Mortal kombat characters

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Mortal kombat characters

Wikipedia list Article The list of playable characters of Mortal Kombat: Armageddon (2006), minus Taven, Daegon and Khameleon This is a list of playable characters from the Mortal Kombat fighting game series and the games in which they appear. The series takes place in a fictional universe composed of six kingdoms, which are supervised by beings known as the Elder Gods. The Elder Gods created a fighting tournament called Mortal Kombat to resolve conflicts between the kingdoms. Mortal Kombat's first game introduces a tournament in which earthrealm could be won by Outworld if the tournament is lost. Warriors representing earthrealm manage to defeat tournament champion Goro and his host Shang Tsung, but this leads Tsung to look for other ways to defeat Earthrealm. Since then, each game features a new villain who wants to conquer the kingdoms. By Mortal Kombat: Deception, most of the main characters had been killed by Shang Tsung and Quan Chi, but by Mortal Kombat: Armageddon they all return. Introduced in Mortal Kombat (1992) Johnny Cage Main article: Johnny Cage Kano Main article: Kano (Mortal Kombat) Liu Kang Main article: Liu Kang Raiden Main article: Raiden (Mortal Kombat) Scorpion Main article: Scorpion (Scorpion Mortal Kombat) Sonya Blade Main article: Sonya Blade Sub-Zero Main article: Sub-Zero (Mortal Kombat) Goro Main article: Goro (Mortal Kombat) Shang Tsung Main article: Shang Tsung Reptile Main article : Reptile (Mortal Kombat) Introduced in Mortal Kombat II See also: Mortal Kombat II Baraka Main article: Baraka (Mortal Kombat) Jade Main article: Jade (Mortal Kombat) Jax Main article: Jax (Mortal Kombat) Kintaro Voiced by: Rhasaan Orange (MK9) The deputy chief of Mortal Kombat II, Kintaro is a tiger-striped Shokan warrior (the same breed as Goro and Sheeva) who joins Shao Kahn's attempt to conquer Earth World during the events of the second tournament , in which he challenges Liu Kang, but loses. He is a lead character in the 2005 spinoff Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks, and is playable along with the entire list of the series in Mortal Kombat: Armageddon (2006). His greatest involvement in MK's continuity is in the reboot of the 2011 series, in which he serves as an opponent for Kung Lao, Stryker, and Sub-Zero in the game's story mode, during which he severely mutilates Kabal. Kintaro has a minimal presence in several MK comic series published in the 1990s, with a more prominent role coming in the 2015 DC Comics miniseries Mortal Kombat X, in which he serves under Sheeva, but is beheaded by Sonya Blade in the final edition while she is under the influence of Havik's blood code curse. The character was a stop-motion clay figure whose design was inspired by the Japanese mythological character Kintar. It was initially designed for mkii as an anthropomorphic bipedal tiger lined with skin, but the concept was due to the difficulty of creating such a complicated outfit. [1] Kintaro was redesigned as a goro spinoff, according to co-creator John Tobias. [2] UGO Networks opined in 2012 that Kintaro serves no real purpose except for being a reskinned Goro whose sole purpose is to avenge the death of the above-mentioned at the conclusion of the original game. [3] Den of Geek wrote that he has virtually no story to talk about outside of the [MK9] retcon. Their Reverse Rip was ranked ninth in Gameranx's 2012 selection of the ten most horrific fatalities in the MK series,[5] and Prima Games ranked 35th on their 2014 list of the series' top 50 fatalities. [6] Kitana Main article: Kitana Kung Lao Main article: Kung Lao Mileena Main article: Mileena Noob Saibot Main article: Noob Saibot Shao Kahn Main article: Shao Kahn Smoke Main article: Smoke (Mortal Kombat) Introduced in Mortal Kombat 3 and updates See also: Mortal Kombat 3, Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3, and Mortal Kombat Trilogy Chameleon Portrayed by: John Turk (MKT). Chameleon appeared in the PlayStation 1, Sega Saturn and PC versions of Mortal Kombat Trilogy as a partially transparent male ninja who mimicked all the movements of the human ninjas exchanged for the palette. The game simply referred to him as one of Shao Kahn's deadliest warriors. [7] At Armageddon, his backstory states that he was present at events dating back to Liu Kang's victory in the first Mortal Kombat tournament, betting his time while watching the events unfold, while his finalsimply described him as the true champion of Mortal Kombat. Chameleon ranked 32nd one point ahead of Khameleon - in the UGO selection in 2012 of the 50 best characters in the series. They say copying is a form of flattery, so Chameleon makes our list. [3] Complex ranked him tenth in the 2011 selection of the series' ten most underrated characters. [8] Cyrax Main article: Cyrax Ermac Main article: Ermac Kabal Main article: Kabal (Mortal Kombat) Khameleon Portrayed by: Becky Gable (MKT) Voiced by: Johanna A?onuevo (Armageddon) Debuting in the Nintendo 64 version of MKT as a palette change of Kitana, Khameleon is described as the last female of the Raptors breed, which was brought to near extinction by Shao Kahn. , which then merges his home kingdom of Zaterra with Outworld. Khameleon informs The Reptile that Kahn is responsible for the extinction of his race,[9] but R?ptile fits once again into Kahn's influence and turns against Khameleon. Having failed in her attempts to assassinate Kahn, she wanders the kingdoms while contemplating her revenge. [10] During armageddon events (in which she is playable only in the Wii version), she learns about the battle royal between the combatants in the Pyramid of Argus in Edenia, and the gift of supreme power that would be bestowed on the winner. Khameleon seeks to achieve this power for herself in order to keep him away from Kahn while taking revenge on him for his actions against his race. [10] According to the art director of Steve Beran, Khameleon was included in Armageddon due to the great demand of fans. She ranked 33rd in the UGO selection of the 50 best series Motaro Motaro character sketch for Mortal Kombat Trilogy (1996), by John Tobias. Motaro is a centaur, a race of centaur creatures with ram-like horns and a long rat-like metallic tail. He first appears as deputy chief in Mortal Kombat 3. Motaro's species came into conflict with the Shokan, a four-gun race to which Goro, Kintaro, and Sheeva belong, as Kahn favors the Centaurians and helps them defeat and subjugate the Shokan race. As a Centaurian, Motaro possesses great strength, as well as a sharp tail that fires bursts of energy from its tip, and the power of teleportation. Ed Boon called Motaro one of Mortal Kombat's characters the strangest way. John Tobias said his motaro creation was inspired by a toy he had as a child. The toy in question, the antagonist of the Baron Karza Micronauts, came with a horse named Andromeda that, when disassembled and combined with the figure, created a centaur-like creature. [13] As described in their biogeddon card, the developers were confronted with the decision (motivated by fans' demand to include it),[14] not to include Motaro in the game or remove its hind legs due to the difficulty of compensating for its unique half-horse body shape. They decided to remove their hind legs with the explanation that a curse was placed on their race. Motaro appears in the 1997 film Mortal Kombat: Annihilation, played by former American star Deron McBee. His rivalry with Sheeva was briefly addressed and he is defeated by Jax at the end of the film. There was also another fight scene with Motaro that was not included in the film. Motaro made appearances in the animated series Mortal Kombat: Defenders of the Kingdom in 1996. Motaro appears in the deadly 2020 film Kombat Legends: Scorpion's Revenge, where he is one of the Outworld monsters that Kano throws to Johnny Cage and Sonya Blade hits. Motaro ranked 31st in the UGO rankings in 2012 of Mortal Kombat's top 50 characters, noting that he is a hard-to-beat sub-boss. In 2013, Complex ranked the fight against Motaro in Mortal Kombat 3 as the 31st most difficult boss battle in video games,[18] and Motaro himself as the tenth most brutal fighter in the series. Fans ranked him as the 39th best character in the series in a 2013 online poll organized by Dorkly. Den of Geek ranked Motaro 42nd in its 2015 ranking of the franchise's 64 playable characters. Main article of Nightwolf: Nightwolf Rain Main article: Rain (Mortal Kombat) Sektor Main article: Sektor Sheeva Main article: Sheeva Sindel Main article: Sindel Stryker Main article: Stryker (Mortal Kombat) Introduced in Mortal Kombat Mythologies: Sub-Zero See also: Mortal Kombat mythologies: Sub-Zero Fujin Portrayed by: Anthony Marquez (MKM:SZ); Nic Toussaint (MKX) Voiced by: Herman Sanchez (MK4), David Horachek (MK:A), Troy Baker Matthew Yang King (MK11) Fujin (named after the Japanese wind god Fjin) is the then nameless wind god who first appears in MK Mythologies as as of the four guardians designated by Raiden to protect Shinnok's amulet, all of which Sub-Zero must defeat to acquire it. He makes his debut in Mortal Kombat 4, joining Raiden in his battle against Shinnok. [22] In MK Armageddon, his only other playable appearance in the games, Fujin expresses his concern about what caused Raiden's descent into madness. He and Kung Lao join forces to control Raiden and Liu Kang, but if it was not found to normalize the two now corrupted warriors, he and Kung Lao would be forced to kill them. Meanwhile, he searches for Taven and his brother Daegon, hoping to impede his progress and learn the true purpose of his quest. [23] In the 2015 comic book miniseries Mortal Kombat X, Fujin helps Raiden in the search for a missing Kamidogu dagger cursed by Quan Chi. However, he is later attacked and is rescued by Takeda. Fujin gives him a mask and armor similar to that of his mentor Hanzo Hasashi (Scorpio). When Earthrealm heroes defeat Shinnok in the final battle in the game's story mode, Fujin and Raiden return Shinnok's amulet to the Elder Gods. In the expansion of the DLC story to Mortal Kombat 11, Aftermath, Kronika trapped Fujin in the Void after he refused to join her in altered time for his own purposes. After his death, the wind god was able to escape alongside Shang Tsung and Nightwolf. Fujin worked with them to secure the Crown of The Souls of Kronika so that Liu Kang could restore the story, but Shang Tsung betrayed his allies so he could steal the Crown and change the story for himself. Fujin tried to stop him, but had his soul drained in the process. At the end of Shang Tsung, Fujin becomes his servant alongside Raiden. Fujin ranked 40th on ugo's 2012 list of the series' top 50 characters. In 2014, Prima Games included Fujin among its twenty cheapest characters in the series, describing him as the marquee character of Mortal Kombat 4, but it was his ... annoying beast [his designated weapon that Ed Boon admitted to having added to the game][24] that really aggravated the masses. Despite this, Fujin's beast appears as one of his weapons in Mortal Kombat 11: Aftermath. Main article by Quan Chi: Quan Chi Sareena Portrayed by: Lia Montelongo (MKM:SZ); Dana Hee (Konquest) Voiced by: Danielle Nicolet (MKX) Sareena is among Quan Chi's three personal killers, along with Kia and Jataaka, who are ordered to kill Sub-Zero before reaching Quan Chi. She is described in MK Mythologies as fractionally faster and a more talented fighter than her fellow assassins. [26] After being spared by Sub-Zero, she helps him defeat Quan Chi. After expressing her desire to escape the Netherrealm with him, she is shot in the back by Shinnok. As is later revealed in Mortal Kombat: Tournament Edition the attack destroyed its human form and that its essence was then banive as for his treachery. After years of torture, Sareena escapes the Netherrealm in her human appearance MK: Mortal Alliance, during which she encounters the youngest sub-zero; the brother of what she knew before. Feeling that he owed her for helping her brother, Sub-Zero grants his sanctuary with Lin Kuei back to terrareal. Sareena makes her playable