home, often with the accompaniment of a drum to tell it when to hop. Some expanded this into entire of squads of hopping corpses led across the countryside, information technology beingness cheaper that way... though more prone to one'southward getting lost, or undetectedly exceeding the limits of its animating spell and going rogue.

Sub-Trope of Our Vampires Are Unlike. Compare Classical Moving-picture show Vampire and Our Zombies Are Different, Looks Like Orlok. Non to Be Confused with a western-style vampire who is ethnically Chinese.

Incidentally, in Chinese, the word Jiāng Shī is also applied to the Anglo zombies (alongside 丧尸/喪屍 Sàng Shī which exclusively means zombies), while Slavic vampires utilize another term entirely 吸血鬼 (Xī Xuè Guǐ, literally Blood-Sucking Ghost). A Chinese man would find jiangshi to be closer to zombies than vampires.

Not to exist confused with the actual Chinese poet Jiang Shi.


Examples:

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    Animation

  • Kong Kong from Spookiz is one. His talisman enables him to have on the attributes of whatever drawing is placed on information technology.

    Anime & Manga

  • Bloodline: Is a much nicer form of this trope... in a sense. It'south played straight with Chong Yin and Ye Ren in the prequels.
  • Dragon Ball:
    • Chiaotzu appears to be based on these, wearing a Qing Dynasty outfit and having extremely stake skin. His telepathic attacks also require him having his arms outstretched, in a rather jiangshi-esque way.
    • Android 19 besides shares many similarities to them, namely his stake white skin and his absorption of fighters' ki to power himself via stretching his arms out in front of an attack.
  • In Interspecies Reviewers, Zel ends upwards sleeping with one of these when the reviewers (sans Crim) visit the undead brothel Necrowife. He gives her a six out of ten.
  • In Monster Musume, Jiang-shi are a sub-species to zombies, primarily found in Asian countries like China and Taiwan. They tend to suffer from rigor-mortis almost daily, particularly later slumber, locking upwards their elbows and knees, forcing them to practise tai chi every 24-hour interval to open up their joints. Chapter 39 introduced the get-go named jiang-shi in the form of Shiishii.
  • Nanbaka 's Upa dresses like i.
  • Ling-Ling from Rosario + Vampire is a Chinese Jiang Shi, who tin can freely dismember and reassemble herself. She commands an regular army of Zombies, though information technology'southward seen that her "friends" have some degree of independence. She'south likewise capable of using the Jigen-Tou, though she's the least skilled of its three users.
  • The corpse servants of the Tao family in Shaman Rex. Fitting for a Chinese family of shamans. The family tends to impale people with stiff bodies to make full out their army of corpses. Lee Pai-Long, Jun'southward personal retainer, has the total outfit and everything, merely is much less potent, seeing as he'south a Bruce Lee Clone.
  • In one episode of Wan Wan Celeb Soreyuke! Tetsunoshin, Mentum dresses up every bit a jiang shi as office of a horror allure held in a cemetery. While Tetsunoshin has no thought what a jiang shi is, Victoria both knows and is afraid enough of them that she punts Chin clear off-screen purely out of fear.
  • Rin Azuma from Yozakura Quartet is one, though she doesn't quite look the function. In fact, her but vampiric traits seem to be her need to keep a talisman on her person and her vulnerability to a Necromancer'southward mind-command. Also affair-destroying forcefields in the anime.
  • The CMX manga Zombie Fairy features one of these in the championship role.

    Comic Books

  • One Iron Fist series featured Chinese vampire bats who were dressed like traditional jiangshi.
  • Plow upward in Pinnacle 10 as the Triad-counterpart rivals of The Mafia-analogue European vampire mobsters.

