Dragon Shiryū
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Shiryū | |
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Saint Seiya character | |
First appearance | Manga Saint Seiya Chapter 4: "Galaxian War" (1986) Anime Saint Seiya Episode 2 October 18, 1986 |
Created by | Masami Kurumada |
Voiced by | Japanese Hirotaka Suzuoki (anime) Chiyoko Kawashima (child) Takahiro Sakurai (Hades OVAs and Knights of the Zodiac)[1] Ken Narita (Omega) Kenji Akabane (Legend of Sanctuary) English Jerry Houser (Guardians of the Cosmos) Dan Warry-Smith (DiC dub) Jay Hickman (ADV dub) Luci Christian (ADV dub, child) Blake Shepard (Knights of the Zodiac/Netflix dub) |
In-universe information | |
Weapon | Body armor Excalibur Gauntlet Round shield Shortsword |
Relatives | Chunli (wife, Omega only) Shoryu (adoptive son) Ryūhō (son, Omega only) |
Affiliations | Bronze Saints |
Birthplace | Original series: Japan 2019 remake: Chinatown, San Francisco, California, United States |
Abilities | Super strength Super speed, agility, reflexes Stamina Healing Flight Energy sensing Energy projection Energy absorption Durability Dimensional travel |
Alternative names | Dragon Long |
Dragon Shiryū (Japanese: 龍星座の紫龍, Hepburn: Doragon no Shiryū) is a fictional character from the Saint Seiya universe created by Masami Kurumada. As one of the protagonists of this media franchise, he has made appearances in the several manga, the original anime adaptation, OVAs, films and video games. He has also inspired a large number of collectibles. Considered the most mature and wisest of the five heroes, Shiryū is the Bronze Saint of the Dragon constellation, whose Cloth possesses legendary defensive and offensive properties. Shiryū is one of the ten surviving orphans trained to become Athena's Saints by Mitsumasa Kido. With Kido dead, Shiryū and his allies become the protectors of his adopted granddaughter, Saori, Athena's reincarnation.
Character outline
[edit]Out of the five main characters from Saint Seiya, Shiryū is the calmest and most collected. He greatly respects his master Libra Dohko, from whom he learned not only how to use his Cosmo to fight, but also fundamental wisdom for life. He trained at Lushan for six years under his tutelage, during which time he befriended the old master's protégé Chunli.
In addition to possessing great physical strength, Shiryū owns one of the most durable Bronze Cloths. Having spent the last two and a half centuries under the mineral-rich waterfall of Lushan, it is harder than diamonds. It is also legendary for the shield on its left arm and its right gauntlet, endowed with powerful piercing capabilities, which have earned the Cloth its nickname as "the strongest fist and shield". In times of extreme need, the five main Bronze Saints are also allowed to temporarily wear Gold Cloths. In the Sanctuary arc, Shiryū used the weapons of the Libra Gold Cloth to free Cygnus Hyōga from Aquarius Camus's ice coffin. In the two battles against Poseidon and Thanatos, he wore the Libra Cloth.
Shiryū sports the image of a green and white dragon on his back which is connected to his guardian constellation and only appears as his Cosmo is rising. Whenever his life is in danger, the image begins to fade. Once it completely vanishes, it is a sign that Shiryū's Cosmo has reached zero and he is dead.
Abilities
[edit]As a Saint, Shiryu has been trained in mind and body to learn how to use the power of the Cosmos within his own body and use it for super strength, speed, agility, durability and reflexes. The constellation he uses for extra power is that of The Draco constellation, aka Dragon and by channeling his cosmos into the Dragon constellation using the cloth armor it's based on' he's able to combine his cosmos with the constellation's cosmos to increase his own power which he can use for cosmic energy blasts, heal himself and sense other people with their own cosmos. After he and his fellow bronze saints obtained the blood of the gold saints to repair their cloths when they were damaged they acquired even more power and upgraded cloths in the process, same for god cloth after their cloths were blessed by Saori aka Athena herself using her own blood as well.