debut in MK: Armageddon, in which she follows Sub-Zero to the Netherrealm, saving him from being killed by Noob Saibot and Smoke. After the battle, Sareena loses his human form and returns to join him despite his resistance. In MK: Armageddon Mode Konquest, Sareena, Kia and Jataaka are ordered by Quan Chi to kill Taven, but fail; while Kia and Jataaka are killed and their souls descend into the Netherrealm, Sareena is free from Quan Chi's control. She was seen in an unplayable appearance on MK9, as one of the fighters at the bottom of the Pit facing Daegon or Frost. At MKX, Sareena has been monitoring around the Netherrealm about what Quan Chi is up to behind the scene. By the time D'Vorah, Kotal Kahn's faithful executioner is revealed to have worked for Quan Chi and Shinnok, as she now has Shinnok's amulet, Sareena helps the Special Force led by Kenshi and Jax to capture Quan Chi alive. Sareena appeared with Kia and Jataaka in four episodes of the television series Mortal Kombat: Konquest in 1998, in which they were original characters renamed Siann, Mika and Sora, respectively, while their role serving Quan Chi was unchanged. Although Sareena was omitted from the UGO selection in 2012 of the series' top 50 characters, she was ranked 26th in Den's ranking of the 64 characters in the series, with the site considering her Sub-Zero Moment of Humanity into something significant. [4] Shinnok Main article: Shinnok Introduced in Mortal Kombat 4 See also: Mortal Kombat 4 and Mortal Kombat Gold Jarek Performed by: Mark Myers (MK4) Voiced by: Herman Sanchez (MK4), James Freeman-Hargis (MK:A) Jarek made his first chronological appearance in Mortal Kombat: Special Forces as chief character, where he and other members of the Black Dragon were released from a United States Special Forces prison by Kano , who had proposed reforming the Black Dragon clan, but in reality, Kano just wanted to use them as pawns to slow down any Special Forces agent who pursued him in his quest to obtain an artifact called the Eye of Chitian. Debuting as a playable character in MK4, Jarek was the rough and short-tempered second in command of the Black Dragon clan. In the games, he initially used special moves and Fatalities popularized by Kano. His plot stated that he was the last member of the Black Dragon after Kano's apparent death, and was being pursued by Sonya Blade for crimes against humanity. Captured, he finds himself working alongside earth heroes in the fight against Shinnok's forces. In Jarek's semi-canonical finale, after Shinnok's defeat, Sonya confronts Jarek on a cliff edge and tries to arm Jarek to return under Special Forces, Special Forces, He refuses and tries to kill Sonya, but Jax interferes and knocks Jarek off the cliff. However, Jarek's biography of Armageddon explains that he survives, and he believes that his (false) death would help him regain enough strength for revenge while traveling through the kingdoms in search of ancient texts that would show him a Fatality worthy of his traitor. Impressing Quan Chi after witnessing his new skills, he invites Jarek to join the Dark Forces in order to get his revenge. Jarek copied all of Kano's special moves in MK4, as well as his Heart Rip and Eye Laser fatalities, despite possessing no cybernetic enhancement, but he was not as well received as his predecessor and Armageddon is the only other time he has appeared as a player character. His resemblance was based on that of artist herman Sanchez. Jarek was left out of the 2012 UGO list of the series' top 50 characters. He has notably received negative reception for his mk4 ending, which is actually an amalgam of his endings, Sonya and Jax (the latter combines all three, including the non-canonical deaths of Sonya and Jarek). Cracked included him in a 2013 feature titled 6 Video Game Endings That Are Clearly F#@%ing With Us, saying about Jarek begging for his life while Jax swings him over the cliff cliff: What follows is one of the stupidest exchanges I can remember in a video game. ... It's hard to put into words how bad this performance is. In 2010, listed the MK4 finals, exemplified with the Nintendo 64 version of Jax's ending, among the Top Ten Ridiculous Things to Come out of Mortal Kombat, and ranked Jax finishing 19th on its 2013 list of the top 200 wrestling game finals. Jax easily has the best, especially since it is an extension of the end of Jarek, which is a kind of extension of the end of Sonya. ... It's so beautiful shit. [32] Kai Portrayed by: Kimball Uddin (MK4) Voiced by: Ed Boon (MK4) Kai is a former member of the secret white lotus society who meets Liu Kang in the United States while Liu Kang was recruiting and training a new generation of Shaolin warriors. During the events of Mortal Kombat 4, Liu Kang and Kai join earth warriors in Aennia to assist Raiden in his battle against Shinnok. [33] He makes his only other playable appearance in Armageddon. Ed Boon explained that the developers wanted an African-American character who was very agile like Liu Kang, including the same fireball projectile with the difference that was fired vertically. In addition, he was the first character in the series to perform a handstand, which led to other special moves in MK4; Boon intended this to be Kai's main fighting style in Armageddon, but time constraints prevented it. Kai ranked 47th on ugo's 2012 list of mortal kombat's top 50 characters. Robert hardcore gaming 101 said: With all his projectile moves, he's basically the black Liu Kang. [35] Meat Meat's Meat's the story describes it as a gruesome experiment created by Shang Tsung, who escapes the sorcerer's clutches before he could be completed. Prima Games' strategy guide for the game described Meat as a fun character who helps Shinnok, although this relationship is not mentioned in the game's plot. [37] Quan Chi as Meat in MK4 Meat initially served as a skin created by art director Tony Goskie for each wrestler in MK4. [38] The name Meat was simply a designation given to the model so that it could be used in the game, until Midway finally made him a playable Easter egg joke character. Players first learned of the character's official name after Meat lives! appeared on Ed Boon's website promoting the third arcade review of MK4. [39] Strategy guides also referred to the character as Carne, later making him an official nickname. [40] Meat appeared in Deception's Konquest mode, establishing him in the series' canonical plot. Meat ranked second (49th) on ugo's 2012 list of fifty MK characters. ScrewAttack ranked Meat fourth in the 2011 ranking of the series' ten worst characters: Let's take a generic [character] model, take his meat and call it a day. Ryan Aston of Topless Robot placed Meat second in his selection of eight characters who are goofy even by Mortal Kombat's standards, calling it a bloody riff on Soulcalibur's character Charade, and its plot a truly fragile excuse for its existence. In 2009, Total Film's Sam Ashurst included Meat in his selection of 7 Nasty Characters for a third Mortal Kombat film, because The Flesh can't move without spreading blood everywhere. We'd love for him to turn Mortal Kombat 3 from a teen movie to a spatter movie. [44] Reiko Portrayed by: Jim Helsinger (Konquest) Voiced by: Ed Boon (MK:D), David Beron (MK:A) Reiko is a general in the armies of Shinnok, Shao Kahn, and the Brotherhood of Shadows. [41] In MK4, after Shinnok's forces are defeated, Reiko disappears, before re-emerging to join the fight against the Defenders of the Earth. In the 2011 reboot of Mortal Kombat, he makes a special appearance at the bottom of the Pit stage, battling Daegon, Frost, Kenshi or Sareena. Reiko did not participate in Mortal Kombat X, but he has been a featured antagonist in the 2015 game-based comic series, serving as Mileena's advisor while secretly intending to use Mileena to claim the throne of Outworld for his own. His backstory shows him as the successor to Shao Kahn's throne after the events of MK9, a prophecy that was false after Quan Chi used Kahn as a tool for his government and shinnok of Earthrealm and Outworld. Reiko attempts suicide as a result before being paraded by Havik, leading to events such as Scorpio's death, Jacqui's curse and Cassie Cage, and the corruption of Shujinko and Raiden, all with kamidogu daggers, but he himself is apparently killed in battle by Kotal Kahn, Mileena, and Ermac,[45] Ermac,[45] Havik arrived to save Reiko in bringing a Raiden possessed with him to capture Johnny, Sonya, Kotal, Ermac and Mileena. Having survived and captured the five warriors who oppose him, Reiko finally fulfills his reign of blood as a new God of Blood. The name Reiko is actually a female Japanese name (as was later the case with Hotaru in Deception), and Ed Boon said the show's developers came to associate it with Shao Kahn in relation to its plot, resizing on it for its Armageddon appearance. Reiko debuted in MK4 in an outfit similar to that of the ninjas swapped palette of the two-dimensional games, in addition to salt and pepper chops with black hair, but he returned to Armageddon in a costume similar to Kahn's and both sides of his shaved head. His alternate fantasy was a duplicate of his MK4 design. Reiko ranked 42nd on the 2012 UGO list of mortal kombat's top 50 characters. Hardcore Gaming 101 said about the character: Reiko loves to wear the helmet of Shao Kahn, and ... he has a new outfit more like Shao Kahn's and uses a hammer as his former master does. Reiko has problems. Gavin Jasper of Den of Geek ranked Reiko last (73rd) in his 2015 ranking of the series' playable characters, so he considered the wasted potential of his storyline in relation to his connection to Shao Kahn: Reiko is like opening the biggest Christmas present just to see that you have a pair of socks worn. WhatCulture ranked him 14th in the 2015 selection of the series' twenty worst characters. Reiko is guilty of the crime of having zero individuality. [47] Tanya Performed by: Lia Montelongo (MK4) Voiced by: Rosalind Dugas (MK4), Beth Melewski (MK:D), Jennifer Hale (MKX) Natural from Edenia as Kitana, Rain, and Jade, Tanya is introduced to MK4 as looking innocent, but is regularly portrayed in the series after that as unreliable, as she chooses to serve on the evil side, even if it means betraying her companions in the process. In MK4, she allows Shinnok and Quan Chi to invade her home kingdom, and tries to lure Liu Kang into a trap in MK4 (which she performs in her non-canonical ending), but fails when Shinnok is defeated by Liu Kang and the defenders of Earthrealm. With her master missing and herself sought over by her home kingdom for treason, Tanya flees to Outworld as a fugitive, resurfacing as an executioner of the Mortal Alliance, who are imposing their will on the inhabitants of Outworld. When the Mortal Alliance is killed, Tanya then joins Onaga, who tried to merge the six Kamidogu into one and thus acquire incredible power, for which she brings him to Edenia. Tanya was added to Mortal Kombat X as a downloadable character,[48] and has a small role in the game's story mode, where she and Rain help Mileena in her attempt to regain the outworld throne from usurper Kotal Kahn after Mileena's promise to free Edenia from the merger of a deal that goes nowhere when Mileena is killed by D'Vorah. The end of Tanya Tanya she and Rain fleeing Kotal Kahn's forces in Outworld; when they are captured, she hands Rain to Kahn in exchange for clemency, and Rain is burned at the stake. MK co-creator Ed Boon named Tanya after her younger sister Tania. She ranked 34th on UGO's 2012 list of MK's top 50 characters. His MK4 Triple Neckbreaker fatality was ranked tenth in screwattack's Top Ten Worst Fatalities selection in 2011. [50] Complex named Tanya seventh in her 2011 selection of the ten underrated MK characters. Our girl Tanya is the traitor to all the traitors in the series, exchanging her loyalty more often than we can count. However, Den of Geek ranked her 68th in the 2015 ranking of the franchise's 73 characters, for being a one-dimensional villain whose only quality is betrayal. Total Film named her among the seven nasty characters wanted for a third Mortal Kombat film, citing her Thigh Stab deception fatality and suggesting that she be played by Rosario Dawson. [44] Introduced in Mortal Kombat: Special Forces See also: Mortal Kombat: Special Forces Tremor Voiced by: Fred Tatasciore (MKX) A brown ninja swapped palette who is one of kano's Black Dragon cohorts and possesses the ability to geokinesis (earth manipulation), he escaped special forces custody during a prison break orchestrated by Kano, to whom he was blindly loyal. Kano designated him as his watchman and guardian of a portal leading to Outworld, but Tremor was eventually defeated by Jax. Tremor was originally intended to be playable in Mortal Kombat Trilogy, but was replaced by Rain. He was an exclusive character in Challenge Mode on the PlayStation Vita port of the 2011 reboot, and made his official debut as a downloadable character in Mortal Kombat X.