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Thousand-Wolf Pack

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Thousand-Wolf Pack

Thousand-Wolf Pack

Their soul is listening — speak, and they will answer.

Basic Description

The Thousand-Wolf Pack is a tale type about bands of wolves cornering travelers at night. The victim escapes up a large tree, but the wolves stack themselves like a living ladder to reach the branches. When they still cannot reach, the pack calls for a chief or a strange ally, and the situation abruptly turns—this is the set pattern. Alongside the “sending wolf,” it is a classic wolf legend: details vary by region, but the core elements—pack coordination, a summoned creature, and a nighttime encounter—remain consistent.

Folklore & Legends

In Tosa’s “The Blacksmith’s Wife,” a woman who goes into labor on a mountain pass and a courier are chased by a wolf pack. The wolves cry, “Call the blacksmith’s wife of Sakihama!” A great white wolf arrives wearing a cooking pot like a helmet, but it is struck down and retreats. Later, back home, the wounded “woman” proves to have been a monster in disguise. In Izumo’s “The Koike Hag,” the wolves shout, “Call the Koike Hag!” An old cat appears, using a teakettle lid as a helm; it is slashed between the brows, and the next morning the family finds their aged cat injured. On Mount Yahiko in Echigo, in the tale of “Yasaburō-baba,” the summoned being’s arm is cut off; at home, the “mother” is found with a shoulder missing, exposing her true form as an ogress.

Yokai Cards1

Thousand-Wolf Pack across multiple art-style decks

Card gallery

Detailed Analysis

The traditional image of the Senbiki-Ōkami portrays not a lone wolf but the terror of a pack moving under command. Tales begin on a nighttime pass where a survivor escapes up a tree. The pack gains height through leaps and coordinated boosts, and when they cannot reach, they summon a chieftain or outside entities such as an old cat, an ogress, or the Blacksmith’s Wife. Those summoned are linked to in-home impostors disguised as family, and by morning the world bears traces—bloodstains, missing household vessels, wounds, or memorial steles—that anchor the tale in reality. Though the wolves’ behavior is exaggerated, older interpretations align it with knowledge of nocturnal habits and pack movement, and prayers, edged tools, and daybreak commonly mark the turning point. Depending on region, the chieftain appears as a white-maned great wolf, an old cat, or an ogress, with names like the Blacksmith’s Wife, Koike Hag, or Yasaburō Hag, yet the core pattern of tree-bound escape and summoning remains. Folklorically, the story links calamity lurking at borders—mountain passes, the hour before dawn—to shapeshifters within the home, often accompanied by memorial towers and place-name lore.

Character Profile

This section is our own creative profile for storytelling. It is not historical fact or scholarship.

Rarity
Epic
Personality
pack-minded and cunning, relentless yet disciplined
Compatibility
strong on night roads, formidable at mountain passes, thrives in winter, opportunistic near human settlements
Abilities
coordinated pack tactics, leaping and shoulder-stacking to reach heights as a figurative motif, summoning a chieftain or uncanny allies, nocturnal pursuit and relentless encirclement
Weaknesses
hesitates when struck by a blade, loses momentum before prayers and at daybreak, cannot fully reach those who remain at high elevation
Habitat
mountain passes, forest edges, borders near villages

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