Appearances
[edit]Saint Seiya
[edit]Six years after the Graude Foundation sends Shiryū to train at Lushan's Five Old Peaks (廬山五老峰, Rozan Gorōhō) in China, he obtains the Bronze Cloth of the Dragon constellation from Libra Dohko. He then returns to Japan to participate in the Galaxian Wars tournament, wherein he is narrowly defeated by Seiya. When Phoenix Ikki steals the Gold Cloth, Shiryū becomes involved in the battles to recover it from the Black Saints and eventually discovers that Saori Kido is the Goddess Athena whom he swore to protect. In the following battles against the Silver Saints, Shiryū is forced to blind himself to achieve victory against Perseus Algol. His injury does not keep him from battle and he joins his fellow Bronze Saints as they go to Sanctuary to depose the false Pope, Gemini Saga. He recovers his sight upon awakening his seventh sense in the fight against Cancer Deathmask.
In the Poseidon arc, he confronts the General Chrysaor Krishna. Having been repaired with the blood of the Gold Saints after the battles of the Twelve Temples, the Dragon Cloth becomes golden whenever Shiryū uses his Cosmo to the maximum and awakens his seventh sense. However, even that added protection is unable to keep Shiryū from losing his eyesight a second time to Krishna's overwhelming attacks. In the end, he manages to cutting through the General's chakras and defeat him. He then destroys the Pillar guarded by Krishna and joins Seiya to free Athena and reseal Poseidon.
Shiryū defeats several Specters during the Hades arc. He awakens his eighth sense and his Cloth is endowed with the power of Athena's divine blood by Aries Shion, which enables him to travel to Elysion and deliver Athena's divine Cloth to her. After a confrontation with the twin gods Hypnos and Thanatos, he awakens the Dragon God Cloth and successfully helps Athena defeat Hades.
In the official sequel of the manga of Saint Seiya, Shiryu and Chunli have adopted a baby whom they named Shoryu. Then, he goes back in time with Hyoga, to the time of the previous Holy War against Hades in the eighteenth century, in order to help Saori / Athena save Seiya's life, who is cursed by the sword of the god of the underworld. Shiryu is proclaimed as the future Gold Saint of Libra successor to Dohko, from the Gold Saint of the eighteenth century Libra Dohko (Young).[2]
Saint Seiya Omega
[edit]In the original series Saint Seiya Omega, Shiryū is still alive well after the Hades arc events. According to the Saint Seiya Omega history, Shiryū finally returned to Lushan, where he married his love interest Chunli and fathered a boy called Ryūhō. Due to an unspecified accident, however, Shiryū has lost all of his five senses and was forced to step down as a Saint, bequeathing his armor, duties and obligations to his son.[3]
Following the defeat of the God of Darkness Abzu, Shiryū's senses are restored, but he insists that Ryūhō must continue his duty as the next Dragon Saint. During the war against the Pallasites, Shiryū joins the assault on the enemy stronghold donning the Libra Cloth, which he inherited from the previous Libra Golden Saint, Genbu.
Other appearances
[edit]Shiryu has also appeared in multiple spinoffs from the series including its films and novels such as the Gigantomachia.
