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  • Thank You Ben for the suggestion! Welcome to Top10Archive! From a creature with eyes

  • for hands, to river children you should play tricks one; in this installment, we're going

  • to visit 10 unique, unusual and perhaps the most popular creatures from Japanese Mythology!

  • 10. Kuchisake Onna The Kuchisake Onna, or slit-mouthed woman,

  • was once a beautiful woman who was murdered in a grotesque and violent way; returning

  • as a spirit to seek her retribution upon the world for allowing such an act to happen.

  • It is said she'll appear as a beautiful woman who hides her face behind a mask in an attempt

  • to disguise her two deep and bloody gashes; each of which stretch from mouth to ear on

  • both sides of her face. Kuchisake Onna stalks her victims in the shroud of darkness, revealing

  • herself to ask her prey if they think she is pretty. If answered "yes", she removes

  • the object to reveal her mutilated face. Again she asks, this time in a more grisly voice.

  • if they still think she is pretty. If you answer "no" or scream, she carves a matching

  • smile onto your face; if you respond with "yes" again she leaves, only to return to

  • the victim's house that night to murder them. 9. Kirin

  • Though its origins are not Japanese, the Kirin was first introduced to Japanese culture through

  • the Chinese myths of the legendary Qulin. The Kirin is often times described as near

  • godlike creatures that resemble a deer with scales covering its body, an ox's tail, flowing

  • golden manes and is surrounded within a shroud of holy fire. Since, it has become a symbol

  • of wisdom and benevolence to the Japanese people. The Kirin is easily one of the rarest

  • and interesting creatures known across East Asia. A magnificently serene being, the Kirin

  • eats not of flesh, but instead is strictly vegetarian. As it moves, not a single creature

  • is trampled beneath its tread, from the smallest of insects to a single blade of grass. It

  • is said to have a beauty rivaled only by its scarcity; as Kirin will only appear during

  • times of world peace, under the rule of noble and enlightened leaderships.

  • 8. Tenome Tenome, or "eyes with hands", is a yokai that

  • masquerades as an elderly suite, or blind guide, with eyes not upon its face, but instead

  • on its hands. They walk aimlessly through open fields and graveyards on a search for

  • food; the bones of a living human. Genome waits for their unsuspecting pray to come

  • in close before making their attack. It is able to keep track of running victims in the

  • dark due to an exceptional sense of smell to compensate for its horrendous sight. In

  • legend, a young man entered a graveyard at night as a test of his courage; when from

  • out of the darkness, an old blind man appeared. When it was close enough, he noticed it had

  • eyes on its hands yet not its face, so he ran to a nearby temple, receiving shelter

  • from a priest who hid him in a locked chest. The Tenome would eventually track the young

  • man down due to his smell; when the priest opened the chest after the Tenome was gone,

  • the young man was nothing but a sack of flesh. 7. Yamata no Orochi

  • Yamato no Orochi, the eight headed, eight-tailed gargantuan serpent appears in the earliest

  • written Japanese documents, the Kojiki and the Nihongi. The Kojiki is an old chronicle

  • in Japan, dating from the early 6th to 8th century A.D. Legend states that every year

  • Yamata no Orochi would appear before the gods, Ashinazuchi and Tenazuchi, who were meek and

  • brittle in their old age, and demand a sacrifice, one of their eight daughters. On the eighth

  • year, with just one daughter remaining, the storm god of summer, Susanoo, came across

  • the elder gods during their time of need; after hearing their tale, he would agree to

  • destroy the great serpent in exchange for their last daughters hand in marriage, Kushinada.

