Written by Jonathan Wojcik
DARKSTALKERS
We're really doing a "video game year" this Halloween, but Resident Evil doesn't have to hog it all! The Capcom Fighting Game Darkstalkers, A.K.A. Vampire Savior, is a Spooky Gaming classic that you might not have expected to see here, especially with most of its characters leaning so much more towards a human design. Back when I was a kid, though, everyone I knew was a fan, and I had a pretty memorable time playing it at mall arcades back when they were still a type of thing that existed. I even remember the terrible cartoon show and associated action figures! Wait, did I say "terrible?" I dare you to name an achievement by man, god or beast that's objectively any better than these forty seconds. What were we even talking about again? Spooksneakers 4 on the Sega McTendo? Right! Yeah! As soon as I'm done watching this scene on a loop, I'm going to write you an article! See you in six hours!

MORRIGAN AENSLAND
So, we may as well start with the character everyone remembers the most, probably because it was 1994 and every video game, comic book, anime and movie went completely overboard marketing whichever character they gave the biggest boobs. She wasn't supposed to be the "star" of the game, but she sold, and is still more or less treated as the face of the series.
Originally conceived as a female vampire, it was the suggestion of producer Alex Jiminez to make the character into a Succubus, a concept the Japanese team apparently hadn't heard of at the time and was "very excited about" once Jiminez explained it. It's almost hard to imagine there was a time when games and anime weren't routinely loaded with Succubi and Incubi, but Morrigan was apparently a true pioneer.
Morrigan's more than just some sex demon, however. In Darkstalkers continuity, succubi and incubi are demons that feed on dreams, and must experience constant stimulation - dating, dining, dancing, fighting, even playing games - or wither up and die in only a couple of days, forcing them to live what might seem like senselessly hedonistic lifestyles. Morrigan even likes video games! The sexy demon getup and tournament fighting is all just an extension of this bratty nerd's perpetual boredom.
Her outfit is also pretty damn stylish, with those awesome bat-patterned tights, and if you always thought the wings on her head and thighs were anatomically ridiculous, don't worry, because they're not actually a part of her body. The wings are formed from actual bats, or at least shape-shifting supernatural bats that Morrigan can control. Each wing on her head is a single transformed bat, and the larger wings are three or four bats apiece. Several of her attacks demonstrate the versatility of her little winged friends, which can meld together into all sorts of convenient, deadly forms presumably made entirely out of sculpted bat-flesh. That is actually REALLY kickass! Despite appearances, Morrigan is a genuinely creative and original take on what it might mean to be a "Succubus," with a set of powers I haven't really seen anywhere else.

JON TALBAIN
So except for the addition of a succubus and a couple of other oddballs, the principle of the original game was really "what if we made Street Fighter out of the Universal Monsters," so there obviously had to be a werewolf. There isn't much to Jon beyond what you might expect from his werewolfery, except the fact that he uses moves inspired in particular by Bruce Lee, so he's also a kung-fu werewolf.
I've discussed before how I never actively thought much about werewolves in the past, associating them more with goofy furry art (no offense to goofy furries) and a mainstream commoner taste in monsters. These days, I aggressively reject that sort of superior attitude about basically everything, and even if a wolf guy isn't "my" thing, I respect and appreciate the horror they were meant to represent and how awesome they can be through other people's eyes. Also, he's predominantly blue, and there's something I really like about blue as a scary monster color.

FELICIA
A cat girl may not be recognized by most as one of the core monster archetypes out there, but it wasn't something a Japanese franchise in the 90's could afford to skimp out on if it could find any excuse to include it, and they certainly went all-out making her, uh, "marketable." I went with the official "censored" version of this art because the actual cat blocking her ass is really funny, but also because her design skirts a line that my google ad provider might actually complain about. She's pretty much naked except for strips of fur.
When Felicia isn't running around naked and eating rodents, she's also a nun!

VICTOR VON GERDENHEIM
Just the sort of character you want in a homage to the Universal Studios Frankenstoid; a big, destructive beast with who's actually a sweet, gentle and naive soul on the inside. His terminally ill creator actually dies shortly after Victor is brought to life, and having no understanding of death, Victor believes the unresponsive professor is just that disappointed with him. This is the entire reason Victor goes on to battle other monsters in a big tournament-style melee, because he thinks he needs to show his dad that he's the Strongest Monster Ever. Great, now I want to cry.
Victor eventually finds companionship in his master's other, more humanlike creation, Emily, which he considers his "little sister," and the two live happily in their dad's castle until Emily finally just...stops working. It turns out that she was just a crude prototype, and could only hold an electrical charge for so long before "shutting down" again. Victor is easily fooled by the villain of Darkstalkers 3 into believing he must help gather souls to bring Emily back to life, but in the end, Victor only saves her by sacrificing himself.
He's "just" a Frankenstein's Monster with electrical superpowers, but Victor's personality is adorable and his story agonizingly sympathetic, even compared to his original inspiration. I mean, HE THOUGHT HIS DEAD DAD WAS JUST MAD AT HIM HIM. HE THOUGHT THAT THING. PLEASE HUG HIM AND TELL HIM EVERYTHING WILL ALWAYS BE OKAY.

