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The Hibagon (ヒバゴン) or Hinagon (ヒナゴン) is the Japanese equivalent of the North American Bigfoot or the Himalayan Yeti. [ citation needed ] Sightings have been reported since the 1970s around Mount Hiba in the Hiroshima Prefecture .
Hibagon or Hinagon – ape-like, similar to Bigfoot, or the Yeti (Japan) Jué yuán – blue-furred man-sized rhesus monkey that abducts human women (China & Japan) Satori – mind-reading magical ape or monkey (Japan) Shōjō – anthropomorphic spirit, depicted as furred, somewhat confounded with orangutan (Japan)
Hibagon The Japanese version of Bigfoot or the Yeti, sighted on Mount Hiba in Hiroshima Prefecture. Hiderigami Chinese spirits said to bring droughts. Error: {{Transliteration}}: transliteration text not Latin script (pos 64) A baboon-like Chinese yōkai. Himetataraisuzu-hime
Hibagon – The Japanese equivalent of Bigfoot. Hitotsume-kozou – A Yōkai that takes on the appearance of a bald, one-eyed child. Jiangshi – A being in Chinese legends and folklore similar to zombie or vampire. Jinn – Genie-like beings. Jorōgumo – A spider that can change its appearance into that of a seductive woman.
When the Saturday family travels to Tokyo, Japan to deal with an attacking Hibagon, they discover that it is actually a professor named Talu Mizuki who became trapped in the cryptid's body after he used a mind-transfer device he invented to escape the Japanese crime lord and philanthropist Shoji Fuzen and his original body was destroyed in a ...
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"Honeonna" (骨女) from the Konjaku Gazu Zoku Hyakki by Sekien Toriyama. Hone-onna (骨 (ほね) 女 (おんな), literally: bone woman) is a yōkai depicted in the Konjaku Gazu Zoku Hyakki (1779) by Toriyama Sekien.