| Morrigan Aensland | |
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![]() Morrigan in Namco × Capcom (art by Takuji Kawano) |
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| Series | Darkstalkers Marvel vs. Capcom Capcom vs. SNK |
| First game | Darkstalkers: The Night Warriors (1994) |
| Created by | Akira Yasuda |
| Designed by | CRMK (Darkstalkers, Darkstalkers 3, MvC, MvC2)[1] Ikeno (Night Warriors)[1] Shinkiro (Capcom vs. SNK)[1] Kinu Nishimura (Capcom vs. SNK 2)[1] Shukō Murase (anime) |
| Voiced by (English) | Saffron Henderson (cartoon)[2] Kathleen Barr (anime)[2] Erin Fitzgerald (Cross Edge)[2] Siobhan Flynn (MvC3)[2] |
| Voiced by (Japanese) | Yayoi Jinguji (most games) Rie Tanaka (MvC3) Rei Sakuma (cartoon, anime, drama CD, Gunbird 2) Kikuko Inoue and Yumi Tōma (drama CDs) |
| Fictional profile | |
| Birthplace | Scotland |
Morrigan Aensland (Japanese: モリガン・アーンスランド Hepburn: Morigan Ānsurando) is a video game character from the Darkstalkers series of fighting games developed by Capcom. She was introduced in Darkstalkers: The Night Warriors in 1994. Since them, she has also appeared in multiple video games outside of the Darkstalkers franchise, and is widely perceived as the most popular Darkstalkers character and one of flagship Capcom characters.
Morrigan is a succubus who is very vain and lives for little more than the excitement of battle. While Demitri officially fills the role, it has often been suggested and implied that Morrigan is the main character of the Darkstalkers series, due to her importance in the overall story as well as her many appearances outside of her game series. She may even be considered a protagonistic anti-hero, because despite her demonic appearance and heritage, she is not actually evil. Sometimes, her name is written as Aeslead (Aenslaed).[3]
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Morrigan is named after Morrígan, a goddess from the Celtic mythology. She appears as a beautiful young woman with long, light-green hair, large breasts, a tight leather leotard trimmed in feathers, purple nylons with bat patterns, black boots, and bat-like wings on her back and on top of her head. Morrigan can reshape these wings into spikes and blades when attacking her enemies, as well as using them to shield herself from enemy attacks. Her wings can also separate from her, and form into a cloud of bats. She uses a variety of magical attacks as well.
Morrigan was created by Akira Yasuda (Akiman). Early in the development of Darkstalkers, the development team decided to have two female characters: a catwoman and a female vampire, characters who would become Felicia and Morrigan, respectively.[4] Initially, Felicia was intended to be the "sexy" female character of the title, while the vampire would be the "cute" female character. However, Morrigan's design took on a tone that emphasized sexiness, causing Felicia's character concept to be altered accordingly.[5] Her costume mirrors "her personality: somewhere between a batlike demon and a charming lover."[6]
Morrigan has had exactly the same 2D sprite set as far as Capcom vs. SNK 2 as she did in the original Darkstalkers game; her sprites looks especially out of place in the Capcom vs. SNK series as they gain a black outline in the borders. She received an updated character model only in Tatsunoko vs. Capcom, which was also the first game in which she was featured as a 3D rendered model.[7] In Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3 Femme Fatale Pack (it was is also available for free with pre-order from GameStop[8]), Morrigan received a downloadable content costume based on an outfit she wore in the anime Night Warriors: Darkstalkers' Revenge.
Morrigan is a succubus born in 1678 in Scotland and is the adopted daughter of Belial of the Aensland House. When she was born, Morrigan was extremely powerful (an "S Class noble" according to some Japanese source books), so much so that Belial sealed away part of her power, one-third in himself to be returned upon his death, and one-third in a pocket dimension, which eventually became a being of its own, a succubus named Lilith. Unaware of Belial's action, Morrigan grew up and found her life as the Queen of the Night in the Aensland castle dull, so she frequently visited the human world to look for entertainment.
On one occasion, Morrigan was drawn to a strange power (which would turn out to be the fire demon Pyron) and ventured into the human world once again. Upon her return, she was informed of Belial's death and that she was the next successor to the Aensland throne. Although she is now rightfully the ruler of the Makai, she shirks her responsibilities and seeks to continue her life as before. Morrigan eventually meets Lilith, and the two beings merge into one, fully restoring Morrigan's power.