[48] Tremor is portrayed as an elementary terrestrial ninja who can manipulate lava and create an earthquake. In Mortal Kombat X, Tremor is now wearing a ninja-style costume, as well as receiving variations based on the manipulation of crystals, metals, and boulders. Introduced in Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance See also: Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance Blaze Voiced by: Simeon Norfleet (MK:A) Debuting as a hidden character in Mortal Alliance, and later appearing as the final boss of Armageddon, Blaze is an elementary who was pursuing a mission when he was attacked on a bridge by an ancient cult. This group of holy men, described as still serving the dead dragon king Onaga, captures Blaze and binds him to the task of protecting the last Great Dragon Egg. After the egg hatches, Blaze is able to resume his past mission. [52] Blaze is said to have been created to oversee the strength of all fighters in the kingdoms, but upon being freed from the egg incubation chamber, Blaze discovers that the power and number of these fighters have become too great in his absence, while Taven's brother, Daegon, had already been [53] He then plans to reunite all the fighters in a final final where the actions of the two brothers would eventually determine their destinies and prevent Armageddon. Sensing that something evil from the Netherrealm was influencing Daegon, Blaze decides to travel there to find his source. In Armageddon's Konquest mode, Blaze appears confronting Taven and Daegon. When Taven defeats Daegon, Blaze prepares to face Taven. While enslaved by the sect of Onaga, the spell used on him corrupted his mission. Blaze is finally defeated by Shao Kahn, causing Armageddon. The characters' Armageddon endings caused everyone to gain some measure of immense power after defeating Blaze. Blaze originated in Mortal Kombat II as a fiery figure unnamed and distant on a bridge at the bottom of the pit II stage, squarely against a character wearing green and black pants. Fans nicknamed them Torch and Hornbuckle, respectively, and both were liu kang's palette exchanges. Since they were unable to call him Torch for legal reasons (risk of copyright infringement on Marvel's character, Human Torch), Midway officially named him Blaze for his debut in the official series in Deadly Alliance. Blaze made a special appearance in Mortal Kombat X at the bottom of the pit stage battling rain. He ranked 37th on UGO's 2012 list of Mortal Kombat's top 50 characters, with the site adding: Although [saving the Dragon's Egg] doesn't seem like a tough guy's job, you'll change your mind as soon as you see Steam Blaze in your direction. [3] Garth Kaestner of the gaming site G3AR named him among the ten worst characters in the series (sixth): Blaze was essentially created based on fan feedback since his first 'participation' in MKII, but ... this is an example of how some things should be laid to rest before they begin. [57] Bo' Rai Cho Voiced by: Carlos Pesina (MK:DA, MK:D, MK:A); Steve Blum (MKX) Played by: Chris Mathews (MKX) Bo' Rai Cho is a burly and jovial outworld native who has trained many great warriors, including Liu Kang. Since he is originally from Outworld, he never enters the Mortal Kombat tournament, as this would mean competing on behalf of Outworld and therefore the brutal emperor Shao Kahn. Upon learning that Liu Kang was assassinated by the Mortal Alliance, he carries Kung Lao under his wing. As a group of ground warriors prepare for a frontal attack on the Mortal Alliance, Bo' Rai Cho secretly enters the palace and escapes with Li Mei's body. He regroups with the other ground warriors led by Raiden and retreats to safety instead of joining the attack. His back story is that he has coached warriors for centuries to compete in tournaments. After many failures, the success finally came when he coached Liu Kang, who defeated Shang Tsung and became champion of the Earthrealm tournament. He appears at the mk9 end of Shang Tsung as having trained Shang Tsung for the role of outworld's new protector against the now god Liu Kang, and makes a brief appearance in comic mode and comic books mkx. In story mode, he is seen talking to Raiden about the deaths of Liu Kang and Kung Lao before nearly being killed by Shinnok. Whether he survived the

attack is unknown. Bo' Rai Cho was added as a playable character to Mortal Kombat X via downloadable content as part of Kombat Pack 2. The character's name is a play on the word babe (Spanish for drunk), and he is usually described as intoxicated and carrying a container of alcohol. His fighting moves consist of zui quan-style fights mixed with vulgar actions, such as throwing up on the ground to make the opponent lose his foot, and propelling himself back to his feet, flatulando, which itself is used in one of his Fatalities, as well as his finisher Hara-Kiri in Deception. Character designer Herman Sanchez said the word split well into three Asian syllables, while the developers wanted a sloppy character for the series, as well as the first introduced who would be a teacher. [58] Bo' Rai Cho received middling critical reception; he ranked 37th on UGO's 2012 list of MK's top 50 characters: Having some comic relief like Bo' Rai was a breath of fresh air. Or, in his case, a belching of fresh air. Den of Geek ranked him 55th in his ranking of the 73 characters in the series. He's basically a Boogerman Shaw Brothers, and the joke runs out after the third time you use his vomit attack. [4] Robert Naytor of Hardcore Gaming 101 unfavorably compared him to Virtua Fighter character Shun Di: Make him a big fat guy, take all his charm, and make him puke and fart a lot, and you have Bo' Rai Cho. [35] ScrewAttack ranked him tenth on his 2011 list of the series' ten worst characters, particularly for his weapon in the game of a simple wooden team (a damn dick). Complex named him one of the most underrated characters in the series in 2011. Game Informer's Dan Ryckert ranked his Deception DoomFare among the worst fatalities in the series, as did Earth-'s James Deaux, who ranked him 17th out of twenty. Game Rant's C.J. Smillie ranked his finisher Hara-Kiri, in which he keeps his flatulence long enough to explode, seventh on the 2011 list of the worst finalists. Bo' Rai Cho's farts should be pretty lethal, but that's really forcing. Prima Games named him one of the cheapest characters in the series due to his vomit-projectile movement,[25] but ranked The Fart of Doom 42nd on his 2014 list of the series' top 50 fatalities. The Brazilian gaming portal UOL Jogos, in 2015, ranked Fatality alongside Ermac's Headbanger hara-Kiri as the best finalists for Deception. [63] Drahmin voiced by: Rich Carle (MK:D) Drahmin is a grotesque creature known as Oni, a demon from the netherrealm's fifth plane. He's got a huge skewer bat implanted in his arm in place of a normal hand, wears a bizarre mask called Face of Kun-Lo, and constantly has an army of flies (which he uses as projectile in the games) buzzing over your body. The mask allows him to control his anger and fight with his disciplined Style of Netherrealm, but without it, he loses focus and attacks with murderous insanity. Centuries ago, he was a cruel human warlord in Outworld who was exiled to the Netherrealm where his body and soul should be tortured for all eternity. He and his companion Oni Moloch became allies, and during the time of the Mortal Alliance, Shang Tsung fears quan chi's betrayal and hires Drahmin and Moloch to protect him, promising revenge as compensation for Quan Chi having previously fled to Outworld without them after having freed him from Scorpio's torture. Scorpio later tries futilely to defeat Quan Chi and the Oni cast him into a Soulnado, where his body is torn to pieces. In Armageddon's Konquest mode, Drahmin again faces Taven in the Netherrealm, but loses. Shinnok later reveals that Taven was only tested for illusions, causing uncertainty whether Drahmin was actually in hell. The real Drahmin is killed along with the other characters during the battle royal in the Pyramid of Argus. Ed Boon revealed that Drahmin was one of the most difficult characters to program, as he had to specifically write code that would prevent the club mounted on Drahmin's arm from switching sides whenever the character turned during gameplay. Drahmin was excluded from the 2012 UGO list of the series' top 50 characters. In 2013, G3AR named him among their worst characters in the series, citing his horrible appearance and lack of combo skills. Den of Geek ranked him 47th in the 2015 ranking of the series' 64 characters. Drahmin is like a collection of cool concepts that doesn't make much of a sum. ... Your friend Moloch does a lot more with less. [4] Drahmin was not included in Mortal Kombat X.[65] Frost Voiced by: Christine Rios (MK:A); Kelly Hu (MKX); Sara Cravens (MK11) Frost was discovered by Sub-Zero, who welcomed her as her prot?g? after being impressed by her abilities. However, he was unable to instill a sense of humility in her. The Deadly Alliance Konquest mode reveals that she wished to become Lin Kuei's new grandmaster, and froze Sub-Zero to steal the Dragon Medallion, an artifact that served as a symbol of Lin Kuei's leadership and also improved his Sub-Zero's abilities. Without the strength and discipline needed to control the power of the object, it was consumed by its own freezing ability. Sub-Zero buried her alongside her cryomancer ancestors in Outworld; forgetting her. Frost was not playable in Deception, but was added as an exclusive character for the PSP version of the game (MK Unchained), in which she realized she was still in Outworld and believed that Sub-Zero had taken her Dragon Medallion. She returned to the Lin Kuei temple in Earthrealm with the intention of killing Sub-Zero, but killed many of her clan mates in of it and became delirious to the point of seeing it everywhere. Sub-Zero froze it froze it placed her body in a shrine at the bottom of the temple, where she remained until Armageddon's Konquest mode when Taven entered the temple and freed her. Believing he was Sub-Zero, she fought him before running away embarrassed upon realizing his mistake. In Mortal Kombat X, she tried in vain to ambush Scorpio while he was making peace with Sub-Zero on behalf of their respective clans, leading to a fight between them that ends in Frost being frozen on the spot by Sub-Zero. In Mortal Kombat 11, Frost teamed up with Kronika and was converted into a Cyber Lin Kuei believing that Sub-Zero was leading Lin Kuei the wrong way after allying with Shirai Ryu. She took control and led cyber lin kuei after Sektor was killed, but she was disabled by Raiden, who used her connection to the cyborgs to shut them all down. Frost was the first character designed (by Herman Sanchez) for Deadly Alliance, and the developers admitted that they initially received fan reaction for including a female Sub-Zero in the game. She is one of several featured appearances on pit's set in the reboot of the 2011 series. Frost appeared briefly in the second edition of dc comics' deadly miniseries Kombat X, in which she was repackaged as a contemporary mixed martial artist who loses to Cassie Cage in an illegal underground fight that is interrupted by the Black Dragon. Her outfit consisted of a simple fighting outfit, while she had a more Westernized personality who