According to Derek Hale , Kitsunes have auras that they learn to conceal as they grow. It is shaped like a fox with large pointed ears and muzzle. In Season 5 , the aura is revealed to be a manifestation of the fox spirit within their human body that can take control at will if it becomes stronger than the human in mentality and power. It can be seen with digital photographs and by those with enhanced vision like a Werewolf.
Traditionally, tails are symbols of how powerful kitsunes are. They appear to only have nine tails. Tails are achieved when a kitsune becomes more powerful. For example, Kira got her first tail from a piece of obsidian in Mexico that she used to unlock her healing ability. The age of the "tail" also denotes its power level such as. The older it is, the more potent in power it is.
Somehow, kitsunes can be represented in physical items like Noshiko's knives or Kira's hira-shuriken. This transformation of "tails" into the physical knives went unexplained during Season 3. Destroying a tail weakens a kitsune's powers regardless of the intent. It appears to allow certain magic to be performed such as Noshiko summoning Oni or when Void Stiles used one to take control of the demons.
Her tails were broken from most recent to the oldest due to the older tails being stronger Letharia Vulpina , Insatiable. She explains that, according to myth, when a Kitsune rubs its tails together it can create fire or lightning called "foxfire.
The most famous Japanese fox wife is Kuzunoha , the mother of strong magic user Abe no Seimei. When rain is falling on a clear sky, Japanese people say two kitsune are getting married.
Of course, this is considered to be a good omen. Maybe the idea of having a Japanese kitsune near you is not appealing at all.
Or perhaps someone you know is possessed by a Japanese kitsune. Here is a handy step-by-step guide to recognize and expel an unwanted kitsune, according to Japanese folklore. If none of these steps seem to work, bring your friend to your local Inari shrine, and they will take care of it. There are not many tips on how to attract a Japanese kitsune in case you want a devoted kitsune wife. However, to attract a kitsune, try leaving some fried tofu on your doorstep. Of course, you could also spend some time at an Inari Shrine in Japan and see if you can find a kitsune.
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Get help. Password recovery. Basic Japanese Fox Abilities Japanese kitsune are shapeshifters. Japanese Kitsune Romance Not every non-divine Japanese kitsune is a trickster. How to get rid of a Japanese Kitsune Maybe the idea of having a Japanese kitsune near you is not appealing at all. Are their eyes a different color?
Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation : One of the film's extras is a female, posh-looking kitsune, being the only Eastern creature among a cast made up entirely of Western monsters. White Snake : The owner of the Precious Jade Workshop is a fox-demon appearing as a child-sized woman with a human face on one side of her head and a fox face on the other.
She returns in the sequel as a more prominent character, and at one point even transforms into her true form — a colossal nine-tailed fox. Film — Live-Action. One of the three sons of the elderly Great Lord has a wife who is clearly manipulating him to his downfall. She has her husband send his right hand man off to kill a rival woman and return with her head encased in salt.
The would-be assassin takes a page from Zhuge Liang and returns telling a tall tale about how he beheaded a kitsune. He opens his satchel and reveals the head of a kitsune statue, then curses the "demon" who got away, likes to disguise itself as a beautiful woman, and seeks to corrupt and ruin men.
The wife reacts with fury. Sadly, the son does nothing. It doesn't end well. Akira Kurosawa's Dreams has a segment in which a little boy wanders into the woods and seeks a kitsune wedding procession. Specific Films 47 Ronin : Witch is a malevolent kitsune with heterochromia who serves as The Dragon to the main antagonist.
Painted Skin stars a malicious nine-tailed huli jing named Xiao Wei, who maintains her youthful human form by eating men's hearts, but who falls in love with a human general who saves her life. She conspires to take the place of his wife, and nearly succeeds, but ultimately sacrifices her power in order to undo the damage she caused. In the sequel, set years later, she escapes the glacier she was imprisoned in and conspires to become a human by getting a human to willfully give her their heart during a solar eclipse , initiating a love triangle between herself, a Rebellious Princess with a scarred visage , and the princess' Bodyguard Crush to accomplish this.
FX has three tails and is pretty weak though he eventually earns a two-tail upgrade for extreme valor. Ako has nine tails. She's also "the bearer of some of the most noble blood Under- or Above- Hill.
One makes a brief yet important appearance in the Tales of the Five Hundred Kingdoms series in Fortune's Fool , giving the female lead a magic paper crane that comes in handy. Specific works In American Gods , also by Neil Gaiman , some background characters are implied to be kitsune; during the battle between the old gods and the American Gods, two Asian women are killed and upon dying they turn into foxes.