    Films — Live-Action

  • One of the blonde heroine'south costume changes in Asian Dynamite is one of these.
  • Crazy Safari, a Hong Kong-made Spin-Off of the The Gods Must Be Crazy (also known as The Gods must exist crazy 3, Vampires Must Exist Crazy). The corpse of a Chinese vampire is bought from an auction and flown with a aeroplane to China in order to give it a proper burial. The plane crashes and a grouping of tribesmen (Bushmen) come up across the vampire, and apply it to get fruit out of a tree, by having it hop into it repeatedly. Yeah.
  • In Fantasy Mission Forcefulness, ane of the many random oddities encountered past the eponymous force while spending a night in a haunted business firm is a bunch of hopping jiangshis.
  • The Taiwanese Jiāngshī Xiǎozi (Jiangshi kid) / Hello Dracula / Kyonshies serial is probably the well-nigh successful jiangshi picture series later on Mr. Vampire, notable for its Child Hero protagonists, recurring undead child characters and more than family unit-friendly tone than its rival series. It had four sequels, a TV show specifically made for Japan and a Straight to Video spin-off series that only fabricated it to the showtime entry.
  • The Jitters, an old movie inspired by Mr. Vampire, involves a jiangshi getting loose in modern America.
  • Child From Kwangtung has a scene where the titular child and a agglomeration of his friends snuck into a funeral parlour in order to steal from a coffin, past dressing themselves as jiangshis. Much to their horror, in the middle of their theft a group of real jiangshi of a sudden enters...
  • The Legend of the 7 Gilded Vampires (1974) is a co-production with Hammer Horror, and features Western and Chinese vampires in the aforementioned film. It has been released cut with various titles such as Seven Brothers Encounter Dracula.
  • Mr. Vampire is the Trope Codifier in modernistic popular civilization, and the first motion-picture show to portray jiangshi as the central villains. It started off a pocket-size craze of supernatural-themed movies in Hong Kong and Taiwan at the fourth dimension from its release to early-mid 90s, and had five sequels (although only the last i, Mr. Vampire 1992, is a direct sequel to the showtime 1).
  • Our Friend Power five: Dalgeun at one point dresses up as a jiangshi, consummate with painting his face a stake purple and wearing a long, colorful robe, all in an effort to scare Mina. When he moves, he fifty-fifty hops around with his arms outstretched. And so, when the turtles see him hopping around, they also transform into jiangshi, thinking that's just how humans are supposed to wait...
  • The 2013 Hong Kong film Rigor Mortis takes on the daunting chore of making a jiangshi actually scary.
  • Chinese vampires occasionally show up in the works of Godfrey Ho merely they take eye stage in Robo Vampire.
  • The Shadow Battle is allegedly the offset Shaw Brothers film to feature the iconic jiangshi. The protagonist is a novice sorceror working at a funeral parlour, whose job consists of transferring bodies from morgues to graveyards past converting them to jiangshis first. A botched spell results in the jiangshi getting loose, and Hilarity Ensues.
  • These feature heavily in the 2004 film Shaolin vs Evil Dead.
  • Another Taiwanese kung-fu movie, Swift Shaolin Boxer (starring Angela Mao) had a cadre of kung fu fighting jiangshisouthward who shows upwardly in one scene and speedily disappears, although they're later revealed to exist a group of rogue martial artists posing as the undead. Their appearance qualifies as a deadline Big-Lipped Alligator Moment. (Yeah, it's a rather incoherent mess of a movie)
  • Ultraman Ginga Due south The Movie: Showdown! The x Ultra Warriors!: Arisa gets assaulted by a horde of these when attempting to infiltrate Etelgar's fortress, since the fortress feeds on her fears and plain jiangshi are what scares her the nigh.
  • This Hong Kong motion picture called Vampire Cleanup Department combines traits of both types.
  • The Hong Kong film Vampire Vs Vampire besides features both types. The jiangshi is a child and friendly (it is shown sucking a lycopersicon esculentum dry rather than drinking claret or lifeforce). The Western vampire is dug out of the ground but associated with an old church. They don't straight fight each other nearly as much as y'all might think from the title.