Morrigan was the original Darkstalker to break out of her original fighting game series and be transplanted in to the Marvel vs. Capcom series. In Marvel vs. Capcom: Clash of Super Heroes (1998), not only was Morrigan present, but an alternate "Lilith-style" Morrigan was a secret character. In her intro-sprite, Lilith appears and merges with her in a nod to when the two merged in Morrigan's ending in Vampire Savior. In Marvel vs. Capcom 2: New Age of Heroes (2000), she is joined by fellow Darkstalkers Anakaris, B.B. Hood, and Felicia. Morrigan acts as the sole representative of the Darkstalkers series in the Capcom vs. SNK games, making appearances in both Capcom vs. SNK: Millennium Fight 2000 and Capcom vs. SNK 2: Mark of the Millennium 2001. Morrigan represented the series along with Felicia and B.B. Hood in SNK vs. Capcom: The Match of the Millennium (1999) and was Darkstalkers representative for fighting crossovers with Tatsunoko vs. Capcom: Cross Generation of Heroes (2008), Tatsunoko vs. Capcom: Ultimate All-Stars (2010), Marvel vs. Capcom 3: Fate of Two Worlds and Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3 (2011), accompanied in these titles by Felicia and Hsien-ko.
Morrigan has also represented Darkstalkers in non-fighting roles, appearing in the crossover tactical RPG Namco × Capcom (2005) and the multi-company crossover tactical role-playing games Cross Edge (2008) and Project X Zone (2012), in all cases appearing with other Darkstalkers personalities, as well as in the puzzle game Super Puzzle Fighter II Turbo (1996, with a super deformed design), the card game SNK vs. Capcom: Card Fighters Clash (1999), in the Sega Dreamcast port of the 2D shooting game Gunbird 2 (2000) (a secret character),[9] in the North American version of We Love Golf! (2008),[10] and in the Japanese version of Monster Hunter Frontier (2011).[11] With all of her appearances in Capcom crossover projects, Morrigan is the single most common Darkstalkers cast member to appear outside of the origin series. She is also featured in her own mobile game, titled Osanpo Morrigan (お散歩モリガン, "Morrigan Taking a Walk").[12]
In the American cartoon Darkstalkers, Morrigan received a change in character and was changed into a villain. Morrigan's character in the cartoon was jealous, rude, power-hungry and despising humans, and stated to be a direct descendant of the sorceresss Morgan le Fay.[3] Her appearance was also altered, making her older and wearing a less revealing costume.
The anime OVA series Night Warriors: Darkstalkers' Revenge featured Morrigan more like her game appearances, portraying her as a semi-innocent demon world inhabitant, a member of the royal family who was more interested in going to Earth than in her duties. The picture of idle rich, she would often leave at will out of mere boredom, much to the frustration of her guardians, elder men of the Aensland family. Her father, Belial, is not mentioned. Morrigan's role as a hero was a focus, with her activities as a succubus downplayed. Morrigan is shown fighting Jon Talbain in the episode intros for the first three episodes. She battles Demitri Maximoff when he attempts to return to Makai but their battle is interrupted when they are sensed by Huitzil. In the last episode, Morrigan goes to Earth after Demitri was bested by Pyron and she encounters him unconscious in the ruins of his castle. Demitri suddenly awakens and attempts to vampirise Morrigan, but she does not resist, much to his surprise. Morrigan tells Demitri that he may become the leader of Makai after all, since a change of leadership is needed to help its current disarray from falling into destruction. They both later observe Donovan's victory over Pyron.
In the UDON Comics version of Darkstalkers, Morrigan is a brash 300-year-old succubus who wants nothing more than to visit the human world and have a good time, often at the expense of the men she seduces, and completely ignores her duty as future ruler of the Makai Realm; this annoys her father, Belial, and gets her two servants, Lucien and Mudo into heaps of trouble. Eventually she hears of Demitri's restoration, and goes to her father to warn him, only to find that he is in no position to fight. For the first time, she takes on the responsibility that she has often put aside, and returns to the human world to fight Demitri, and prove herself worthy of the Makai Realm and the power that Belial sealed away many years ago. In the special issue Morrigan vs Demitri it is implied that had Belial not sealed away her power, Morrigan might have evolved into a being similar to Pyron and destroyed the Earth.