Fengshen Yanyi : Daji is presented as one of the main antagonists, a sadistic nine-tailed fox-demon sent by the goddess Nu Wa to punish King Zhou for his blasphemy towards her.
Fox Demon Cultivation Manual : The titular fox demons are huli-jing , the Chinese equivalent of kitsune. Rong Bai is a nine-tailed fox spirit, and through drinking his blood Song Ci also becomes a fox spirit though he has fewer tails than Rong Bai.
Kij Johnson wrote a short story about a Japanese fox spirit and it was so popular that she later expanded it into a full novel, Fox Woman , after doing extensive research to make it historically accurate. In Fudoki , another novel by Johnson, a male kistune plays an important role as part of a warband that the main character joins. Despite actually being named Kitsune, no one except the main character seems to realize his true nature.
In the Goosebumps book Return to Ghost Camp, the snatcher is fox-like ghost that murders one camper from Camp Full Moon each year and can shape-shift into a human to fool its victims. In the former, Silver Snow's maid is a kitsune, while in the latter it's left ambiguous as to whether any of the characters are literally kitsune, but the trope is at least toyed with. In Journey to the West there are two notable fox demons, and one of them is even a nine-tailed vixen.
They're the uncle and mother of the two demon kings Kinkaku and Ginkaku, making them half- huli jing demons though they're usually depicted as massive oni-like monsters. In a case perhaps of Unbuilt Trope , the mother is actually an old crone, while the uncle Hu Aqi isn't much of a trickster but rather a ferocious warrior who fights with an halberd.
A more classical vixen demon reappears later as the mistress of Niumowang, the Ox Demon King. Additionally, another fox spirit appears near the end in the form of the concubine of a human king secretly making him sick and then manipulating him to order the creation of a fake medicine using the hearts of children.
Celia persuades Poppet to ride it, rather than the gryphon, by telling its story. In The Machineries of Empire , a nine-tailed fox - called a ninefox or an eyefox note it has eyes on each of its tails - is the symbol of the Shuos faction, comprised of assassins, spies and saboteurs with love of games. In The Night Mothers Heir Ink Drop is a Kitsune, he has the ability to transform ito different things depending on how many tails he has.
Technically she's half human, but she has the same powers and abilities as a full-blood kitsune and is treated as one by everyone else. However she has only one tail, nine-tailed fox-spirits are mythological in that world though at one point she casts a shadow that seems to have multiple tails , and can only assume three specific forms: a Talking Animal fox, a "fur" form halfway between fox and human, and a third that looks almost human save for her pointed ears and tail.
Other animal spirits seen can assume similar forms. Brandon Sanderson 's Starsight has the kitsen, talking foxlike aliens that were the origin of Earth's kitsune myths, when some of them with the ability to teleport between planets ended up in medieval Japan. Wearing the Cape : Officially, Japanese superspy Kitsune is a Breakthrough with powers that perfectly mimic the mythological kitsune.
Or maybe he's a delusional Breakthrough who truly believes he's a kitsune. Or maybe he's a projection produced by another Breakthrough, a self-sustaining supernatural entity that sprung out of a dying man's wish for a guardian kitsune. Or maybe he really is a kitsune , centuries old and only returned to the world recently, and magic is real after all. The one thing that's clear is that he finds it hilarious to keep people guessing. Specifically, he is a snow fox who lived long enough and grew powerful enough to gain human intelligence.
He is a master of light and dream madra , and the Wei clan follows in his footsteps, practicing the Path of the White Fox.
Elder Whisper acts as a Stealth Mentor for Lindon early on, pushing him to improve himself despite the rest of the clan telling him he's worthless. Live-Action TV. The Fuchsbau Wesen in Grimm are very similar to Kitsunes. There is also a type of Wesen known as Kitsune, and according to legend, are one of the very few Wesens to have a tail—nine, in fact.
Several kitsune show up among the various fae in Lost Girl , though it's constantly mispronounced as "kit-soon". Perhaps unsurprisingly, the portrayal of the creature is almost wholly inaccurate.
Here, the kitsune is presented as a being of human appearance with the ability to transform its hands into deadly claws.
Amy and others like her must feed on human brains in order to survive and can only be killed with a stab to the heart. About the only thing the show's kitsune have in common with the mythical creature is their foxlike eyes. Super Sentai Kyuemon Izayoi from Shuriken Sentai Ninninger , who fits the trickster archetype because he's extremely secretive, manipulative, and you never really know where his loyalties lie until late in the series, where it turns out he's Big Bad Gengetsu Kibaoni's firstborn son.