    Literature

  • A classic example of a hopping corpse is sent to commencement threaten and then attack Geneviève Dieudonné in Kim Newman's Anno Dracula.
  • Quite perhaps the basis of the little-known Asia-based Jade Vampire Courtroom mentioned in The Dresden Files
  • The lurching, strangling, and soul-stealing multifariousness appears in The Story of the Stone. When its manus is cutting off, it continues to strangle our hero, until Ox dumps the lamp over his head and the lamp oil loosens the thing'due south grip enough to pry it off. So the dismembered body keeps moving... Fortunately for all concerned, once the monster'southward grip was broken, information technology lost its power to steal souls. When the fires finally died out, there was nothing getting upwardly again. Too bad the mastermind using said vampire to do his dirty work was still alive... Hugart would afterward use one again, a great deal less climactically, to get-go off the plot of his third book.
  • In South.A. Sidor's Fury From The Tomb, Yong Wu'south parents had been railroad workers until a jiangshi killed them in their tent one nighttime. Though bullheaded, mute, and ghastly to behold, they retain enough of their human emotions to look out for their son'due south welfare, following Yong Wu and his companions on their journey through the desert, feeding on coyotes and other wildlife when they're not discreetly helping out against ghoul banditos and a stolen mummy's curse.
  • This is touched upon in Grandmaster of Demonic Tillage: Mo Dao Zu Shi. The really tall thresholds at the entrances and exits of ancient Chinese bury homes (like a morgue, except storing corpses in coffins and all) is meant to forbid them from getting out. Run into, when the corpse is animated by natural energy, the torso is however undergoing rigor mortis, so it can only hop, and it becomes difficult to hop over the threshold. And so it hops, information technology trips, and information technology falls and stays on the ground until daybreak, where it could be discovered...
  • The Mediochre Q Seth Series sees them used equally Mooks by the Big Bad of Born to Raise the Sons of Earth.
  • One of the curt stories from Foreign Stories from a Chinese Studio, titled "The Blood-Drinking Corpse", has a adult female'south corpse reviving in an inn and going on a killing spree, earlier chasing one of her would-be victims to a garden. Missing a slash with her Femme Fatalons, she ends upwards being Left Stuck Afterward Attack as she embeds her claws into a tree, and is subsequently discovered the next morning, reverted back to a corpse with her fingers still in the bawl.

    Live-Action Boob tube

  • While not nowadays in Blood Ties, they are mentioned by Coreen in reference to "Illuminacion del sol," a sun-shaped weapon that paralyzes a vampire when stuck in his or her breast. Despite the Spanish name, perhaps given by its previous owner Monsignor Javier Mendoza, it was actually created at the request of a Chinese emperor to battle jiangshi. Given that the weapon works on a Western vampire, information technology tin exist causeless that these jiangshi are the same, although the number of supernatural beings in existence in this verse could indicate otherwise.
  • Featured in the initial episodes of Chinese Paladin iii; referred to as zombies.
  • In Choujuu Sentai Liveman, a Monster of the Week transformed the departed souls lingering on Academia Isle into Jiangshi in order to take a private regular army.
  • Forever Knight: Nick Knight is captured by a Chinese acupuncturist who (incorrectly) believes he killed his mother years before. He identifies Nick as a jiangshi.
  • The mook enemies in Juken Sentai Gekiranger, the Rinshi, are based on the jiangshi, though they feed off fear instead of life energy. That and jumping headfirst into cars and making them explode. A Rinshi that passes through the Chamber of Trials is worthy of condign a Monster of the Week. Night Activity Girl principal graphic symbol Mele is a really stiff ane.
    • Bated from parsing the proper name as ii words rather than ane, no pregnant changes seem to be fabricated to the Rin Shi in Gekiranger's adaptation, Power Rangers Jungle Fury.
  • The "Okami" from Supernatural, who looks similar a growling asian teenager who feeds on people. Apparently, since Western vampires must be staked in the chest, Eastern ones must be impaled with a bamboo stake. Vii times. Oh, and the stake must have been blessed past a Shinto priest.
  • What We Do in the Shadows: In "The Orgy", ane of the guests at the Bi-Annual Vampire Orgy that the main characters are hosting is a Chinese hopping vampire. Nadja greets him personally and even refers to him every bit a jiangshi.