sees her refer to Cassie as a Beverly Hills brat. She was left out of the 2012 UGO list of the series' top 50 characters, but Complex placed her eighth in the series' selection of the ten most underrated characters in 2011. Den of Geek ranked Frost 37th in the 2015 ranking of the series' 73 characters. With Sub-Zero's attempt to rebuild Lin Kuei and give legitimacy, adding Frost to the cast was a nice touch. [4] Hsu Hao Hsu Hao is a cybernetically enhanced Mongol member of the Red Dragon clan that Mavado orders to both infiltrate the Special Forces and help the Red Dragons completely destroy the rival Clan of the Black Dragon. He follows his instructions without question and helps Special Forces for years until the Black Dragons are apparently eliminated after Jarek's death. Hsu Hao then detonators a nuclear device at the underground base of the Outside World Research Agency before escaping, taking away the OIA's only means of interdimensional travel in the process. Mavado later sends Hsu Hao to kill Shang Tsung under Quan Chi' orders, but Jax intercepts Hsu Hao on his way to Tsung's palace, and kills him by ripping out his cybernetic heart. He returned with the rest of the cast to Armageddon, and during the free battle between the fighters in the Pyramid of Argus, he is briefly seen fighting Johnny Cage before both are knocked down from the pyramid, and his end makes him take down Shinnok and and the new ruler of the Netherrealm. Hsu Hao was unofficially called Kublai Khan while the Mortal Alliance was in development. Series art director Steve Beran described him as the anti-Jax who had experiments carried out on him by the Chinese army, resulting in the heart implant, while Ed Boon explained that his special Hand Clap movement was inspired by what he had read in the superhero comics. [70] However, Hsu Hao was not well received among the development team; The main storyteller John Vogel explained that his death in Deadly Alliance was entirely destined to be canon, but he was reluctantly included in Armageddon much to my dismay just because the game was featuring the entire playable cast. He was additionally the first character in the series that Boon officially omitted from the Mortal Kombat X. Hsu Hao list, however, appeared in the first edition of the dc comics prequel series based on the game, in which he goes after Kenshi under Daegon's orders to betray the Red Dragon, but is later killed by Scorpio. The reaction from fans and critics has been as negative as. Hsu Hao did not make ugo's 2012 list of MK's top 50 characters. G3AR ranked him second on the 2013 list of the series' ten worst characters (a Mongolian character with an Iron Man-style chest). [57] Destructoid named him the worst character in the series in 2014: Hsu Hao is so bad that even the creators of Mortal Kombat hate his guts... in a game that was filled with new, luster additions, he was undoubtedly the most plastered of this litter. Robert Naytor of Hardcore Gaming 101 described the character as a slightly racist take on a Village Person. He finished second in the last (72nd) in the 2015 Den of Geek ranking of the 73 characters in the series, ahead only of Reiko, with the site describing him as completely redundant and ... ultimately unseemable. It makes sense that they already killed him in the comic Mortal Kombat X. [4] Kenshi Main article: Kenshi (Mortal Kombat) Li Mei Voiced by: Lina Chern (MK:D), Tara Strong (MKX) Li Mei made her debut in Deadly Alliance as a replacement for Sai-Wielding for Mileena. His village was forced into slavery to help build the palace of Shang Tsung around a Soulnado, which had been a long-standing legend of his people. By attacking Kano, she gains the attention of Quan Chi, who promises her freedom if she wins a tournament. At this time, she befriended Shujinko, captured by Kano during her forty-year search for kamidogu. Shujinko offers to train her, even if he feels that his chances in the tournament are small. She later travels to a nearby forest, where she is attacked by Moloch and Drahmin, but escapes while Shang Tsung forms an alliance with the two Oni. His final in Mortal Alliance portrayed his tournament winner Quan Chi and earning the right to be imprisoned forever one of the bodies of Onaga's soldier, but in Deception Bo' Rai Cho rescues her from this fate, but apparently it is only partially successful as Li Mei takes on some some of these ancient warriors, and their end results in her voluntarily becoming queen of Onaga. In Armageddon's Konquest mode, Li Mei fights Shinnok in the Netherrealm. She begins to gain advantage over him until taven (who does not know shinnok had turned evil) appears and makes her go away. Shinnok later reveals that all this was created as a test for Taven. In the game's cinematic prologue, and therefore its canonical ending, she is the first kombatant to be killed, impaled by Hotaru as soon as the battle begins between the Forces of Light and Darkness. She makes a brief appearance in Mortal Kombat X, taking a number of world refugees to Earth due to a civil war between Kotal Kahn and Mileena and alerting Special Forces to Mileena's possession of Shinnok's amulet, as well as Kano's involvement in Outworld. Li Mei was omitted from ugo's 2012 list of the franchise's top 50 characters. She has particularly received a mixed reception for her Deception design; in 2009, Total Film named her among the seven nasty characters they wanted for a third Mortal Kombat film, because of her emotional and moving story, but mostly because her outfit makes her look like batgirl after a fight with Wolverine. Den of Geek ranked her 57th in the 2015 ranking of the entire list of 73 characters in the series, feeling that she was only distinguished by her ridiculous bandana outfit and underwear. Joe Pring of WhatCulture ranked Li Mei sixth in his 2015 selection of mortal kombat's twenty worst characters for his hilariously bad costume... Anyone who wears a bandana while dancing in metal-plated underwear deserves to be ridiculed. [47] Mavado Voiced by: Alex Brandon (MK:A) Mavado's influence on the game's plot began before the events of MK4. Since the Red Dragon's top priority is the extermination of the Black Dragon while still wishing to keep their existence a secret,[72] they decide to manipulate the Special Forces for their own purposes. To this end, Mavado instructs his subordinate, Hsu Hao, to infiltrate the Outworld Research Agency and help them locate and kill the last members of the Black Dragon. Mavado is hired by the Mortal Alliance to defend himself against Kenshi in exchange for acquiring the opportunity to take into custody the last member of the Black Dragon, Kano, who was then in the service of the Mortal Alliance. [72] He enters into a rivalry with Kabal that has Mavado deeply defeating him in combat and stealing his words from the hook. He then tracks down and defeats Kenshi and leaves him for dead, but in Deception, Kabal returns after being healed by Havik, and returns the favor to Mavado by defeating him and taking back his swords. [74] In Armageddon's Konquest mode, Mavado is ordered by Daegon to kill his brother Taven, but fails, and at the end of Kabal, Mavado loses to Kabal in the final battle and kills himself, with Kabal then hoisting his disembodied to heaven as a symbol of the superiority of the Black Dragon. Black. it was originally called Evil (Spanish for Evil) during the development of Deadly Alliance,[75] and character designer Steve Beran had originally designed a killer-style look at the character,[76] but the idea was erased due to the belief that it did not fit with the Mortal Kombat universe. [77] He won the series' first body-proposition special for the use of a physical object, throwing two long, hooked bungee cables into the ground and slings himself first to dropkick his opponent,[77] an attack that was incorporated into his Thrust Fatality Boot, in which he also has thorns attached to the soles of his shoes. Although Mavado was not included in Mortal Kombat X, he had a minor role in the 2015 game-based prequel comic series, when he and the Red Dragons kill Kotal Kahn's warriors during the latter's failed attempt to remove Mileena from the outer world throne,[78] and when the Red and Black Dragon factions fight each other for custody of the captured Cassie Cage and Jacqui Briggs , which are released during the melee and kill Mavado with their own words hooks. Mavado was omitted from the 2012 UGO list of mortal kombat's top 50 characters. GamePlayBook's Robert Workman ranked him eighth in his 2010 selection of the worst mk characters, describing his Fatality as stupid, but Den of Geek, who ranked him 39th in the 2015 rankings of the series' 73 playables, thrilled that he received legal points added for his bungee hook attacks and ... that he murdered Kabal [and] stole his tough guns. [4] Mokap introduced in Deadly Alliance as a hidden joke character, Mokap is a motion capture actor with a vast knowledge of martial arts and fighting styles. He continually finds himself inexplicably transported and involved in the battles, simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time. [81] Mokap's Mortal Alliance biography reveals that he is a former martial arts teacher on chicago's north side. One day he was called by Johnny Cage to do some motion capture work for his new film and became the main martial arts talent for motion capture in this film. Mokap was taken to Hollywood to begin his first session. [82] It is not known how Mokap participated in the Events of the Mortal Alliance, and although he fights on the side of good, it does not seem to affect the outcome of the battle. Some time after that, Mokap gained some telekinetic powers, although the source of these powers was not explained. Mokap returns in MK: Armageddon, again fighting for the earthly world side and for his life. He was called Mokap Man in his mk:da finale, and he made two brief appearances in Konquest deception mode. Mokap's name is short for motion capture (with C being replaced by a K according to mortal kombat tradition), as in the used by the actors to capture the movements of the characters. It is a tribute to Midway graphic artist Carlos Pesina, who had played Raiden in the two-dimensional games and provided motion capture works most of the characters in the three-dimensional titles. Pesina admitted that it was very flattering to be included in the game, but joked that it was strange to see fatalities performed on him. [81] The North Side of Chicago reference in Mokap's biography was a nod to the Lakeshore Sport & Fitness athletic club located in the area, where many of the actors who were cast for the digitized MK games had worked as martial arts instructors and personal trainers. [83] The character had been added at the end of the Mortal Alliance development process, so he had no own fighting styles, a weapon position, or a Fatality, but instead had three fighting styles borrowed instead of the two standard ones. [81] Mokap finished last in the UGO rankings in 2012 of MK's top 50 characters, and Den of Geek ranked him 55th in the 2015 ranking of the characters in the series, as it did not work well as a comedy character because the game did little to differentiate the characters in terms of personality. [4] However, Total Film in 2009 named Mokap among the seven nasty characters sought in a third Mortal Kombat film, suggesting that he be played by motion capture expert Andy Serkis. Prima Games included its 50th-place Armageddon Head Smash fatality on its 2014 list of the top 50 fatalities in the MK series. Almost nothing fancy, but dying at the hands of a guy in a ping-pong ball-laden suit is embarrassing enough. [62] Moloch voiced by: Bob Ladewig (MK:D) The deputy chief of the Mortal Alliance, Moloch is a blue-skinned, hunchback Oni Destroyer who is the only known ally of his counterpart, Drahmin. The sorcerer Quan Chi confronts him and Drahmin with an offer to free them from the Netherrealm if they protect him from the Scorpion ninja spectrum. They accept the offer by attacking Scorpio whenever he approached Quan Chi, allowing Quan Chi to escape his torture, but he then promptly abandons Moloch and Drahmin and flees to Outworld. After the Eponymous Mortal Alliance kills Shao Kahn and Liu Kang, Shang Tsung makes a deal with the two Oni behind Quan Chi's back, promising them revenge against Quan Chi for his actions. At the end of Armageddon, Moloch destroys the Pyramid of Argus with a single punch before turning Edenia into a desert, but ends up trapped there even after destroying its portals in the process. [85] Quan Chi is seen toting Moloch's severed head during his pre-match performances in Mortal Kombat X.