Reception
[edit]In Japan, Shiryū is the most popular of the Saint Seiya protagonists, ranking first in the main characters poll of the five Bronze Saints.[4] The Journal of Popular Culture noted the use of Shiryu's techniques where a dragon is seen alongside his fists as one of Kurumada's most striking illustrations in the Saint Seiya manga due to the style the impact has. Additionally, when Shiryu faces Cancer Deathmask, the writer addressed that Kurumada's message as seen through this fight scene is that people should still embrace violence based on what the aggressor has done, with Deathmask having attacked the innocent Chunli.[5] Kenji Akabane considers the character both "cool" and "serious".[6] Singer Shoko Nakawgawa considers Shiryu her favorite character from the series thanks to his sex appeal provided whenever Shiryu loses his protection in battle as well as because he is willing to go as far as to remove his eyesight to protect his friends.[7]
DVDVisionJapan praised Hirotaka Suzuoki's work for making Shiryu sound like a "wise fighter". His fight against Seiya was also found enjoyable by the reviewer for the amount of violence that might be seen as fanservice and the dramatic considerations when the cast believe one of the two would die.[8] Chris Beveridge from AnimeOnDVD liked the fight between Shiryu and Death Mask, calling it one of the most interesting showdowns from the DVD reviewed also finding a level of risk enjoyable due to Shiryu nearly falling to the Underworld.[9] Mark Thomas of the Fandom Post criticized Shiryu's overuse of his Rising Dragon as he tends to repeat in all of his fights even when his enemies manage to block it.[10] Similarly, in a review of the series, writer Jason Thompson notes Kurumada tend to make overuse of Shiryu's training so that in a latter fight, he remembers to use a more powerful technique in order to defeat his enemies. Thompson also felt that Shiryu healing Seiya through removing his blood too gruesome in that a similar action is repeated when Shiryu blinds himself to defeat a Silver Saint.[11] IGN noted that Shiryu stands out for being able fight despite being disabled and is one of Seiya's closest friends despite initially clashing as enemies in the series' beginning.[12] In regards to the Netflix series, HobbyConsolas warned long time fans not to expect the original violent battle between Shiryu and Seiya from the original series as a result of the demographic intended.[13]
References
[edit]- ^ "Netflix's Knights of the Zodiac: Saint Seiya CG Anime Reveals Japanese Cast". Anime News Network. Retrieved 2019-03-18.
- ^ Saint Seiya Next Dimension vol.7 cap.52
- ^ Saint Seiya: Omega, episode 4
- ^ Kurumada, Masami (2004). "Popularity polls". Saint Seiya, volume 3. Viz Media. ISBN 1-59116-299-8.
- ^ Piatti-Farnell, Lorna (December 2013). "Blood, Biceps, and Beautiful Eyes: Cultural Representations of Masculinity in Masami Kurumada's Saint Seiya". The Journal of Popular Culture. 46 (6): 1133–1155. doi:10.1111/jpcu.12081.
- ^ "キャスト発表会見レポート!". Archived from the original on 2014-03-04. Retrieved 2014-05-26.
- ^ "中川翔子インタビュー". KurumadaPro (in Japanese). June 6, 2012. Retrieved October 25, 2024.
- ^ "Saint Seiya". DVDVisionJapan. Archived from the original on February 17, 2008. Retrieved January 24, 2008.
- ^ "Saint Seiya Vol. #10 (of 12)". AnimeOnDVD. Archived from the original on November 1, 2006. Retrieved August 19, 2017.
- ^ Thomas, Mark (August 3, 2017). "Saint Seiya Collection 1 Anime DVD Review". Fandom Post. Archived from the original on November 20, 2017. Retrieved November 19, 2017.
- ^ Thompson, Jason (November 18, 2010). "Jason Thompson's House of 1000 Manga - Saint Seiya: Knights of the Zodiac". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on September 27, 2017. Retrieved November 19, 2017.
- ^ "Guía y curiosidades de Los caballeros del zodíaco". IGN (in Spanish). 4 August 2017. Retrieved June 4, 2020.
- ^ "Crítica de Saint Seiya: Los Caballeros del Zodiaco de Netflix - Parte 1" (in Spanish). Hobby Consolas. 19 July 2019. Retrieved June 3, 2020.
- Anime and manga characters who can move at superhuman speeds
- Anime and manga characters with superhuman durability or invulnerability
- Anime and manga characters with superhuman strength
- Child characters in anime and manga
- Anime and manga characters introduced in 1986
- Dragons in popular culture
- Fictional blind characters
- Fictional characters with energy-manipulation abilities
- Fictional characters with extrasensory perception
- Fictional characters with water abilities
- Fictional Japanese people in anime and manga
- Fictional shield fighters
- Fictional swordfighters in anime and manga
- Male characters in anime and manga
- Martial artist characters in anime and manga
- Orphan characters in anime and manga
- Saint Seiya characters
- Teenage characters in anime and manga
- Time travelers