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  2. Yokai Rental Shop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yokai_Rental_Shop

    Yokai Rental Shop (Japanese: 妖飼兄さん, Hepburn: Yōkai Nii-san) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Shin Mashiba. It was serialized in Square Enix's shōnen manga magazine Monthly GFantasy from June 2015 to July 2017, with its chapters collected in four tankōbon volumes.

  3. Miyoshi Mononoke Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miyoshi_Mononoke_Museum

    The Miyoshi Mononoke Museum, also known as the Yumoto Koichi Memorial Japan Yōkai Museum, or shortened to the Yōkai Museum, is located in Miyoshi, Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan. [1] The museum collection holds over 5,000 artworks and objects that represent yōkai , supernatural beings in Japanese folklore.

  4. Yōkai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yōkai

    Yōkai (妖怪, "strange apparition") are a class of supernatural entities and spirits in Japanese folklore.The kanji representation of the word yōkai comprises two characters that both mean "suspicious, doubtful", [1] and while the Japanese name is simply the Japanese transliteration or pronunciation of the Chinese term yaoguai (which designates similarly strange creatures), some Japanese ...

  5. Shodoshima Yokai Art Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shodoshima_Yokai_Art_Museum

    The Shodoshima Yokai Art Museum, [1] also known as the Yokai Bijutsukan Art Museum is a small museum in Kagawa prefecture, which is focused on yōkai, supernatural entities in Japanese folklore. Description

  6. List of Yo-kai Watch media - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Yo-kai_Watch_media

    Yo-kai Watch (Japanese: 妖怪ウォッチ, Hepburn: Yōkai Wotchi) is a supernaturalist multimedia franchise created by Level-5.The franchise is mainly known for its series of role-playing video games, which have been released for various different video game platforms.

  7. Ootakemaru - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ootakemaru

    View a machine-translated version of the Japanese article. Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate , is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.

  8. Bake-danuki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bake-danuki

    Taxidermy of a Japanese raccoon dog, wearing waraji on its feet: This tanuki is displayed in a Buddhist temple in Japan, in the area of the folktale "Bunbuku Chagama".. The earliest appearance of the bake-danuki in literature, in the chapter about Empress Suiko in the Nihon Shoki, written during the Nara period, is the passages "in two months of spring, there are tanuki in the country of Mutsu ...

  9. Kasa-obake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kasa-obake

    A figure of a kasa-obake from the 1968 film Yokai Monsters: One Hundred Monsters A two-legged kasa-obake from the "Hyakki Yagyo Zumaki" by Enshin Kanō. [1]Kasa-obake (Japanese: 傘おばけ) [2] [3] are a mythical ghost or yōkai in Japanese folklore.