[86] In the comics, Moloch is executed by revenant Kitana by order of Quan Chi for not being able to recapture Scorpio. Moloch was designed by Allen Ditzig, with its concept changing little of its finished design. He was not included in the 2012 UGO list of the series' top 50 characters. Bryan Dawson of Prima Games named Moloch in his 2014 selection of the cheapest characters from Mortal describing it as generally unpleasant to look at and the kind of cheap when you feel that your friend is playing as a boss character but but geek ranked him highly in his 2015 ranking of the 64 characters in the series (21): [He] fit the role of Goro [sub-boss] in Deadly Alliance and brought some total brutality that had not been felt in a Mortal Kombat boss since Kintaro. [4] Nitara Portrayed by: Elissa Cadwell (2021 film) Nitara is a bat-winged vampire who spends a lot of time trying to find a mysterious sphere that connects her home kingdom of Vaeternus to Outworld. The sphere, however, was inaccessible to her, and so she tricks the Agent of the World Research Agency Outside Cyrax to retrieve the sphere after sending Reptile to attack it and destroy a panel on Cyrax's arm in the process, thus trapping it in Outworld, but when Cyrax delivers the object, Nitara compensates Cyrax by sending it back to Terrarealm. Nitara breaks the ball to pieces, sealed the independence of her outworld kingdom, but she is knocked out in the process, and is back home when she wakes up. [88] She then makes her mission to protect the fragile stability of the kingdom. [89] In Armageddon, a genocide of her race begins to occur, and she is sent by the elders of her people to a crater in Edenia to find a prophesied force of great power that could destroy the assassin's blade. As she travels there, she comes across the demonic Ashrah, the blade's possessor. To protect the rest of her race, Nitara lures Ashrah out of her kingdom and continues to Edenia, planning to bring her aggressor to the Edenian weapon where it can be used against her. The character was designed by midway artist Luis Mangubat, and there were plans to have a male vampire counterpart in Deadly Alliance, but the developers were unable to add it to the game in time. She was featured in a fictional Blood energy drink ad that was unlockable in the game's Konquest mode. She ranked 46th on UGO's 2012 list of the series' top 50 characters. In 2011, Complex named her one of the most underrated characters in the series. Buffy would have her ass handed to her for this girl. Nitara will make her debut in the upcoming reboot of mortal kombat, played by stuntman Elissa Cadwell. [92] Introduced in Mortal Kombat: Deception See also: Mortal Kombat: Deception Ashrah Voiced by: Johanna A?onuevo (MK:D, MK:A) Ashrah is a demonic netherrealm with the appearance of an elegant and demure woman, dressed in a white outfit with a flat, wide hat that has a train attached to the rear. She was once a member of Quan Chi's Shadow Brotherhood who worshipped the fallen elder god shinnok. When Ashrah refuses to comply with one of Quan Chi's orders, he sends his sister to kill her. In her continual attempt to escape the Netherrealm, she finds a sacred sword known as Kriss that cleanses her evil spirit at every death, but the blade is actually a mystical weapon of killing vampires that corrupts her welder with the false belief that they are using it to vampires and other demons. She searches for Noob Saibot, whom she she being a powerful demon because doing so would allow her to complete her ascension, but also mistakenly assumes that destroying Ermac would help purify her soul, because her powers are common in the Netherrealm, even if he is a force of good. In Armageddon, she successfully escapes, emerging into an unknown kingdom surrounded by celestial beings who turn her into her chosen warrior. Ashrah is then transported to Nitara's homeland of Vaeternus to begin killing his race of vampires, but is defeated by Nitara. She then flees to Edenia in search of Blaze's power in order to destroy Nitara and gain ascension. According to series co-creator Ed Boon, the character was commonly misconceived as a female version of Raiden due to her outfit, while he believed at the time of Deception's release that she would have the greatest impact of the game's new characters in terms of her design and special moves. Ashrah ranked 45th on UGO's 2012 list of Mortal Kombat's top 50 characters: Ashrah may look like it came out of a Monet painting, but don't let that fool you. Den of Geek placed its 53rd in the 2015 ranking of the 64 characters in the series, opining that there was nothing special about it ... Design or style of play that caught anyone. [4] Robert Naytor of Hardcore Gaming 101 commented on his in-game costumes: A modest outfit in [a] female mk, who could have imagined? Kevin Wong of Complex ranked Ashrah's Voodoo Doll fatality seventh on his 2013 list of the series' top twenty final moves, saying that while the character herself didn't work very well, his finisher was a lot of fun, but was surprised that it took so long to explore voodoo for its magical elements. [95] Voiced by: Josh Schmittstenstein (MK:D) Once a respected Seidan guard, like Hotaru, Dairou is arrested after killing the assailant responsible for his family's murder. He manages to escape in the middle of a prison riot instigated by the anti-government resistance movement led by Darrius, and no longer follows the Seidan law after that, nor yields to Chaos. Instead, he becomes a mercenary, having positive or negative assignments by nature, while he is revered among Seido's secret underground. One contract has Darrius hiring Dairou to steal the Seidan government's Declaration of Order (which he performs at the end of Darrius' deception), but another involves the murder of his former companion Hotaru. [96] In Deception's Konquest mode, Dairou is hired by Damashi (Onaga) to get Shujinko out of seidan prison, killing two guards in the process before disappearing; Hotaru believes Shujinko killed the guards while consorcing with known criminals to escape. He is also hired to eliminate Kobra, but Shujinko commissions to do so since Kobra recognizes him and therefore awaits the attack. At the end of Deception, mortally injures Hotaru in in but Hotaru dies before Dairou can reveal who ordered the murder. In his non-canonical armageddon finale, he defeats Blaze and Shao Kahn, claiming the Outworld rule for himself and restoring it to its former glory, while he forms an alliance with Earthrealm and Edenia. [98] Dairou was cast in Deadly Alliance conceived by Herman Sanchez as an armored samurai-type character wielding a pair of katanas,[99] but was left out of the game due to time constraints and the complexity of the design. [100] Although the character's name was Japanese of origin,[101] his original design was avoided for Deception in favor of a more classic Chinese appearance, which included a Manchuan line hairstyle and Autumn Dao weapon in the game. Ed Boon considered the character's Tombstone Drop maneuver --in which he hits his back on the ground and sends his opponent into the air, setting them up for combos--one of the game's best moves. Although Boon considered Dairou a cool-looking character, the overall and critical reception was decisively negative, as he was omitted from the 2012 UGO list of the series' top 50 characters. He was ranked 67th by Den of Geek in his 2015 rating of the series' 73 playable characters, with the site calling him incredibly generic. [4] Dustin Thomas of Destructoid ranked him third in his 2014 ranking of the series' five worst mk characters (there really isn't much to say about him). CJ Smillie of Game Rant named Dairou's Hara-Kiri Backbreaker ending the move in Deception among the ten worst Mortal Kombat Fatalities (Friday): Hara-Kiri of Bo' Rai Cho stretched the player's suspension of disbelief to its limits, but he drilled a direct hole in him. [61] However, his Fatality Ribs to Deception's Eyes received positive critical attention. Prima Games ranked fourth on the franchise's top 50 fatalities list in 2014, while Game Informer's Dan Ryckert in 2010 ranked it among the best finalists in the series. He may not be a classic character like Sub-Zero or Liu Kang, but Dairou seems perfectly adept at creative fatalities. He was the only Mortal Kombat finisher on a 2010 list of The UGO's Chris Plante's top deaths: Dairou may be a C-list celebrity, but his fatality is A+. The UGO included the Joker's censored fatality of Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe on the same list as a reminder that Mortal Kombat went from Dairou's rib to censor a head shot in half a decade. [104] ScrewAttack ranked eighth on its list of the series' top ten fatalities in the same year. Thomas considered the character's only high point. [71] UGO's K. Thor Jensen ranked the incredibly demented Fatality fifth on his 2011 list of the 50 most gruesome video game finishing moves. [106] Darrius Voiced by: Steve Jones (MK:D) Having stayed with the oppressive nature of his home kingdom of Seido, Darrius leads a resistance movement seeking senate of the kingdom. He takes advantage of his strict laws to manipulate individuals to join in his movement. According to his biography of Deception, he resorts to having another family of Guards (apparently Dairou, but this is never explicitly stated) murdered in order to provoke them to retaliate forcefully and therefore be punished with incarceration after Darrius gets them out of prison and convinces them to join their ranks. In his finale, he hires Dairou to steal the Declaration of Order, a scroll depicting Seido's laws, so he leads his group of revolutionaries to defeat Hotaru's forces and annex control of the Senate. [107] Designed by Steve Beran, Darrius was the last new addition to deception's list, and his original role in the game was the new leader of the Red Dragon clan. His alternate attire - a pair of orange gi bottoms and a small afro - was a nod to actor Jim Kelly in the martial arts films Enter the Dragon and Black Belt Jones. According to Beran, the character's look was inspired by the comic art of the 1960s and 1970s, and the end result was intended to be a mixture of these fused elements with an elegant modern approach. He also described Darrius as having an attitude of 'not taking b.S.' as a star athlete who had made his way to fame for a rough upbringing and humble beginnings. [108] Darrius was described by Boon as a more Americanized character in the fighting game who had an indescribable appeal about him, and artist herman Sanchez enthused that he was thin and mean, aggressive, [and with] style. Storyteller John Vogel expressed his desire to see the character in future episodes of MK. Darrius did not make the 2012 UGO list of the series' top 50 characters, but Gavin Jasper of Den of Geek ranked him most favorably in his 2015 ranking of the series' 73 characters (44th): He immediately fell into the obscurity of Mortal Kombat, but ... it is worth revisiting below the line. Prima Games ranked her 26th on the 2014 list of the top 50 finalists in the series. Gameranx ranked seventh out of ten on a 2012 list of the series' most horrific fatalities. It's a shame that this fatality didn't reappear in the last Mortal Kombat. However, Game Informer named him one of the most confusing finalists in the series. [59] Havik Voiced by: Ryan Rosenberg (MK:D, MK:A) Havik is a cleric of Chaosrealm, and his only representative in the games. Neither good nor evil, his ambitions are to spread discord and he is cowering of those who can promote his ends, regardless of his goals. He is a frequent troublemaker in Orderealm and shares a bitter rivalry