    Music

  • RTRT by Mili is about a girl befriending one of these by offer him normal human being food. The 2 go forth great, at least until he gets shot.

    Podcasts

  • One episode of Residents Of Proserpina Park has Terry claiming Alina and her friends to stay in the park overnight. Terry provides them with some jiangshi for protection against the more dangerous residents of the park.

    Tabletop Games

  • All Mankind Must Exist Eaten is mostly geared toward survival horror and monsters in the Romero tradition, merely the Atlas of the Walking Dead supplement features information and stats for various monsters from around the world, including "gyonshi" (alternate romanization). The Gyonshi here is depicted as a blue-gray, visually corpse-like undead created when bad Feng Shui leads to improper chi flows through a graveyard or when Taoist rituals are invoked to deliberately heighten the dead. Largely paralyzed from the waist down, they move only through hopping, and they're blind, hunting through a combination of hearing and the power to odour the breath of the living. They are inhumanly strong and resistant to hurting, and wield claw-like fingers. Their claw (and their bite or natural language, if they have such) carries a dark expletive which afflicts a living person with an uncontrollable hunger for claret, turning them into a kind of "living vampire". They are repulsed or even damaged by string soaked in chicken claret and sticky rice, can be subdued and controlled by Taoist paper charms, and slain by using fire or a sword fabricated of peach forest that has been blest through Taoist ritual. Variable attributes include being smarter than the usual mindless hopping corpse, existence able to hop impossibly high distances or even levitate and get effectually by hovering (usually a effect of the gyonshi having been a Taoist priest or sorcerer in life), having fangs, using a barbed tongue to suck blood, and just being able to move in direct lines, forcing them to stop and reorient themselves if they want to alter management.
  • The Deadlands faction known equally the Maze Rats, which were a gang of mostly Chinese pirates, had one of these, with the instructions to "remove the paper from its forehead and stand back" in example of emergencies.
  • Hungry ghosts from Exalted.
  • I of the many monsters used by the Eaters of the Lotus from the Tabletop RPG Feng Shui. The Architects of the Flesh also employ them, modifying them with Arcanowave technology to go Bouncing Benjys.
  • Announced every bit enemies in the Asian film expansion of Grave Robbers from Outer Infinite.
  • Kindred of the East, an entire roleplaying supplement in the Sometime Globe of Darkness. Calling themselves the Kuei-Jin, they are spirits of the expressionless who fought their way back from one of the 1001 hells and dorsum into their bodies, which they reanimate and keep live by feeding on the chi of other people. In the setting's present day, they're unremarkably involved in turf wars with western vampires. Just people of Asian descent can get Kuei-Jin. Primarily some other instance of the setting'due south many alien religions which are all somehow true and mutually sectional from one some other.
    • And a book for the new line, Vampire: The Requiem, features the jiangshi, ghosts jump to their bodies and graves who seek out the life of the living. It's part of a whole book on things in the setting that are vampiric without being, well, vampires.
  • Ghostrick Jiangshi is a Lighter and Softer version of a Jiangshi in Yu-Gi-Oh!. He can search out his comrades very easily.
    • A straighter example is Chief Kyonshee, a Normal Zombie-Blazon Monster whose proper name is a misspelling of "kyonshi," the Japanese term for a jiangshi. Different Ghostrick Jiangshi, Primary Kyonshee isn't shown hopping, but instead appears equally the revived torso of an Quondam Principal of some kind, put to evil use—the paper over his face reads "Cursed."
  • Dungeons & Dragons has dabbled with the trope before via its Ravenloft setting, which is home to the game'southward widest variety of vampires.
    • The primeval iteration of the Chinese Vampire was the Oriental Vampire in 2nd edition. This is more a weird blend of the standard (Western) Vampire and the Bakeneko and Nekomata, with a sprinkling of Jiangshi. This vampire looks largely like its living self, salve a feral cast to its features, slightly luminescent peel, and that its nails grow into massive claws, which it tends to favor over weaponry. They can't turn into mist, simply can plough invisible and walk through walls. Their gaze paralyses a victim with a mesmeric effect rather than charming them. They can summon insect swarms and bang-up cats to their aid, and transform into tigers. They are repulsed by mirrors, holy symbols, garlands of rosemary & ivy, and the olfactory property of incense of rosemary and myrrh. They lack the ability of the "western" vampire to climb walls like a spider, but can instead levitate at volition, and retain their cousin's lack of a reflection or shadow and their ability to move in complete silence. Nonmagical weapons that strike these vampires do no damage and are destroyed. They must rest in at least a cubic foot of soil from their original burial place at night; if exposed to sunlight, or prevented from sleeping in this grave-soil for nine days in a row, they are destroyed. Staking them through the centre with bamboo renders them inert; killing them requires placing blessed rosemary in the vampire's mouth and and so sewing its mouth and optics shut with golden thread using a silver needle. These vampires are largely associated with the Japanese-based domain of Rokushima Taiyoo and the Bharat-based domain of Sri Raji, in large office due to the setting's only China-based domain, I'Cath, being an uninhabited wasteland.
    • In the 3rd edition reboot, the aforementioned "Oriental Vampire" was renamed the Chiang-Shi, but otherwise remained identical.
    • In the 5th edition reboot, the Jiangshi finally debuted under its accepted proper name. Described equally a soul trapped within its ain corpse, animated past its bitterness, the jiangshi is all but paralyzed by rigor mortis, causing them to hop along with their arms outstretched. They feed on the life energy of others, which sustains them and temporarily limbers upward their bodies, which grants them the ability to fly via levitation at an impressive pace. They tin can freely shapechange into people, animals, and other undead creatures, and are repulsed by mirrors and holy symbols. They are finally associated with I'Cath, which in this iteration of the setting is an bodily populated domain.
    • Adjacent to the Chiang-shi and Jiangshi is the Kizoku, a monster from Rokushima Taiyoo that combines elements of the standard vampire and the incubus; though its modus operandi combines elements of both, it'south not an undead creature. Appearing as handsome Japanese or Chinese men with a small mole in the shape of a black crescent moon somewhere on their torso (typically a mitt or face up), the Kizoku seduce women into committing acts of evil, normally murdering their husband or betrothed, before sucking out their souls. There are some key differences between the 2nd and tertiary edition versions of the monster. In second edition, a Kizoku merely devours the women he corrupts, and can simply be slain permanently by staking him the heart with a stake fabricated from weeping willow wood. In 3rd edition, the women whose lives are drained past the Kizoku are transformed into weeping willows. They tin can be restored by Wish or Phenomenon spells, but if someone who truly loved a Kizoku's victim finds her tree and sacrifices her by cutting it down and fashioning a weapon from its heartwood, that victim can permanently slay the Kizoku, which volition instantly restore all of the Kizoku's other victims to life. The woman whose heartwood was used tin can merely be restored with a Wish or Miracle spell.

