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  2. Zatoichi and the One-Armed Swordsman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zatoichi_and_the_One-Armed...

    Zatoichi and the One-Armed Swordsman (Japanese: 新座頭市・破れ!唐人剣, Hepburn: Shin Zatōichi: Yabure! Tōjin-ken, lit. ' New Zatoichi Break! Chinese Sword ') (Chinese: 獨臂刀大戦盲侠; pinyin: Dú bì dāo dàzhàn máng xiá), also known as Zatoichi Meets the One-Armed Swordsman and The Blind Swordsman Meets His Equal, is a 1971 Japanese-Hong Kong chambara / wuxia ...

  3. Sword dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sword_dance

    Lady Gongsun of the Tang dynasty, who was known for her elegant sword dancing, as depicted in Gathering Gems of Beauty (畫麗珠萃秀). Sword dances in China and Vietnam, known as jian wu or múa kiếm, began as a military training exercise with swords and spears which evolved into an elaborate acrobatic dance. [8]

  4. Bladedance of Elementalers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bladedance_of_Elementalers

    Bladedance of Elementalers (Japanese: 精霊使いの 剣舞 ( ブレイドダンス ), Hepburn: Seirei Tsukai no Bureidodansu, lit. Spirit Elementalist's Blade Dance), also written as Blade Dance of Elementalers, is a Japanese light novel series written by Yū Shimizu with illustrations by Hanpen Sakura (volumes 1-13), Yuuji Nimura (volumes 14-16) and Kohada Shimesaba (volumes 17-20).

  5. Touken Ranbu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Touken_Ranbu

    Touken Ranbu quickly became very popular in Japan, particularly with young women, and had over 1.5 million registered players by 2016. [6] The game has been credited with accelerating the Japanese cultural trend of "katana women" (カタナ女子, katana joshi) – women who are interested in, and who pose with, historical Japanese swords. [7]

  6. List of Mo Dao Zu Shi episodes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Mo_Dao_Zu_Shi_episodes

    Nothing further is found on the mountain so they leave to continue investigating. They meet the crazy woman again and find a pile of dead bodies with sword marks from Shuanghua. Lan Wangji explains the sword belongs to a talented cultivator named Xiao Xingchen. The arm goes out of control again and escapes from the Cloud Recesses.

  7. The Legend of Sword and Fairy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Legend_of_Sword_and_Fairy

    The Legend of Sword and Fairy (Chinese: 仙劍奇俠傳; pinyin: Xiānjiàn Qíxiá Zhuàn), also known as Sword and Fairy (仙劍) or Chinese Paladin, is a Chinese language fantasy video game series and media franchise centered on a series of nine Chinese mythology/xianxia-themed adventure role-playing computer games created by Yao Zhuangxian.

  8. Swords of Legends - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swords_of_Legends

    Li Yifeng as Baili Tusu (百里屠苏) / Han Yunxi (韩云溪) . Huang Tianqi as young Baili Tusu / Han Yunxi; Han Yunxi is the son of the Wu Meng valley's head shaman. After his whole tribe was massacred, the aura of the Sword of Burning Solitude was inserted into him to save his life, including one half of Crown Prince Changqin's celestial soul (Sword of Burning Solitude).

  9. Congqian Youzuo Lingjianshan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congqian_Youzuo_Lingjianshan

    An anime adaptation co-produced by Tencent and Studio Deen, and named Reikenzan: Hoshikuzu-tachi no Utage (霊剣山 星屑たちの宴, literally "Spirit Blade Mountain: Feast of the Stardust") aired in January to March 2016, which was simulcast in Chinese and Japanese. [1]