with his general, Hotaru, but Havik's role in the game is instead in connection with Kabal and the recently reformed Black Dragon. Havik opposes the Dragon King, Onaga, who rules by diktat. He finds a badly wounded Kabal, who had been defeated by the leader of the rival clan, the Red Dragon. Havik restores Kabal's Kabal's and convinces him to restore the former glory that the Black Dragon clan possessed in the name of anomy. He did it to promote chaos on earth. Havik, along with Kabal and new recruits Kira and Kobra, ventured into Outworld. There, Havik revealed his plans: to lure the heroes into battle with Onaga, and once the Dragon King had been defeated, to overthrow or distract the battle winners long enough that Havik could consume Onaga's heart, which would grant him Onaga's ability to raise the dead. Havik lures the heroes to the Dragon King as planned and thus sets his schemes in motion, though at the end of Kabal, Kabal kills Havik and steals Onaga's heart for himself. Havik made a special appearance in Mortal Kombat (2011) at the end of Noob Saibot. He served as a main antagonist in the deadly comic Kombat X, where he aligns himself with Reiko in his attempt to take over Outworld. Havik is the brains behind the cursed curses of kamidogu daggers that brainwash various characters and place them under his mortal power throughout the story arc, and he also uses Reiko as a container to store Shinnok's amulet (whose revelation is caused by Havik manipulating Reiko to kill himself), which he plans to use to descend all kingdoms into chaos. His plan is thwarted by Scorpio, who rips Havik's head off the panel - breaking the curse in the process - and presents his severed head to Drahmin and Moloch, then killed by Quan Chi, stepping havik's head on the Netherrealm. It was revealed that Havik had an agreement with Quan Chi in search of the amulet, but Havik had his own plan to use it for his large-scale chaos. Havik was designed by Steve Beran as an alternative outfit for Noob Saibot before receiving a plot of his own, although his original name during the development of Deception was Skab. Ed Boon said the developers wanted a decadent character whose specials would seem disturbing, such as his knees bending to the wrong side whenever he fired a projectile, or him breaking his own neck during battle. He was ranked 38th on the 2012 UGO list of mortal kombat's top 50 characters. The character received a positive reception as deception's debut character. Hardcore Gaming 101 described Havik as the least of the newcomers to Deception, even if that's not saying much. [35] Dustin Thomas of Destructoid said in 2014: The only new character in Deception worthy of being a character from Mortal Kombat is Havik. In ranked 30th in 2015 with 73 characters, Den of Geek said: While the entire Orderrealm/Chaosrealm subplot never picked up, Havik is strong enough to exist on its own. [4] Sam Ashurst of Total Film named Havik among his seven nasty characters wanted for a third Mortal Kombat film in 2009 because we like the of someone who looks like a zombie version of Genghis Khan walking around and doing the occasional, occasional good deed, that he should be played by Jason Statham in a cheap Skeleton costume. Kabal's Deception finale was ranked #135 in the 2013 list of the 4th card of the top 200 finals of fighting matches. Despite dying, Havik is very excited about these developments. It's chaos, baby! [115] Hotaru Voiced by: Chase Ashbaker (MK:D) Hotaru is a tall and imposing general of Seido, the Kingdom of the Order, and is zealously dedicated to preserving law and order at any cost, even if it means aligning himself with the Dragon King Onaga to achieve this. He is neutral because he preserves law and order for those of higher authority, regardless of his side or his intentions. He first appears in Deception's Konquest mode when Shujinko needs his help, and then he ventures into Outworld to confront Shao Kahn's Tarkat armies who are besieging the walled city of Lei Chen to complete the mission shujinko has rewarded him with. However, when Shujinko later returns to Seido to visit him for another assignment, Hotaru arrests him for breaking the curfew. Shujinko ages in captivity for years before Dairou eliminates two guards positioned in Shujinko's cell and frees him before disappearing; Hotaru mistakenly believes that Shujinko himself killed the two men and escaped, provoking a battle in which Shujinko emerges victorious over his former ally. Years later, Hotaru's forces were under Onaga's command; believing that this newly resurrected ruler would bring order to the universe, Hotaru helps the Dragon King's hordes in their attacks and pursues those who would stand against them, such as Sub-Zero and Kenshi, the first hotaru set out to bring to justice before Onaga. He, however, does not know that a reward was put on his head: Hotaru had in the past served as a guard for Dairou while the latter was arrested for murder. Dairou is now under contract to eliminate Hotaru, but no mention of this is made in Hotaru's biography, while the Sub-Zero/Kenshi tandem factors in his non-canonical endings: Kenshi hacks Hotaru in two before he can kill Sub-Zero, and this scenario is reversed at Hotaru's conclusion that makes him display Kenshi's unsty head to Onaga before dispatching Sub-Zero-Zero. [117] Furthermore, at the end of Darrius, Hotaru's forces are unable to stop the seidan Senate coup by Darrius' revolutionaries,[118] while at the end of Dairou, he is killed in battle,[119] giving Hotaru the distinction of suffering death or defeat in three total finals. He fatally stabs Li Mei through the middle of the section with his naginata during the opening sequence of MK: Armageddon, but his own mutilated body is seen prominently at the beginning of the story mode of the 2011 reboot, which depicts the aftermath of Armageddon. [120] Hotaru was conceived as a polar order versus chaos opposite Havik. [121] His name is in Japanese firefly,[122] which was the inspiration behind his iridescent hard-shell armor costume (with sashimono bands mounted on his shoulders) shoulders) was designed by midway artist Jennifer Hedrick. Hotaru ranked 43rd on ugo's 2012 list of mortal kombat's top 50 characters. Den of Geek ranked him 60th in his 2015 ranking of the series' 73 characters. In the battle between order and chaos, the order tends to be more boring, but Hotaru has just enough of a legal factor. [4] Robert Workman of GamePlayBook ranked Hotaru tenth in his selection of the series' worst characters for his use of lava as a weapon, as well as stealing Liu Kang's Bicycle Kick for one of his special moves. His Body Slam finisher from Deception was placed tenth by C.J. Smillie of Game Rant in his 2011 selection of the series' top ten fatalities: Hotaru is not a guy you want to annoy, and if anyone can make you follow the law for a T, it's him. [123] Kira Voiced by: Christine Rios (MK:A) In her story, Kira disguises herself as a man and sells weapons to terrorist organizations in the mountains of Afghanistan, but during one of these transactions in a cave, her cover is discovered and she has no choice but to fight to leave. Coming out victorious, she meets Kabal, who was waiting outside to contemplate the winner. He decides to reconstitute the Black Dragon, and how Kira's cold and calculated movements remind him of the Red Dragon, the organization from which the Black Dragon has separated. As the Black Dragon did not have this presence, Kabal offers to make Kira his first recruit. Accepting, Kira dedicates herself to her new organization, and helps Kabal recruit Kobra. According to the end of Kira MK: Deception, Kabal makes his fight against Kobra to death as a test; Kira wins, but both return to Armageddon. In her official rendering of Deception, Kira is seen carrying the same Raptor knives that Kano used throughout the series (called Dragonteeth in the game). The show's main storyteller, John Vogel, described her as the most disciplined of the Black Dragons, while Midway programmer Jay Biondo called Kira the fatal attraction. Kira was left out of the 2012 UGO list of the series' top 50 characters, but was among seven characters from nasty series sought after by Total Film's Sam Ashurst in 2009 for a third Mortal Kombat film, suggesting that she could be played by Olga Kurylenko with a pencil mustache. Kira ranked 32nd in Geek's 2015 ranking of the 64 characters in the franchise, with the site calling her the evil Sonya Blade that was a little easier to take seriously than Kobra. John Harty of WhatCulture ranked his Deception storyline fourth in his 2015 selection of the ten badass stories, saying about his preBlack Dragon past: Whether in reality or in fiction, this is a concept that speaks to a person with some serious balls. [125] Kobra Voiced by: Alex Brandon (MK:A) Kobra is a young Martial Artist from New York City who wants their martial arts in a real fight in order to experience the legitimate violence of the sport. The emotion and excitement of the struggle begins to him, and he starts killing drug dealers and gangs, before moving on to convenience stores and gas stations. Eventually, he is arrested, not knowing how many lives he had destroyed, and while handcuffed in the back of a patrol car, he notices a girl and a masked guy with bloody words involved in a standoff with police. Kabal and Kira soon took him to the new Black Dragon syndicate after killing the officers. The trio flee to Outworld, where they work for Havik, the cleric of Chaos; at the end of Kabal, he has Kobra and Kira distract the heroes of the Earth while Kabal fights Havik, but at the very end of Kobra, he and the Black Dragon simply tear up the forces that had come out victorious over the Dragon King. He appears in Armageddon's Konquest mode with Kabal and Kira as Taven's first combatant, protecting a bridge with Kira in the Botanical Jungle that Taven needs to traverse. Kira abandons Kobra when he begins to fight the newcomer, eventually escaping after he fails to stop him. At the end of Armageddon, Kobra rises to divinity after defeating Blaze and wants Kira to join him as his queen; the Elder Gods obey, but convert her into a goddess of death who reduces Kobra to dust after she kisses him, which serves as a warning not to demand anything from the Elder Gods. Kobra was nicknamed Ben Masters in his life bar while Deception was in production due to his physical resemblance to Street Fighter character Ken Masters, but a German video game publication that even played an initial unfinished version of the game later falsely claimed, to Midway's anger, that Ken himself would be a guest character in the game. [129] As Liu Kang in the first generation of games, Ed Boon described Kobra's role in Deception as the simple character that everyone can pick up and play with special moves easy to perform. [130] GamePlayBook placed Kobra sixth on its 2010 list of the ten worst MK characters. He has a burning fist attack (Shoryuken, anyone?) along with a Windmill Kick (a limp variation of hurricane kick) ... I'm sorry, Kobra, but you don't have a bite. However, Den of Geek ranked Kobra (evil Johnny Cage) 35th in the 2015 rankings of the 64 best characters in the series, while his Armageddon finished 101st in the 2013 rankings of the top 200 wrestling game finals: Kira's finale has a similar situation where Kira becomes all-powerful, becomes all-powerful, powerful, 2013 helps Kobra and he kills her for it. These two need a therapist in the worst way. [129] Onaga Voiced by: Nigel Casey (MK:D, MK:A) Deception's main antagonist, the Onaga massif, also known as The Dragon King, was the original ruler of Outworld until one of his chief advisors, Shao Kahn, fatally poisoned him and took control of the besieged kingdom, but Onaga was actually able to the consciousness from beyond the grave. A long time before Liu Kang's victory over Shang Tsung in the deadly Kombat tournament, Onaga communicated through death to through an avatar called Damashi (deceiving in Japanese). He convinced Shujinko to embark on a quest to unite the Kamidogu of the six kingdoms, claiming that he was fulfilling the wish of the Elder Gods. When the Dragon's Egg