Mang Kuangyun: Difference between revisions
no edit summary
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
'''Máng Kuáng-Yún''' ({{CJKV|t=芒 狂雲|j=Bō Kyōun}}) {{flagicon|ROC}}<br />(c.v. [[Kiyoyuki Yanada]]) | '''Máng Kuáng-Yún''' ({{CJKV|t=芒 狂雲|j=Bō Kyōun}}) {{flagicon|ROC}}<br />(c.v. [[Kiyoyuki Yanada]]) | ||
Commonly known as '''Líng-Wáng''' ({{CJKV|t=靈王|j=霊王 Reiō|l=Spirit King}}), Mang Kuang-Yun mastered the forbidden art of {{nihongo|"Pressure Point Displacement"|秘孔変位|Hikō Hen'i}} during his [[Hokuto Sonka Ken|Hokuto Sonkaken]] training. Bears the nickname "mad dog". | Commonly known as '''Líng-Wáng''' ({{CJKV|t=靈王|j=霊王 Reiō|l=Spirit King}}), Mang Kuang-Yun mastered the forbidden art of {{nihongo|"Pressure Point Displacement"|秘孔変位|Hikō Hen'i}} during his [[Hokuto Sonka Ken|Hokuto Sonkaken]] training even after desperately trying to awaken it with the use of opium. Planning to travel to Japan in order to battle [[Kenshirō Kasumi]], his master attempted to prevent him because Kuang-Yun's ambitions had turned evil. His master would ultimately fail to seal his pupil's fists and was killed by the | ||
Hikō Hen'i technique. Kuang-Yun Bears the nickname "mad dog". | |||
He was promised [[Pān Yù-Líng]] by her adoptive father [[Wēng Hóng-Yuán]] for an assassination of [[Qing Bang]]'s head boss. He suppressed Pān Yù-Líng's memory because of his unrequitted love for her and due to his resentment for | He was promised [[Pān Yù-Líng]] by her adoptive father [[Wēng Hóng-Yuán]] for an assassination of [[Qing Bang]]'s head boss. He suppressed Pān Yù-Líng's memory because of his unrequitted love for her and due to his resentment for Kenshirō Kasumi, who was not only Japanese but also capable of wooing her. Kuáng-Yún dislikes the Japanese due to Japan's role in partitioning and subjugating China in a time of imperialism. | ||
He got his wish to "fight someone worthy of taking my life" granted by the [[The Taoist|Old Taoist Fortune Teller]]. By the time he had met Kenshiro, he was already dying from a slow decaying death from his self inflicted pressure points. He fights and loses to [[Kenshirō Kasumi]] and later dies due to gunshot wounds from [[Tian Xue-Fang]]'s men. In his death, he reveals that Yù-Líng was not really killed, but actually had memories of her past suppressed. | He got his wish to "fight someone worthy of taking my life" granted by the [[The Taoist|Old Taoist Fortune Teller]]. By the time he had met Kenshiro, he was already dying from a slow decaying death from his self-inflicted pressure points. He fights and loses to [[Kenshirō Kasumi]] and later dies due to gunshot wounds from [[Tian Xue-Fang]]'s men. In his death, he reveals that Yù-Líng was not really killed, but actually had memories of her past suppressed. | ||
He has a heightened sense of hearing much like Kenshirō Kasumi's hearing. | He has a heightened sense of hearing much like Kenshirō Kasumi's hearing. |