    Toys

  • Living Dead Dolls Series 27, a "monsters of the world" collection, includes the Hopping Vampire, who comes with a velcro spell tag which can attach to its caput.

    Video Games

  • The Tale of the Dragon expansion for Age of Mythology allows chinese players who worship Zhong Kui in the Heroic Age to train Jiangshi at their temple. They are adequately stiff myth units with a special attack that drains life from enemy soldiers and restores their own.
  • These are recurring enemies in Alex Kidd and the Enchanted Castle.
  • The Battle Cats features Jiangshi Cat equally the final form of the Pogo Cat family. Its mystic seal is just last month's gas bill. True to its undead nature, information technology gains a Last Run a risk Hit Point that lets it come back from an otherwise-fatal assault.
  • An optional boss in Castlevania: Lodge of Ecclesia is a jiangshi. Surprisingly, it's the simply dominate to not be permanently destroyed after you beat it; it is frozen by a talisman upon defeat, and if you lot attack it again, the talisman will break, causing it to revive and assail you, once more.
  • Hsien-ko (US) / Lei-Lei (Nippon) in the video game Darkstalkers is a Jiang-shi; her sister'due south soul resides in the talisman on her brow to protect Lei-Lei from losing control of her powers. A special movement allows the 2 sisters to carve up momentarily and let Lei Lei enter a kind of reckless state. This is lampshaded in Marvel vs. Capcom iii, where Lei-Lei has to remind Chris and Jill that she'southward completely unlike from the other blazon of undead they're used to dealing with.
  • Jiangshi appeared equally enemies in only one level of Double Dragon Neon. Coincidentally, the same level has undead versions of many previous foes.
  • EXTRAPOWER: Attack of Darkforce: Master Wu's usual method of attack is to raise an army of Jiangshi.
  • The final game of the NES Family Trainer series was "Baby Kyonshi'southward Ladder Chance". A game played using the powerpad in which a child jiangshi attempted to discover his parents. The game, as the title suggests, uses a random ladder based organisation to determine what areas you enter. Aside from the Child Hero, the game also features evil jiangshi as enemies.
  • A few of these appear in The Temple of Eleven'an in Fear Outcome ii: Retro Helix. They are invincible and can paralyze y'all if they hit you.
  • Hachoo! accept chubby jiangshi enemies you can crush up during gameplay.
  • Flying Warriors had jiangshi every bit enemies in the Chinatown level, with a giant jiangshi subboss at its end.
  • Gaia Online has a "Gung Xi" set, for males and females. The shoes are described as "Special shoes congenital for hopping." and all the other items brand references to being for dead Chinese people; it'southward pretty likely they're a straight reference to the Ragnarok Online NPCs.
    • The female gear up in the link has the same color scheme as LeiLei/Hsien-Ko.
  • Genshin Impact: Qiqi is described as a zombie but is based on this trope. She's significantly more than "fresh"-looking than about examples of this trope; if not for the Paper Talisman on her forehead, one could easily fault her for a living person at kickoff glance. Existence undead has also fabricated her immortal, simply she's generally unable to act without being given orders, cannot age past her artless appearance, and cannot brand new memories, causing her to forget everything that happens to her unless she writes things down in a notebook. She also has an exercise regimen required to keep her undead muscles limber.
  • Hades (Yīnyáng pànguān / Yin-yang Judge in Prc), from the Chinese fighting game The Killing Blade, is an unusual example because he merges the standard picture's hero and villain roles into 1, as a mysterious and vengeful Taoist priest that looks and behaves as a jiangshi.
  • From Kingdom Hearts II, we have the Nightwalker Heartless, which is exclusive to The Land of Dragons, Mulan'due south homeworld. Some of them happen to be Shang's ground forces, who succumbed to fatigue subsequently marching to the city from the mountains. It's unknown if they were revived upon defeat, though given Arrangement XIII'southward desire to collect hearts, it's unlikely.