hatches, it transfers its energy to reptile, which fulfills the prophecy of Onaga's return. The Dragon King, as such, uses the transformed body of Reptile as a host. After defeating Quan Chi, Shang Tsung, and Raiden, Onaga revives the Earth warriors, who were killed beforehand by the Mortal Alliance, as their pawns. He also forms an alliance with the Tarkatana horde to keep Edenia's armies apart as he searches for the spells that would allow him to merge the Kamidogu together and grant him supreme power. However, Shujinko defeats Onaga, leaving Onaga with only Shinnok's amulet as his only form of protection. Nightwolf sealed Onaga's soul within the kingdom, disparating it from The Reptile's body. Some time later, Onaga is approached at Netherrealm by Shinnok, who offers to restore Onaga's rule over Outworld if Onaga helps Daegon defeat Blaze and gain divine power. He is released from his slavery and returned to his own body. In MK: Konquest Armageddons mode, he is seen joining an alliance with Quan Chi, Shang Tsung and Shao Kahn for his plans to destroy Blaze. Onaga was ranked 39th on ugo's 2012 list of mortal kombat's top 50 characters. [3] Shujinko Voiced by: Max Crawford (MK:D, MK:A) The main protagonist of Deception's Konquest mode, Shujinko (literally Japanese for protagonist) is trained by Master Bo' Rai Cho in the art of kombat. Soon, Shujinko finds Damashi, who claims to be an emissary of the Elder Gods and tells Shujinko to embark on a quest in search of a Kamidogu from each of the six kingdoms. To allow Shujinko to make his orders, Damashi gives him the ability to absorb fighting styles and special attack patterns from warriors that he encounters with great ease. Shujinko's mission takes more than forty years to complete. Later, Damashi turns out to be none other than the Dragon King, Onaga, speaking to Shujinko beyond death. To this yow, Shujinko takes full responsibility, and embarks on a desperate quest to destroy Onaga, believing himself the only warrior capable of doing so. After defeating Onaga, Shujinko becomes known as the hero of Outworld. Some time later, Shujinko deliberately allows him to be captured by Mileena to approach Shao Kahn, Onaga, Shang Tsung, and Quan Chi, whom he plans to defeat. However, Raiden's Deception plot blames Shujinko's vanity and desire for glory for Onaga's rebirth, and he kills Shujinko at its end, despite Shujinko's elimination from the Dragon King. [131] Shujinko appears as a playable character in Mortal Kombat: Armageddon in his elderly form. Ed Boon considered Shujinko the Liu Kang series of next at the time of the game's release, but the character was not particularly well received by fans and critics. Shujinko ranked 41st 2012 list of the 50 best characters from Mortal Kombat. Den of Geek ranked him 65th in the 2015 ranking of the series' 73 playable characters, calling him one of the most na?ve and susceptible dumbasses in video games. [4] ScrewAttack ranked Shujinko as the eighth of his ten worst Mortal Kombat characters in 2011. Bryan Dawson of Prima Games named him one of the cheapest characters in the series due to his moveset that consisted exclusively of the movements of other combatants. Some of the combos... you can do with it are unusual. He's basically Shang Tsung with better hair. [25] Hardcore Gaming 101 compared the old version of Shujinko to the character of Kill Bill Pai Mei. [35] Introduced in Mortal Kombat: Armageddon See also: Mortal Kombat: Armageddon Daegon Voiced by: Tom Taylorson (MK:A) One of the two new characters introduced in Armageddon, the Edenian half-god Daegon is the main antagonist of konquest mode. He is the evil younger brother of Taven, and the second son of the Edenian protective god Argus and the prophesied Delia, as well as the half-brother of the Edenian traitor Rain. When Delia predicted the future of kingdoms as Armageddon, Argus had her children placed in hatchery guarded by two dragons. They would be awakened one day to fight Blaze and save the kingdoms of Armageddon. Daegon woke up prematurely due to a mistake by his guardian dragon. Unbalanced by early awakening, he kills his parents after learning the true nature of the quest: forming the Red Dragon Clan. The search required both brothers to accept a gun from their father (the drake-words) and his armor from his mother. Taven and Daegon eventually arrive in Edenia, where Daegon is defeated and killed in battle, allowing Taven to fight Blaze. His distinctive facial feature, in addition to the dragon tattoo on his healed face, is his missing right eye. The character proved difficult to name, so he was initially called Doug during the game's production. Daegon can be seen fighting Kenshi, Frost, Sareena or Reiko at the Pit Stage in MK 2011. Daegon did not make ugo's 2012 list of the series' top 50 characters, while he finished 56th in the 2015 ranking of the 73-character series. [4] Hardcore Gaming 101 opined that Daegon's developing name was probably the most interesting thing about him. [35] Taven Voiced by: Phil Ridarelli (MK:A) The protagonist of Armageddon, Taven is an Edenian half-god, son of Argus and Delia, and half-brother of the Edenian traitor Rain. He has the ability to control the fire, as does his younger brother Daegon. The Konquest mode revolves around a dispute between Taven and Daegon created by his father to save the kingdoms of Armageddon by defeating a creature named Blaze, with the winner succeeding his father's place, becoming a complete and protective god of Edenia. Until then, they should be sent to Terrarealm and kept in incubation two dragons until Blaze asks them to be awakened. When Taven is freed by his dragon, he that Daegon had been awakened centuries ago, killed his parents, and formed the Red Dragon clan in order to locate Blaze earlier, as well as to eliminate Taven. Eventually, he defeats Daegon in battle, but is killed during the battle of Armageddon. Taven has a stake in the 2011 reboot of Mortal Kombat, in one of Raiden's visions fighting Dark Raiden. Like Daegon, the process of naming him proved difficult, and so he was called Bob until his final name was determined. Ed Boon revealed that he initially opposed Taven's final name before it made perfect sense to him. Taven entered the 2012 UGO list of Mortal Kombat's top 50 characters in 48th place. [3] Hardcore Gaming 101 called him totally generic,[35] and Destructoid named him the second worst character in the series behind Hsu Hao: Taven is the most lenient character in MK history. He ranked 58th in the 2015 Geek Series ranking of the series' 73 playable characters. Appearing in a game based on including all the playable characters of Mortal Kombat, Taven's generic design did him no favors. [4] Introduced in Mortal Kombat (2011) See also: Mortal Kombat (2011 video game) Mortal Kombat included two exclusive guest characters: Freddy Krueger from the horror film franchise A Nightmare on Elm Street; [135] and Kratos from the God of War series. [136] Skarlet Main article: Skarlet (Mortal Kombat) Cyber Sub-Zero Main article: Sub-Zero (Mortal Kombat) Introduced in Mortal Kombat X See also: Mortal Kombat X Mortal Kombat X introduced four exclusive guest characters for download: Jason Voorhees of Friday's 13th horror movie franchise; a Predator from the Predator franchise; an Alien Xenomorph from the Alien franchise; and Leatherface from the Texas Chainsaw Massacre horror film franchise. Cassie Cage Main article: Cassie Cage D'Vorah Voiced by: Kelly Hu (MKX, MK11) Performed by: Brenda Barrie A member of an insectide breed named Kytinn, who comes from the island kingdom of Arnyek, which was merged with Outworld. She is a featured character in the game's story mode, in which she is first seen as the follower of Kotal Kahn, although in reality she is actually a follower of Shinnok. During story mode, she helps Earthrealm defenders recover The Shinnok amulet from Mileena. After her success, she personally kills Mileena, betrays Kotal Kahn, and travels to earthrealm with the amulet to free Shinnok. Once this is done, she accompanies Shinnok to Jinsei Temple, where she is captured by Cassie Cage during the final battle. The prequel comic reveals how D'Vorah secretly joined Shinnok behind Kotal Kahn's back after she witnessed Havik demonstrate the power of Shinnok's amulet. In Mortal Kombat 11, D'Vorah joins the time keeper, Kronika, in the hope of ensuring Kytinn's survival. After murdering Hanzo Hasashi, her displaced self-refugee injured her in retaliation and forced her to escape. D'Vorah's current whereabouts are unknown as she does not appear afterwards CraveOnline ranked her Fatality Bug Me, in which she unleashes a swarm of insects that eat her opponent, fifth in the 2015 selection of the game's top ten Fatalities. [138] D'vorah is a Hebrew female name meaning Bee (pronounced Deborah in English). [139] Erron Black voiced by: Troy Baker (MKX, MK11) Played by: Sorin Brouwers Erron Black is a mercenary gunslinger from Terrarealm in the service of Kotal Kahn, who was interviewed with the Black Dragon until Kano's betrayal. In his non-canonical arcade finale, he was hired by Shang Tsung 150 years ago to assassinate an earthrealm warrior in exchange for slowing the aging process of his body. Erron returns in Mortal Kombat 11, with two different versions of him appearing in story mode. While the current version continues to serve Kotal Kahn, his younger me was brought back from the past by the time keeper Kronika and aligned with the Black Dragon, despite his future allies telling him that he would change alliances. The character ranked tenth in Den of Geek's ranking of the series' 73 playable characters in 2015, with the site calling him Mortal Kombat's Boba Fett. [4] Ferra / Torr Voiced by: Tara Strong (Ferra); Fred Tatasciore (Torr) Ferra and Torr are a double symbiote composed respectively of a young knight and a masked giant brute, and were found wandering the tarkatanas unarmed lands before being forced to serve as personal bodyguards to the new Outworld emperor Kotal Kahn. They are of an Outworld species in which the knight binds with his mount. [137] When fatalities or brutalities are performed on the characters, only Torr will be affected and killed, while Ferra survives, either by apparently disappearing (during fatalities) or just lying in pain beside Torr's finally mutilated body (during brutalities). The characters were designed by Justin Murray, with the initial concept art showing Ferra wielding different weapons ranging from tomahawks to serrated knives mounted on his arm before his skein blades were finished. Ebenezer Samuel of the New York Daily News called Ferra and Torr the game's highlight, with their gameplay-distracting gameplay distracting enough to take their eyes out of the battle, and peculiar enough for it to be worth watching. G3AR's Michael Garvie ranked his Play Time fatality tenth in the 2015 rankings of the game's top ten fatalities. [It] puts them a cut above the rest with their side-splitting effects. Very easy to perform, and even easier to love. [142] Jacqui Briggs voiced by: Danielle Nicolet (MKX); Megalyn Echikunwoke (MK11) Played by: Emjoy Gavino Jax Briggs' daughter and his wife, Vera, Jacqui is a member of Cassie Cage's Special Forces unit who had enlisted in the army against her father's wishes. She develops a romantic relationship with Takeda during the story of the game, as well as a temporary rivalry with Kotal Kahn. She returns in Mortal Kombat 11, retaining her role as part of Cassie's Special Forces unit. Den Den Geek ranked 47th in the series' 73 characters. She's fun to play like, but she doesn't stand out enough... His role in story mode is to get into generic fights aimed at pad out of the plot. [4] Ikhtear Shahrukh of The Daily Star described Jacqui as fitting[ting] into typical generic stereotypes of generic hunting characters rather than being Mortal Kombat material. [143] Kotal Kahn voiced by: Phil LaMarr (MKX, MK11) Directed by: Stephan Scalabrino An Aztec-inspired warrior whose reign of Osh-Tekk was merged with Outworld. He was also worshipped at Earthrealm and served Mileena before knocking her off the throne of the world for treason. [137] As an Osh-Tekk, his powers