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The fox spirit is an especially prolific shapeshifter, known variously as the húli jīng (fox spirit) in China, the kitsune (fox) in Japan, and the kumiho (nine-tailed fox) in Korea. Although the specifics of the tales vary, these fox spirits can usually shapeshift, often taking the form of beautiful young women who attempt to seduce men ...
The player must avoid both the SCPs and an elite MTF unit (Epsilon-11 Nine-Tailed Fox) tasked with recapturing the escaped entities. The game offers multiple endings based on the player's choices throughout the game, including how they interact with SCP-079 and whether they manage to escape the facility.
Kitsune have as many as nine tails. [42] Generally, a greater number of tails indicates an older and more powerful Kitsune; in fact, some folktales say that a fox will only grow additional tails after it has lived 100 years. [43] (In the wild, the typical lifespan of a real fox is one to three years, although individuals may live up to ten ...
The old Chinese text Classic of Mountains and Seas, the earliest record to document the nine-tailed fox, mentioned that the fox with nine tails came from and lived in the country called Qingqiu three hundreds miles east, the term meaning "green hill" interpreted as the country or region of the east and was later historically used to refer to the region of Korea at least since the era during ...
Hel Harington (¿¿Fox Spirit¿¿) Hell Knight (Doom video game series) Hellboy (Hellboy comic book series) Hellspawns (Spawn comic book series) Daimon Hellstrom (Marvel Comics), a.k.a. Hellstorm and the Son of Satan; Henrietta Knowby (Evil Dead II) Hessian Horseman (Sleepy Hollow movie) Hexxus (Ferngully: The Last Rainforest)
Nine-tailed fox; S. Sky Fox (mythology) T. Teumessian fox; V. Vulpecula This page was last edited on 8 September 2019, at 22:21 (UTC). Text is available under the ...
Fox spirits and nine-tailed foxes appear frequently in Chinese folklore, literature, and mythology. Depending on the story, the fox spirit's presence may be a good or a bad omen. [ 2 ] The motif of nine-tailed foxes from Chinese culture was eventually transmitted and introduced to Japanese, Korean, and Vietnamese cultures.
In this piece of literature, Daji's true form was a nine-tailed fox with a woman's face. In Zhaoyang Qushi , a Ming dynasty novel, Daji is a fox spirit who leaves heaven. She was unhappy after her time on earth, so she left again for the earth to make a fox kingdom.