![dwarf fortress werebeast dwarf fortress werebeast](http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-lCqc7Pt-nQ4/VCe0d5c1WlI/AAAAAAAAA-w/dHtJytmuUfk/s1600/Numthur-Dwarf-Fortress-Blog-Dark-Ages-40_13-DAAC-6.jpg)
Saiyans in Dragon Ball transform into giant rampaging monkeys when they see the light of a full moon.Thus, if someone has an elephant zoan fruit, but is an average joe otherwise, they can be easily defeated by someone with a mouse zoan if the mouse zoan has more expertise. Used improperly, the person becomes overly dependent on that devil fruit and can easily be defeated by anyone who has actual fighting skills. Used properly, a devil fruit can enhance a person's already powerful skills. Essentially, it depends on the user's own skills and creativity, as with all devil fruit users.A werehamster can be as dangerous as a werewolf). They tend to be dangerous mass of muscle even if the template creature was relatively harmless (this is also a general tendency among werebeast. Zoan fruits in One Piece turn the recipents into werebeasts.
DWARF FORTRESS WEREBEAST PLUS
The animals are those of the Eastern Zodiac: rat, dog, tiger, rabbit, dragon (he actually turns into a seahorse), ox, snake, sheep, monkey, horse, pig and rooster plus cat. While not called werebeasts, each member has a single and unique alternate animal form. Fruits Basket: The Sohma family is under a curse that causes Involuntary Shapeshifting into animal form when hugged by members of the opposite sex that are not relatives.C'tarl C'tarl from Outlaw Star are werecats with several intermediate forms (Fuzzy Space-Elf to Cat Person to Buff Superpowered Cat Person to Giant Tiger) whose access are dependent on the presence and phase of a moon and on their own personal energy reserves.See Sliding Scale of Anthropomorphism for information on other tropes related to the combination of human and animal features and Shapeshifting for other tropes related to changing form.Examples of these should be listed under that trope. Youkai are Japanese supernatural creatures that are sometimes depicted as having features similar to werebeasts.
DWARF FORTRESS WEREBEAST SKIN
![dwarf fortress werebeast dwarf fortress werebeast](https://i.imgur.com/nn8f5x1.png)
The preference for examples on this trope is for creatures explicity called "were", however very similar cases of human-animal transformation can also be listed, if the nature of the character or creature is strongly linked to a specific animal species. This page is the Super-Trope for all therianthropes, including Our Werewolves Are Different. For more information see The Other Wiki Therianthropy page. Werebeasts often have variations and characteristics similar to those listed on the Werewolf Analysis Page. The wolf version of this is sometimes called a "wolfwere". It should also be noted that while werebeasts normally have humanoid shapes as their default form, sometimes a work will reverse the order and make a werebeast an animal that transforms into a human. Some works will even use extremely unconventional ideas such as were cars. Sometimes authors use normally harmless creatures as the basis of a werecreature for the sake of Rule of Cute or Rule of Funny. However, many other types of creature has been used as the basis of a werebeast. Other than wolves, potentially dangerous predatory mammals such as cats, panthers, lions and bears are the most frequently depicted werebeasts (due to their Rule of Cool). Some of these are inspired by real world mythologies and others are purely the invention of the authors. Such creatures can be found in the mythology of many cultures, and the myths have inspired the frequent use of werecreatures in modern Speculative Fiction, particularly Fantasy and Horror.īy far the most common form of werebeast depicted in fiction inspired by European folklore is the Werewolf, but many stories use other animals as the basis of their werebeasts. The better known Lycanthropy comes from the Greek words for "wolf" and "man", and should only be used for Werewolves. The technical term for this is therianthropy, from the Greek words for "beast" and "man". The prefix "were" comes from the Old English word "wer", meaning "man". They are also known as "werecreatures" or "were-animals". Werebeasts are creatures that can transform between a human (or at least humanoid) form and an animal or animal-like form.