| Mar | APR | May |
| 24 | ||
| 2012 | 2013 | 2014 |
COLLECTED BY
Collection: Wide Crawl started April 2013
| (Tsuchinoko (Romaji), Bachi-hebi (North Japan)) |
|
|---|---|
| Creature | |
| Grouping | Cryptid |
| Sub grouping | Mutter |
| Data | |
| Country | Japan |
The Tsuchinoko (ツチノコor槌の子) literally translating to "hammer's spawn," is a legendary snake-like cryptid from Japan. The name tsuchinoko is prevalent in Western Japan, including Kansai and Shikoku; the creature is known as bachi hebi (バチヘビ) in Northeastern Japan.
Tsuchinoko are described as being between 30 and 80 centimetres in length, similar in appearance to a snake, but with a central girth that is much wider than its head or tail, and as having fangs and venom similar to that of a viper.[1] Some accounts also describe the tsuchinoko as being able to jump up to a metre in distance.[2]
According to legend, some tsuchinoko have the ability to speak and a propensity for lying, and is also said to have a taste for alcohol. Legend records that it will sometimes swallow its own tail so that it can roll like a hoop, similarly to the mythical hoop snake.
The Tsuchinoko features in the 2005 Konami video game Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater. A very rare type of animal only found in certain areas, its capture earns the player the achievement/trophy "Believe It or Not" on the HD Collection of Metal Gear Solid for PS3/Xbox360. The Tsuchinoko was the basis of the Pokémon Dunsparce.[citation needed] In the visual novel RewritebyKey, the Occult Research Club look for a Tsuchinoko. In the Japanese murder mystery games Dangan Ronpa and Super Dangan Ronpa 2, characters Hagakure Yasuhiro (Dangan Ronpa) and Hiyoko Saionji (Super Dangan Ronpa 2) make a reference to the Tsuchinoko.
In 1973 Takao Yaguchi the creator of Tsurikichi Sanpei wrote and illustrated a manga titled Bachi Hebi simultaneously with Tsurikichi Sanpei in the weekly Shonen magazine. It focuses on a group of tourists getting stalked by whole group of tsuchinko. In 1974 Tsurikichi Sanpei and Bachi Hebi received the fourth Kodansha children's cultural manga award. It started the boom in Tsuchinko popularity and was collected in one volume.