ANAKARIS
Our mummy, meanwhile, doesn't have an especially heart-tugging or even very original story, just your typical undead ruler trying to bring back his kingdom, but there's a lot to love about him as a monster. He's got creepy eyes like that all throughout his body, visible just momentarily in several of his attack animations, and in fact, there doesn't seem to be anything actually filling out his big, buff, manly shape. Here are some blink-and-you-miss-them animation frames from a spitting attack:

RIKUO
It's a gill-man! An awfully handsome gill-man, too! His English name is even taken from stuntman Ricou Browning, who wore the original Gill-man suit in Creature From the Black Lagoon. Just like the creature, Rikuo lives in the Amazon River and may be the very last of his kind, his underwater civilization demolished in an earthquake. Fortunately, he finds a female of his species by the end of the first game, the two have laid eggs by the second, and when we last see them, they've discovered another species of merfolk to take them in, identical except for their anglerfish-like antennae.

BISHAMON
While they were making a game out of classic "western" ghouls, the team saw fit to throw in at least one Japan-specific monster. I kind of wish it had been a more interesting yokai of some sort, even one as common as a Kappa or a Tengu, but I guess Bishamon is a concept more suited to this type of game anyway; a demonic samurai warrior possessed by his own cursed suit of armor.

HUITZIL
Getting into more peculiar territory here, Huitzil is a giant, alien robot modeled after a Dogu statue, which of course is supposed to imply that the Dogu are modeled after his kind. An invasion of these machines was even, apparently, what actually destroyed the dinosaurs before they were all buried under the Earth by a cataclysmic earthquake, and just one is eventually reawakened by the original game's villain to serve as a major boss battle.

PYRON
So this is the guy who actually woke up Huitzil, and he's supposed to be an energy-based alien who seeks to destroy and consume the planet Earth. I wish that looked more interesting than a horned man on fire, and it easily could have even if they were really married to the Fire Person angle, because when Pyron is subjected to that "gender switching" move we mentioned earlier, he looks like this:

SASQUATCH
And there's a yeti! They call him a sasquatch, but he's definitely Yeti material, and a fun design with a squatter, rounder shape and more dog-like face than I usually see in bigfeets. He doesn't have that much of a story, but it's nice to see a cryptid as a fighting game character, and it's not too surprising; Japan does think of the various skunk-apes as one of the iconic "Western monsters."

DEMITRI MAXIMOFF
This is the guy who was kind of "supposed" to be the most prominent character, and is more or less the original main villain of the series, though there isn't much of a twist to him. He's a fairly typical Dracula-esque vampire with all that entails, including a spooky castle and an obsession with feeding on the blood of young women. In fact, almost all he's really remembered for besides his silly hair is his final attack, "Midnight Bliss," which transforms his opponents, regardless of sex, into "cuter" female characters just before he drains all their blood out in one go.
It's ridiculous, but some of the transformations have interesting concepts in their own right, and it's a shame they aren't just present as secret, distinct characters themselves. You also get a glimpse of Demitri's "true form" during this maneuver, a shadowy bad-winged demon that would have also made a more interesting design than this default.
Demitri is, of course, the reason everybody's fighting, holding a tournament to determine the new ruler of the demon world. Above all, he wants the throne that Morrigan inherited by birthright, and the two are considered bitter rivals throughout the series. That is, unless you count the 90's cartoon up there, in which case Morrigan is inexplicably just one of Demitri's evil minions.

DONOVAN BAINE
I guess you have to have at least one nearly normal human guy, though Donovan is actually supposed to be a human-vampire hybrid or Dhampir, a concept any media with vampires in it seems to be madly in love with. Like many Dhampir characters, he's angsty and tormented about his semi-inhumanity and fights evil as a hunter of actual vampires. He also protects a creepy little psychic girl, Anita or Amanda depending on the version, who's supposedly destined to rule all humans and poses the biggest threat to Jedah. These two are basically designed as if they're the "heroes of the series" we might be following if this had always been an anime, I suppose.