Kitsune have appeared as a Monster of the Week in certain series: Kagaku Sentai Dynaman : Fox Evo, while nominally based on a normal fox, possesses many of the magical powers associated with kitsune like shapeshifting and illusions.
Ninja Sentai Kakuranger featured a nine-tailed kitsune who wrapped most of her tails around her body like feather boas. Samurai Sentai Shinkenger : The ayakashi Isagitsune is based on kitsune and In-Universe is the basis for them , which is exemplified by the array of magic spells that he uses to befuddle and overpower the Shinkengers.
He appeared in Power Rangers Samurai as Vulpes. On Teen Wolf , the second half of the third season deals with kitsune mythology. Kira Yukimura is revealed to be a kitsune and possesses a golden spiritual aura in the shape of a fox.
In keeping with the idea that the kitsune can create fire or lightning by rubbing its tails together, Kira has the ability to manipulate electrical currents. Her mother has these powers as well. There are said to be 13 different types of kitsune, including the nogitsune — a trickster spirit that feeds on chaos, strife and pain. The latter seems to currently be in possession of Stiles' body. Appropriately for a series inspired by Japanese fairy tales, Ultraman Taro had a kitsune kaiju called Migeon as a Monster of the Week.
While its appearance was rather reptilian for a fox, Miegon possessed all the qualities one would expect, like nine tails, illusory tricks, and various fire-based abilities.
The kitsune is a recurring motif for Japanese band Babymetal , and is the main theme for the song "Megitsune". Which has the narrator falling for a girl who turns out to be a Kitsune, and disappears in fox form every now and then.
Until she gets run over by a car while in that form. The ending is somewhat ambiguous as to whether she survives or not. In Akiko Shikata 's song "Otoshimono" from her album Wokashi , a girl speaks of her brother who was taken by foxes as a child, and apparently turned into a kitsune himself.
Mythology and Religion. Chinese Mythology : Daji — featured as an antagonist in the Fengshen Yanyi — was a woman possessed by a sadistic nine-tailed fox who became the favorite consort of King Zhou of Shang and brought about the downfall of his dynasty to the point that fox cults were outlawed in China.
According to legend, a noble named Abe no Yasuna was travelling to Shinoda shrine when he came across a hunter who had trapped a white fox, intending to harvest its liver for medicine. Yasuna fought off the hunter and freed the fox, but was wounded in the process. A beautiful young woman named Kuzunoha appeared and helped him to his home, and they eventually married and had a son, Seimei.
Eventually, Kuzunoha is revealed to be the fox that Yasuna saved, but due to her true nature having been revealed she must return to the forest. She leaves a poem asking Yasuna and Seimei to come find her, and it is revealed she is the kami of Shinoda shrine, bestowing Seimei with the power to understand animals.
The earliest version of the narrative had the fox-spirit commit suicide out of despair, and some later iterations have Kuzunoha be a human woman who Yasuna was in love with, and who the kitsune impersonates to woo him.
The gender-ambiguous and occasionally tripartite kami Inari has white kitsune as servants, and is often depicted as being one - though this is discouraged by Shinto and Buddhist priests. Due to Inari's close association with kitsune, shrines and temples dedicated to them have statues of foxes wearing red votive bibs. Warring States period warlord Shingen Takeda is said to have caused the downfall of his clan by forcibly marrying a kitsune in human form.
Tamamo-no-Mae was a beautiful fortune teller who could answer any question, and whose beauty was never tarnished. The Emperor Konoe fell in love with her and made her one of his courtesans, but after several years the Emperor fell seriously ill.
Eventually, Abe no Yasuchika, an onmyoji descended from Abe no Seimei, told him that Tamamo was a powerful kitsune — in later versions the same fox-spirit as Daji from the Fengshen Yanyi — that had been poisoning him - though whether she was doing so willingly or on the orders of an evil daimyo hoping to usurp the throne depends on the version being told. Her identity exposed, Tamamo fled, and the Emperor sent Kazusa-no-suke and Miura-no-suke, the two most powerful warriors in Japan, to kill her.
Kazusa-no-suke and Miura-no-suke tracked Tamamo to the Nara plains, but she evaded them for days. Tamamo appeared to Miura-no-suke in a dream, prophesying he would kill her and pleading for her life, but the following day Miura-no-suke shot and killed her.
