Mang Kuangyun: Difference between revisions
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Commonly known as '''Líng-Wáng''' ({{CJKV|t=靈王|j=霊王 Reiō|l=Spirit King}}), Nicknamed "mad dog," 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. He had to resort to using opium as a means of controlling its power since it proved too much to handle. 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. | Commonly known as '''Líng-Wáng''' ({{CJKV|t=靈王|j=霊王 Reiō|l=Spirit King}}), Nicknamed "mad dog," 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. He had to resort to using opium as a means of controlling its power since it proved too much to handle. 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. | ||
He was promised [[Pān Yù-Líng]] by her adoptive father [[Wēng Hóng-Yuán]] for an assassination of [[Qing Bang]]'s head boss. | He was promised [[Pān Yù-Líng]] by her adoptive father [[Wēng Hóng-Yuán]] for an assassination of [[Qing Bang]]'s head boss. Unable to kill Yù-Líng he instead erased her 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. It is speculated that Kuang-Yun's initial desire for Yù-Líng was a ploy to lure Kenshiro back to Shanghai. | ||
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]] in their second encounter 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]] in their second encounter 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. |