  • Star Wars-based videogame Knights of the Sometime Republic featured Rakhgouls, a kind of low-level monster which were quite close to the real bargain.
  • Kung Fu Chaos has a few of these equally enemies. They spin like a top when touched, shredding players to gory pieces.
  • The Sega Primary System game Kung Fu Kid has kyonshi equally enemies on nearly every level.
  • The Simple 2000 championship The Kyonshi Panic, aka Zombie Attack, involves rescuing survivors from a building infested with Jiang Shi.
  • In the levels Ruins and Dungeon of Legend Of Hero Tonma, jiangshi bound from coffins. They wear hats that looks more similar pirate ones than the usual Qing ones. The hat completely obscure their faces, except for their Glowing Eyes of Doom.
  • Konami's fighting game Martial Champion has a generic jiangshi character named Titi (Chaos in Nippon), although in his ending he becomes an expy of Edward Scissorhands. For some reason, he's equipped with Wolverine Claws, which is kind of foreign since only half of the bandage wields weapons and jiangshi tend to use their ain nails as weapons. The game'southward engine lets him equip other characters' weapons such as nunchucks or scimitars, though.
  • Li Lin, one of the playable chqracters from Metallic Slug Attack, in a jiangshi who's part of the undead faction.
  • Though this image of him has faded from Mortal Kombat Two onward, the first appearance of Shang Tsung from Mortal Kombat matched this trope well. A pale, wizened former homo, he looked like a corpse; he didn't hop, simply instead floated off the ground. And wouldn't you know it, his whole modus operandi is stealing souls.
    • Liu Kang also counts also, since he's killed off past Shang Tsung in Mortiferous Alliance and his body was resurrected by Raiden as a Jiangshi (Chinese zombie) monk in Deception, consummate with a pair of enchanted Houan bondage acting as a talisman.
  • La-Mulana has jiangshi as minor enemies in the Endless Corridor.
  • Tenhou from Ninja Master's - Hao Ninpo Cho is blatantly based on Lam Ching-ying'south stock Taoist jiangshi hunter of the 80s-90s films, downwards to the paper seals, wooden sword and bagua mirror.
  • A family unit of them appear in Onmyōji, merely unlike most examples, they do take intelligence, are capable of spoken communication and are one of the expert characters. Oh, and they don't suck life either, that laurels goes to a number of other characters including a Western-style vampire.
  • Overwatch has the trope name as a special pare for Mei that tin just ever be obtained from lootboxes during Halloween flavor.
  • Phantom Fighter puts you in the role of a traveling monk who goes around fighting jiangshi (or "Kyonshies" as the game calls them- the Japanese pronunciation of the Chinese characters for jiangshi). It'southward also notable for the fact that, with a special detail, an Undead Child Jiangshi is playable. Phantom Fighter was originally a video game adaptation of Mr. Vampire, which was pop in Nippon for a while.
  • In Putty, the Oriental level has caped Chinese Vampires that hop effectually and drop other enemies.
  • The main humanoid monsters in the old PC FPS, Raising Dead, curiously resembles the traditional jiangshi, having pale-white skin and clad in Manhurian robes.
  • Ragnarok Online has male person (Bongun) and female person (Munak) versions. They bounce to movement. Subsequently expansion adds a bishonen one, Yao Jun. Bongun, Munak, and he have a rather sad little love triangle plot. Equally usual with monsters in Ragnarok Online, yous tin can tame them as pets (Bongun and Munak are tamed with love letters and diaries from each other) and get their hats.
  • Jiangshi shows upward every bit Elite Mook enemies in Sega Aureate Gun, a runway-shooter dealing with a zombie apocalypse in Beijing.
  • Reikai Doushi is a pre-Street Fighter II fighting game, mostly remembered for its digitized puppet sprites, where a Taoist priest fights against viii jiangshi, nearly notably an axe-wielding Qin Shi Huangdi, a birdlike Genghis Khan, an undead Yang Guifei, and other enemies with punny names based on Mao Zedong, Chiang Kai-shek or Xuanzang.