originate from the sun, and he is physically much stronger than humans. It can draw sunlight to heal and strengthen itself, as well as burn enemies. With relics from Outworld, he can also use blood magic to further strengthen his already potent abilities. He also uses his signature weapon, a macuahuitl, although he wielded other weapons, such as a tecpatl and two scythes. Although it has the ability to teleport through smoke and flames, this cannot be used in the game. In Mortal Kombat X, he led a revolt against Mileena in a flashback before taking her throne and triggering a civil war in Outworld. At the present time of the events of the game, the civil war reached its peak. Cassie Cage's Special Forces team is sent to assist Kotal Kahn and inform him of local events, particularly the disappearance of Shinnok's amulet and his Mileena estate. He and Cassie's team force Mileena's group to hide and execute Mileena, ending the civil war. However, after protecting Shinnok's amulet, Kotal Kahn immediately betrays the Earthlings, imprisoning them and allowing D'Vorah to take the amulet to an unspecified location for safety; unconscious his true alliances were with Shinnok. Simultaneously, Takeda Takahashi pulls Cassie's team out of prison, and they travel back to Terrareal. This causes confusion among outworlders, including Kotal Kahn, who believed the Earthlings and D'Vorah are allies together. He leads a vicious attack against Cassie and his team and refuses to help fight Shinnok, believing that his best course of action is simply to buy more time for Outworld to survive. However, Kotal Kahn's invasion is interrupted when he is defeated by Jacqui Briggs. Shinnok is eventually defeated, and Kotal Kahn retreats back to Outworld. In Mortal Kombat 11, Kotal witnesses a storm caused by the time keeper, Kronika, which brings several kombatants passed from the past to the present. He allied his troops with the time-shifted versions of Raiden and his former lover Jade to stop Kronika and the time-shifted Shao Kahn. Though he and Jade come together to find Kahn, her anger at the tarkatan race leads her to take him down and leave them vulnerable to capture by their target. Kotal is almost executed by Shao Kahn, but Kitana Kitana The Shokan and Tarkatans to help him in the battle against the tyrant. During the fight, Shao Kahn breaks Kotal Kahn's back, leaving him paralyzed from the waist down. After defeating Shao Kahn, Kotal appoints Kitana as his successor to the throne. In the aftermath storyline expansion, Jade took Kotal to the Soul Chamber to heal, only to be interrupted by Sheeva. While he joined the earthrealm/outworld joint army to attack Kronika's guard, he was deccaptured by Shao Kahn before he could reach. Kung Jin Voiced by: Johnny Yong Bosch Played by: Nephew of Lawrence Kern Kung Lao, a retired thief turned Shaolin archer and member of Cassie Cage's Special Forces unit. He makes a special appearance in the 34th chapter of the 2015 DC Comics prequel miniseries based on the game, in which he is hired by Bo'Rai Cho and Sub-Zero to collect data on the weaknesses of cyborgs lin Kuei, and then presents Sub-Zero with a stolen thumb drive containing a virus. According to NetherRealm Studios, Kung Jin's main costume was inspired by Mongolian nomadic archers, containing layers of leather and skin and rough fabrics, with him using it as a symbol of his acceptance of his role as a hero, while his bow was designed to double as a team. Kung Jin is the first homosexual character in the series, which was confirmed by NetherRealm Studios film director Dominic Cianciolo on his Twitter account regarding an exchange of dialogues in the game's story mode between the character and Raiden. [145] Originally portrayed in Mortal Kombat X as Kung Lao's younger cousin, this was retconned in Mortal Kombat 11 to describe Kung Jin as his nephew instead. Den of Geek ranked Kung Jin 52nd in the 2015 ranking of the series' 73 playable characters, describing his revelation to Raiden as sweet, well-made and very welcome, but considering him the most boring of the game's newcomers: [He's] just the guy with the bow and the simple appearance. [4] Takeda Takahashi voiced by: Parry Shen played by Nick Toussaint Kenshi's son, and a member of Cassie Cage's Special Forces unit. After his mother was killed when he was a child, he was entrusted by his father to Scorpio, who raised him as an apprentice in the Shirai Ryu clan and taught him how to fight so that he would prepare against the assassins of his mother, the Red Dragon clan. Takeda wears an armored metallic gray suit and a yellow and black band to symbolize her connection to the Ryu Shirai. [citation required] He wields whips with blades given by Fujin that can be used on any track, and, like Kenshi, possesses telepathic powers, in addition to the ability to cause sensory overload to his opponents in the process. Triborg Voiced by: Vic Chao Triborg is a downloadable character presented as part of the second Kombat Pack of the game. It is a combination of Sektor, Cyrax and Smoke, as well as the Sub-Zero cybernetics from the 2011 reboot. [149] Special Forces agents found hidden storage hidden for The Lin Kuei Cyber Initiative, and at an S.F. facility, scientists began loading the data into a test body. This caused the minds of Sektor, Cyrax and Smoke to blend in, giving life to the body. After killing everyone at the facility, Triborg now seeks to destroy all organic life. Introduced in Mortal Kombat 11 See also: Mortal Kombat 11 Mortal Kombat 11 introduced five exclusive downloadable guest characters: the Image Comics Spawn character, the T-800 model from the Terminator franchise, the DC Comics Joker, cybernatically enhanced cop RoboCop, and Vietnam War veteran John Rambo. Cetrion Voiced by: Mary Elizabeth McGlynn Cetrion is shinnok's sister and daughter of Kronika, an Ancient Goddess who uses the power of nature and elements. Cetrion is coated with natural armor consisting of jade chisel and flowing foliage. She was thought to be a respected Old Goddess among the Elder Gods. After Shinnok's defeat, however, she betrayed the Elder Gods to go serve her mother; to whom both she and Shinnok were truly loyal. Despite helping her mother in her plan to redefine time, Fire God Liu Kang exploited Cetrion's conflict with her loyalty, causing her to lose several fights before using her power to strengthen Kronika. Geras Voiced by: Dave B. Mitchell Geras is Kronika's chief underling and executioner. Possessing sand-based powers and time, he is able to stop time in battle and bank damage caused to opponents, which will take effect once time begins again. It is also able to take seconds from the game timer. Geras has robotic skin and is coated in white and gold armor with luminescent blue energy, similar in style to Kronika. In the game's story mode, he cannot be killed permanently due to his regenerative abilities. While confronting Raiden during the final battle, Geras was thrown into netherrealm's bottomless Blood Sea. In the expansion of the Aftermath story, Geras was killed by Shao Kahn and Sindel, leaving his fate uncertain despite his powers. Kollector Voiced by: Andrew Morgado Kollector is a six-gun tribute collector, a Naknadan who served as an executioner of former Foreign Emperor Shao Kahn. He hid after the rise of the current worthy emperor Kotal Kahn, until he was caught by Kotal himself. When the Temporal Fusion caused by Kronika occurred at the same time that Kollector was about to be executed, Kollector managed to escape and reunite with the time-shifting Shao Kahn and his allies as he joined Kronika's strength. [151] Kollector is capable of using a wide range of weapons, including a flashlight, chain apple, bag pump, and fire bottles. After each fight, the Kollector packs the body of his dead enemy in the leather backpack on his back. He had one of his brothers murdered by Erron Black in the past. Kronika by: Jennifer Hale The mother of the Elder Gods Shinnok and Cetrion, Kronika is a titan and the time architect who oversaw the events in both Mortal Kombat Kombat Schedules. She seeks to reset time and restore proper balance to the universe after shinnok's raiden defeat. This balance involves Cetrion, the model of light, life and virtue, and Shinnok, the model of darkness, death, and addiction fighting each other and putting the kingdoms in an eternal war against each other. She is the first female lead character in the series and the main antagonist of Mortal Kombat 11, as well as the true and general main antagonist of the entire series. She was initially developed as a male character. [152] Other These characters were never featured in games, either because they never existed or were removed during development. Belokk Belokk (right) in a leaked screenshot of Mortal Kombat Gold Belokk was originally scheduled for Mortal Kombat Gold, but was cut from the final release. [153] It was created by Eurocom and, according to Ed Boon, was removed from the game as the developers did not have time to complete it. However, Eurocom accidentally sent information about the game with Belokk in it to the Game Informer, and as a result, six screenshots of it were leaked to the public in a preview upon special request. [156] Hornbuckle Well after the home doors of MKII by Probe and Sculptured Software were released, rumors of hidden extra characters began to revolve around these and the original versions of the arcade, despite the fact that all the secrets of the game were known at the time. In MKII, the background of the Pit II stage depicts liu kang palette exchanges; one engulfed in flames and the other wearing black and green pants. As the rumors began to circulate, these characters were eventually given the names Torch and Hornbuckle, respectively. Hornbuckle's name originated from the SNES port, in which Jade sometimes appears on stage before a fight and tells Hornbuckle who?. This was a reference to Leanne Hornbuckle, whose name appears in the Special Thanks section of the game credits by Sculptured Software. [158] Guest characters Guest characters from various media franchises appeared in subsequent Mortal Kombat games after the 2008 crossover title Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe. = Playable in the basic list of the game = Playable in later iterations of the game = Appears as an unplayable opponent MKvs.DCU MK9 MKX MK11 Playable Batman Playable Playlifeable Playable The Playable Flash Playable Green Lantern Playable The Playable Playable Joker DLC Lex Luthor Playable Superman Playable Woman Wonder Playable Dark Kahn Boss Kratos PlayablePS3 Freddy Krueger PlayableDLC PlayableMOB Jason Voorhees PlayableDLC Predator PlayableDLC Alien PlayableDLC Leatherface PlayableDLC Spawn PlayableDLC The Terminator PlayableD RoboLCCop PlayableDLC John Rambo PlayableDLC Exclusive to Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe See also: Mortal Kombat vs. Universe Dark Kahn Voiced by: Perry Brown and Patrick Seitz Dark Kahn is a character-in-chief who appeared exclusively in Mortal Mortal vs. DC Universe as the game's main antagonist and the only original character in the game. Dark Kahn is a monstrous being of pure rage created from the accidental fusion of Darkseid and Shao Kahn. Although he does not appear in Injustice 2, Dark Kahn is referenced by Sub-Zero and Raiden in pre-battle dialogue with certain characters. References ^ Mortal Kombat Secrets: Mortal Kombat II - In Development. . Retrieved 2011-01-18. ^ The Makers Game: The Artists. A GamePro. Number 88. Idg. January 1996. p. 36. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k UGO Staff (February 28, 2012). Top 50 Mortal Kombat characters. Filed from the original on February 11, 2014. Retrieved February 10, 2014. ^ a b c d e f g h h h l m n o p q r t t u v w x y Jasper, Gavin (January 30, 2015). Mortal Kombat: Rating all characters. Den of Geek. Retrieved February 3, 2015. ^ Cheong, Ian Miles (January 29, 2012). Top 10 Most Horrible Mortal Kombat Deaths. Filed from the original on February 22, 2014. Retrieved February 16, 2014. ^ Worker, Robert (April 2014). Mortal Kombat's 50 Greatest Kills of all time: 40-31. 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