  • After an epic battle between god and monster, Susanoo would prove victorious in smiting

  • the beast, and would even discover the legendary katana of the imperial regalia, Kusanagi no

  • Tsurugi, inside Yamata's tail. 6. Kitsune

  • Having roots in Chinese mythology, the Kitsune, or "trickster fox", has two prominent variations;

  • the good foxes, servants of the Shinto deity Inari, and the more commonplace wicked foxes,

  • who delight in chaos and furor. Most tales about the Kitsune speak of the wicked foxes

  • and how they have been known to trick, and even possess humans, causing personal destruction

  • to their lives. Not innately evil, legends always speak of their honor in repaying debts,

  • and value of friendships they may have. The Japanese argue that the only things imported

  • from China were the negative aspects of the creature, as the Japanese have always held

  • it in the highest regard as early as the 4th century A.D. It is still currently well loved

  • by people, and is easily one of the most famous one on our list, and can still be seen in

  • popular culture, such as in many video games, television shows, movies and literature.

  • 5. Tatsu Much akin to the Chinese dragons of myth,

  • the Tatsu is the Japanese counterpart. Similar in appearance, having long, scaled, serpentine

  • bodies, often shown to have horns and beards. These near omnipotent beings share a strong

  • connection with water in all its natural forms; creating the belief that they may be water

  • gods. Dwelling in their deep sea palaces, as to be far away from human civilization;

  • Tatsu rarely bothers with the concerns of humans, unless it directly involves them.

  • Another legendary creature from Japan, the first recorded stories go back to the ancient

  • books, Kojiki and Nihongi as well. 4. Oni

  • Another Japanese creature of some renown, the Oni, a term referring to an Ogre or Demon,

  • come in many varieties, though they're commonly depicted to have red of blue skin, savage

  • and unkempt hair, with two or more horns protruding from their heads. Oni are formed when a truly

  • evil Himan dies; ending up in one of the many Buddhist Hells, then becomes the ogreish servant

  • of the Great Lord Enma, the King of Hell. The Oni are tasked by Enma to administer horrific

  • and gruesome punishments, such as flaying the victims and crushing their bones with

  • large iron clubs. Though sometimes, if a human is so utterly and truly wicked in life that

  • his soul falls beyond any form of redemption, his flesh will contort and warp as he transforms

  • into a Oni, remaining on Earth. 3. Ashura

  • In Japanese Buddhism, after death, humans eventually become reborn in one of six Buddhist

  • realms: those reborn into Shuradō, the realm of Ashura, become multi faced and limbed,

  • warrior demons that feast upon chaos, violence and destruction, but above all else, they

  • live for war; being the embodiment of everything they desire. Various tellings of the Ashura

  • exist, as some depict them as mere warriors of the demon realms, others tell tale of more

  • powerful beings, considered to be gods among lesser beings; but every tale says they are

  • all powerful, intelligent and magical beings, far superior to humankind.

  • 2. Kappa Kappa are an aquatic humanoid reptilians with

  • turtle like beaks and shells, webbed hands and feet, with a dish-like depression atop

  • their skulls filled with their power source, water. As it must be kept wet at all times,

  • they range in color from green, to blue and other earthen hues. They're often called "river

  • children" due to the creature's size and also usually depicted to be crass and violent.

  • Considered to be among the smartest of the yokai, they are one of the few said to be

  • capable of learning human languages. Solitary as adults, the younger Kappa are commonly

  • found in groups. Eating most anything, they are particularly partial to that of raw human

  • innards... especially, believe it or not, the anus; no worries though, according to

  • legend, the kappa will always return a bow as good gesture, and if you can get it to

  • bow low enough to spill the water from its head, it will panic and allow you the time

  • to get away... anus intact. 1. Daitengu

  • The Daitengu are far more tremendous and striking than that its lesser relatives, the Kotengu.

  • Usually appearing in humanoid form, dressed in monks robes with red faces and long, phallic

  • noses, and a large pair of feathered wings that grow from their backs. Usually considered

  • to possess greater wisdom and power than the lesser Tengu, they are often considered to

  • be more godlike sages of the mountains, rather than that of an enemy of mankind. It is said

  • that occasionally, the Daitengu will teach their secrets to worthy humans; one of Japan's

  • most famous warriors, Minamoto no Yshitsune, was said to have been taught his swordsmanship

  • from on such tongue.

Thank You Ben for the suggestion! Welcome to Top10Archive! From a creature with eyes

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