  • RuneScape: A Jiangshi is an extremely dangerous blazon of undead that is capable of causing a Zombie Apocalypse. It feeds by draining energy from the living, but if a victim survives being drained they are cursed to slowly turn into a zombie like animal that also feeds on life free energy and tin can spread the same curse to others. The curse tin can but exist cured by having the necromancer that created the Jianshi put it to residue, and if is destroyed by whatever other means so all the zombies dice.
  • Shadowrun Returns (specifically, Hong Kong) has Ku Feng, a vampire. As the game is set in Hong Kong, upon encountering her, your grapheme has the pick of snarkily pointing out that she should be hopping, not walking.
  • In Shining Forcefulness III, i of the maps has you in a grave 1000 surrounded by zombified villagers who insist on hoping everywhere. You can kill them, just doing then would keep them from existence cured and plow the town into a literal ghost town. Luckily, a friendly monk who was just passing by joins your party and has a special power to cure them.
  • Sleeping Dogs "Nightmare in North Signal" DLC features jiangshi. Wei has to beat them up to get enough magic power to defeat the yaoguai, and throw them into the Mook Maker to seal it.
  • Sly three: Honor Amidst Thieves has praying mantis jiangshi revived by black magic.
  • A detail level in Spelunky features jiangshi every bit relatively weak enemies in a graveyard. There are female Jiangshi Assassins in Spelunky 2, who are more mobile and can flip their own gravity.
  • Splatoon ii held a special Halloween holiday event called Splatoween, during which players could recieve new Halloween-themed gear, such as a headband with devil horns or a hockey mask. One of these new gear items that stands out is the Kyonshi Hat, which is the Chinese Vampire'due south characteristic round hat and paper talisman.
  • Super Chinese Fighter, a fighting game spin-off of Super Chinese World 2, adds 4 new characters to the serial based on the jiangshi films: the vampire Kyonkyonshi, the taoist jiangshi hunter Poi (based on the typical Lam Ching-ying hero role), his granddaughter Rinrin and fake jiangshi boy Bokuchin, the latter two being based on the child protagonists of the Hello Dracula film series.
  • Super Mario State has a jiang-shi enemy named Pionpi as the game's equivalent of Dry Bones; jumping on information technology squishes it, only it'll popular support afterward a short while.
  • This is ane of Rufus'due south alternate costumes in Super Street Fighter Iv.
  • The Capcom side-scrolling shell 'em up Tiger Road had jiangshi enemies on one level.
  • Since jiangshi are hopping Chinese vampires, Touhou Project fans once quipped that Supernatural Martial Arts Anime Chinese Girl Hong Meiling - who premiered in a game of 2 final boss vampires - may Expy one. She doesn't get this equally much anymore since fans at present equate her to dragons.
    • Thanks to 10 Desires, we now have an actual jiangshi/kyonshi in Yoshika Miyako; she is, nevertheless, presented in a way more than reminiscent of an American zombie. Justified considering of how much more common the typical zombie interpretation is, and Gensokyo literally runs on fantasy (although she is unable to bend her arms).
  • Vampire: The Masquerade – Bloodlines' plot revolves effectually a conflict between archetype Western vampires and Jiangshi, with the latter every bit the bad guys and the former as the good guys. Well, for a given value of "good", anyhow. The game is based on the Old Earth of Darkness universe, and then y'all may want to check out the Kindred of the East entry on this page for more than info.
  • Vice: Project Doom besides had a Chinatown level with jiangshi in it.
  • In the Zombies, Run! Halloween mission Wai Chu Xiao Xin, The Virus has turned the residents of Chinatown into jiangshi. Sam tries to remember the stories his grandfather used to tell him well-nigh how to defeat jiangshi, and luckily Sam and Five are in Chinatown to option up cooking supplies...

