The name Kuro-bōzu has long served as a catch-all for regionally varied apparitions. In Edo-Tokyo it was recorded as a bedroom prowler that drew close to women’s mouths to sip their sleeping breath, leaving a fishy odor before departing. Sightings are vague and it is sometimes classed with faceless ghosts. In the Kii Kumano region, meeting it in the mountains causes its height to shoot up, and the more one pursues it the larger it grows before fleeing at great speed. Near the Osada River in Kaga, it appears as a black mass outlined only by its silhouette and escapes into water when struck with a staff, a behavior some locals attribute to an otter spirit. Across Japan the term also substitutes for giants like Ōnyūdō or sea spirits like Umibōzu, sharing one or more traits of black coloration, monk-like appearance, sudden elongation, and affinity with watersides. None of these types show sustained habitation, and reports of appearances typically cease in time.
Character Profile
This section is our own creative profile for storytelling. It is not historical fact or scholarship.
Yokai Type - Traditional Yokai
Category - General Classifications
Rarity - Uncommon
Personality - relentless but does not linger, may avoid people and flee
Compatibility - strongly linked to nighttime, human dwellings, riverbanks, mountain forests
Abilities - said to sip sleeping breath and lick at the mouth, obscures its form to remain indistinct, elongates its body to intimidate (Kumano lore), flees swiftly to watersides (Kaga lore)
Weaknesses - tends to withdraw when seen and pursued, appearances cease when it changes haunts, known to flee when struck with a staff or fired upon
Habitat - human homes in Edo and Tokyo, mountain forests of Kumano in Kii Province, riverbanks of Nomi District in Kaga Province
🔮Yokai Compatibility Test
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