JEDAH DOHMA
Introduced as a bigger, badder villain than Demitri, Jedah is supposed to be a Shinigami, a Japanese spirit of death sometimes treated interchangeably with the concept of a "grim reaper," but in Darkstalkers continuity this also seems to be interchangeable with basically a "devil," and his design is even heavily inspired by Go Nagai's Devilman.
Also rad are Jedah's wings, which are just giant scythe blades hovering behind his back, and the fact that his outfit, as cool as it seems at first glance, is modeled after a male high school uniform, the equivalent of the devil dressing in a modified sailor suit. He's a 6,000 year old embodiment of death, but his persona is that of a juvenile delinquent who never grew up, and is only missing a pompadour or pointy sunglasses. I guess he has them in spirit. I like him so much more now than I thought I did.

B.B. HOOD
We're getting into characters brought to us by Darkstalkers 3, now, the last true new entry in the series. "Baby Bonnie Hood" is the only character with no supernatural powers, but she was treated as an honorary Darkstalker for Jedah's tournament because her soul is just apparently that dark. She's only a child, but she's also a ruthless bounty hunter who specializes in monsters, and while she prefers to target evil monsters, she's really only in it for the money and the thrill of killing, packing her picnic basket with a physically impossible volume of deadly weaponry and using her harmless appearance as a lure for werewolves and vampires.

LILITH
Eh, sorry, I'm indifferent. There's a complicated backstory in which Morrigan's true power was split into three pieces when she was a child, and one of them is brought to life in the form of Lilith, who's all broken up about being an "incomplete" succubus. Whatever! She always just felt like an arbitrary Morrigan knockoff to me, and maybe designed to appeal to a sketchier otaku crowd, though it's hard to tell when an anime style character is supposed to look like a kid or just supposed to look more androgynous. There is an interesting minor story note that she isn't certain of her gender and could even one day grow into an Incubus, which is also in line with what these demons are actually supposed to do, but it's never really explored beyond a little speculation from Jedah. If the series had properly continued and we ever saw this happen, I'd just hope he kept wearing the bat tights.

HSIEN-KO
Like many American kids back then, Hsien-Ko was actually my very first encounter with the concept of a Jiang-Shi, which I once talked about for its own small Halloween entry about a zillion years ago. These creatures are often translated as "Chinese hopping vampires," but that only does a disservice to their more unique origins and powers. The really fun thing about this one is that there are actually two characters here, sisters Hsien-Ko and Mei-Ling, whose village was destroyed by Jedah's minions along with their Senjutsu master and their mother, who sacrificed her soul to protect them. Now intent on freeing her, the sisters used a secret technique to take on their current forms: Hsien-Ko into a Jiang-Shi and Mei-Ling into the paper talisman on her sister's face, which keeps her powers under control.

Q-BEE
One of the last characters ever introduced is one I'm kind of obligated to consider my favorite, seeing as to how she's a bug. Younger me was kind of disappointed that we only got some arthropod representation in such a human-like form, but she grew on me fast, especially since her anthropomorphic appearance is only superficial!
Q-Bee is actually the queen of a monster race known as the Soul Bees, which inhabit Jedah's territory and are naively loyal to him as minions. They can eat anything, but souls are their most important sustenance, and what allows a young larva to mature into a new queen. That's right - they're parasitoids! Q-Bee even has an ultimate finshing move in which she encases her opponent in a clay prison, implants an egg, then dies as her replacement self hatches! Check that out near the end of this move compilation, because even after 20+ years, nobody has seen fit to make complete animated sprites out of this game's coolest moves and characters.

LORD RAPTOR
Up to now, I'd tackled these characters in their order of introduction, but I felt like I needed to save the #1 most radical man for the end, or I guess for the beginning and end, since we already explored his career as a renowned hip-hop artist, heroic lifeguard and professional party dude.
Raptor's Japanese name is Zabel Zarock, and I want to say it's hard to pick between the two, but...LORD. RAPTOR. Sorry, Japan. We really pulled ahead of you this one time. LORD RAPTOR is the "zombie" of Darkstalkers, from a time before the word was even more strictly defined as a shambling and mindless flesh-eater. Originally an Australian guitarist nicknamed the "God of Metal," he became obsessed with the demon lord Ozom, taking his lyrics directly from the occult tome A Chapter of Tolagido. In his ultimate live performance, he pledged his final allegiance to the demon, sacrificing himself along with the blood of his entire massive audience. Now a living corpse in service to Ozom, his true goal is to eventually overthrow the demon and supplant his own dark god.
Well, Lord Raptor isn't stupid. EVERYONE ELSE is stupid if they think he is!!!
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