    Western Animation

  • The Jackie Chan Adventures episode "Chi of the Vampire" revolves around a Chinese Vampire every bit the Monster of the Week. The Jiangshi drains chi via green beams of calorie-free from his victims' eyes, which will turn them into his vampire minions if left untreated. He has most of the usual weaknesses, simply loses them when he has drained enough chi. Jackie gets frustrated when he learns how bizarre the methods of fighting these vampires are.
  • I episode of Kung Fu Panda: Legends of Awesomeness features these. For the almost part, they're a pretty accurate depiction, though they do eat brains instead of chi.
  • In My Life as a Teenage Robot, XJ9 a.k.a. Jenny goes to Nippon and battles a horde of these. They disappear into a puff of smoke when bonked on the head.
  • Jiangshi are featured in the Three Commitment episode of the same name.

    Real Life

  • Jiangshi stories originated in the Qing dynasty, when many workers were conscripted to work on arduous foreign projects. As such, many of them died, with families requesting for the corpses to exist returned dwelling for burial. Transporting corpses without government permission was illegal, and so it was done at dark by tying corpses to the backs of workers, creating the impression of a hopping, nocturnal corpse.

Menmen

While visiting the undead brothel, Zel asks for the jiangshi.

Alternative Title(s): Jiangshi

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

Posted by: arnoldtherstion1975.blogspot.com

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