Morrigan also appears in the Darkstalkers drama CDs Vampire Night ~Owarai Yoru no Saiten~, Darkness Mission ~Tokusen Batā Shōyu Aji~ and EX Vampire ~Night Warriors~. In the fan service anime Ultimate Girls, the character Tsubomi makes an appearance dressed as Morrigan in the episode 2.
Scores of various figures and stauettes of Morrigan were produced by different manufacturers, including by Bandai (2002[13]),[14] Banpresto (1998,[15] 2004,[16] 2008[17]), Epoch (2003[18]), HBC-Brote,[19] Heihachi Zazen (2005,[20] 2008[21]), Kotobukiya (2005[22]), Kurushima (2001[23]), Max Factory (2009[24]), Mersa (2011),[25] Moby Dick,[26] Modeler's High (2004[27]), Oonishi Kouji,[28] OOXOO (2010[29]), Organic (2006[30]), Pop Culture Shock Collectibles (2009[31]), SOTA Toys (2011[32]), Yamato (two in 2006[33][34]),[35] Yoiko (2004[36]) and Yujin (2002,[37] 2003,[38] 2006[39]), among many others.
Morrigan is widely seen as the most iconic character of Darkstalkers as well as one of the most sexy characters of fighting games and gaming in general. Sega Saturn Magazine praised both her design and abilities as "awesome".[40] The 2009 book 500 Essential Anime Movies: The Ultimate Guide cited her as an example of the popularity of the Darkstalkers character designs, with fans frequently cosplaying as the character at various conventions since the original game's release.[41] In 2011, GameFront's Phil Owen run a feature article showcasing some of Morrigan (and Lilith) cosplayers, calling it "probably the sexiest gallery I’ve ever posted."[42]
In 1998, Morrigan was named the 17th best character of 1997 by the Japanese magazine Gamest.[43] In 2003, GameSpy ranked her third on the list of top ten "babes in games", calling her Capcom's answer to SNK's Mai Shiranui.[44] In 2008, she was ranked as 43rd on IGN's list of top "chicks behaving badly" for her "penchant for magic and kick-ass fighting moves", her outfit described as "one that would make even Jenna Jameson blush."[45] In 2009, FHM listed the "undeniably seductive" Morrigan among the nine sexiest "bad girls of videogame land".[46] In 2011, UGO.com ranked her as the fourth in their list of the "foxiest fighting females to ever be pixelated,"[47] while GameFront featured her twice on the list of "greatest boobs in video game history", as 37th (the Darkstalkers version, called the "reason 12 year olds packed arcades into the late 90s") and 11th (the Marvel Vs. Capcom version, being "50% of all Comic Con costumes").[48] She was also included in UGO's list of the 99 "hottest fictional women of 2012", described as "the best thing" in Marvel Vs. Capcom 3.[7]
UGO.com included Morrigan on their 2008 list of 11 "hottest babes to ever hit the video game world", stating that "her appearances across the Capcom fighting franchises prove that the company has an excellent eye for the female form",[49] as well as in the 2011 list of 50 "hottest girls in games", adding: "With a body like that, we can ignore those wings coming out of her head."[50] In 2009, Manolith included her on the lists of top ten "sexiest video game women" and 25 "hottest female video game protagonists".[51][52] In 2010, CraveOnline featured her on the list of ten "hottest video game girls of all time", commenting: "The iconic succubus from Capcom's Darkstalkers series is more than just an anatomic wonder - she's also one of the single most sexually stylistic ladies in gaming land."[53] In 2011, Japanator.com included her among "Japanese gaming's top ten hottest girls", stating that "In fact, Morrigan is so popular that many people know of her sultry looks who have never touched a Darkstalkers game."[54] According to GameSpot, "Morrigan has been a mainstay in the Capcom crossover fighting games and is definitely a fan favorite."[6]
Play magazine featured her in their "Girls of Anime" special,[55] later regretting her absence in Capcom Fighting Evolution in their "Girls of Gaming" special.[56] She was also included in GameDaily's 2008 list of ten "babes who shouldn't meet your mom"[57] and in Virgin Media 2010 list of ten "game girls you wouldn't dare to date".[58]
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