Mang Kuangyun: Difference between revisions

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    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 Yu-Ling 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 Yu-Ling was not really killed, but actually had memories of her past suppressed.
    ==Gallery==
    ==Gallery==
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    Linkwang.jpg
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    ling wang 6.PNG

    Revision as of 04:28, 2 December 2011

    Ling Wang.

    Máng Kuáng-Yún (traditional Chinese: 芒 狂雲Japanese: Bō Kyōun) Error creating thumbnail: /bin/bash: line 1: convert: command not found
    (c.v. Kiyoyuki Yanada)

    Commonly known as Líng-Wáng (traditional Chinese: 靈王; Japanese: 霊王 Reiō; literally: "Spirit King"), Mang Kuang-Yun mastered the forbidden art of "Pressure Point Displacement" (秘孔変位, Hikō Hen'i) during his Hokuto Sonkaken training. He suppressed Pan Yu-Ling's memory because of his unrequitted love for her and due to his resentment for Kenshiro Kasumi, who was not only Japanese but also capable of wooing her. Kuang-Yun 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 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 Yu-Ling was not really killed, but actually had memories of her past suppressed.

    Gallery

    Trivia

    • Mang Kuang-Yun bears several similarities to Shin from the sequel, Hokuto no Ken. Both are introduced as martial artists able to equal the protagonist (in Shin's case, he was supposedly above Kenshiro due to defeating him in a previous encounter), neither are able to win the love of the protagonist's love interest, both ultimately give up the protagonist's love interest, and both are defeated by the protagonists of their respective series but do not die directly from Hokuto Shinken.