In the original narrative Tamamo's body was taken to Edo and miraculous treasures were found inside, but in later iterations it became a cursed stone called the Sessho-seki Killing Stone and Tamamo's spirit an onryo who haunted it. In an addendum to the tale written in , Tamamo-no-Mae was eventually exorcized by a Buddhist monk named Genno, allowing her to pass on in peace. In some versions, the Sessho-seki was shattered and its pieces scattered across Japan, manifesting as lesser kitsune called kuda-gitsune and other yokai.
From Wikipedia : One of the oldest surviving kitsune tales provides a widely known folk etymology of the word kitsune. Unlike most tales of kitsune who become human and marry human males, this one does not end tragically: ''Ono, an inhabitant of Mino says an ancient Japanese legend of A.
He met her one evening on a vast moor and married her. Simultaneously with the birth of their son, Ono's dog was delivered of a pup which as it grew up became more and more hostile to the lady of the moors.
She begged her husband to kill it, but he refused. At last one day the dog attacked her so furiously that she lost courage, resumed vulpine shape, leaped over a fence and fled. Come back when you please; you will always be welcome. In classical Japanese, kitsu-ne means come and sleep, and ki-tsune means always comes. Kitsune keep their promises and strive to repay any favor. Occasionally a kitsune attaches itself to a person or household, where they can cause all sorts of mischief.
In one story from the 12th century, only the homeowner's threat to exterminate the foxes convinces them to behave. The kitsune patriarch appears in the man's dreams: "My father lived here before me, sir, and by now I have many children and grandchildren.
They get into a lot of mischief, I'm afraid, and I'm always after them to stop, but they never listen. And now, sir, you're understandably fed up with us. I gather that you're going to kill us all. But I just want you to know, sir, how sorry I am that this is our last night of life.
Won't you pardon us, one more time? If we ever make trouble again, then of course you must act as you think best. We'll do everything we can to protect you from now on, if only you'll forgive us, and we'll be sure to let you know when anything good is going to happen! To Inari Daimyojin, My lord, I have the honor to inform you that one of the foxes under your jurisdiction has bewitched one of my servants, causing her and others a great deal of trouble.
I have to request that you make minute inquiries into the matter, and endeavor to find out the reason of your subject misbehaving in this way, and let me know the result. If it turns out that the fox has no adequate reason to give for his behavior, you are to arrest and punish him at once. If you hesitate to take action in this matter I shall issue orders for the destruction of every fox in the land.
Any other particulars that you may wish to be informed of in reference to what has occurred, you can learn from the high priest of Yoshida. Tabletop Games. Kitsunemori , a 3rd edition supplement, is a campaign setting with kitsune as a playable race. They can shift between their true humanoid fox form and a specific human one, can gain the abilities to outright change into foxes or humans they have met , have some degree of innate magical ability , and tend to be neutrally-aligned Shapeshifting Tricksters.
However, only nogitsune kitsune women who have been possessed by spirit oni and corrupted into murderous vamps have been confirmed to have multiple tails. The Pathfinder Advanced Race Guide includes a new Kitsune-Only Feat called Magical Tail that gives the Kitsune a new tail each time it's taken and a new magical ability to go along with it.
RuneQuest : Fox women are magical shape-changers, spend most of their time in their animal forms and occasionally change into their human forms.
As humans, fox women are legendary for their beauty and lust, and they often seduce human males. They are described as the youngest of the Changing Breeds, and are the most spiritually inclined. While physically weakest, they are skilled in elemental sorcery as well as paper-themed origami sorcery. As a character goes up in rank, their vulpine forms grow additional tails, generally up to five the games' level cap , but the legendary Bai Mianxi got up to nine tails.
In Chronicles of Darkness , the kitsune are a type of fox-spirit. Due to Father Wolf coercing their progenitor Inari to reign them in during the ancient times they're divided into two factions, benign Inari Seha obedient foxes of Inari and malevolent Inari Kihar foxes who abandoned Inari.
They are most commonly encountered as allies or enemies of werewolves depending on faction , but kitsune bonded to human hosts are playable. The Tsukiuta stage plays feature Hajime and Shun as Kurotenko and Shirotenko, majestic four-tailed Little Bit Beastly figures who seem to act as rulers of the ayakashi realm.
However, with the movie's cancellation, she was unable to properly join either franchise. Video Games.
AdventureQuest Worlds : The fourth lord of Chaos, the Chaos Shogun appropriately named Kitsune, can shapeshift into a giant purple seven-tailed kitsune.
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