< Mortal Kombat

Mortal Kombat/Characters


Keep in mind: this is not even all of them...


Here is a total list of fighters from the Mortal Kombat games. There are several different continuities, so the fighters below are all listed by the chapter in which they first appeared.




Introduced in Mortal Kombat

Hanzo Hasashi (Scorpion)

"Vengeance will be mine!"

Debut game: Mortal Kombat (Daniel Pesina/Ed Boon)

Other appearances: Mortal Kombat 2 (Daniel Pesina/Ed Boon), Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3 (John Turk), Mortal Kombat Mythologies: Sub-Zero (Sal Divita), Mortal Kombat 4 (Ed Boon), Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance (Ed Boon), Mortal Kombat: Deception (Ed Boon), Mortal Kombat: Armageddon (Ed Boon), Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks (Ed Boon), Mortal Kombat vs. DCU Universe (Patrick Seitz/Ed Boon), Mortal Kombat 9/Mortal Kombat X (Patrick Seitz/Ed Boon)

Non-game appearances: Mortal Kombat (Chris Casamassa/Ed Boon), Mortal Kombat Annihilation (J.J. Perry/Ed Boon), Mortal Kombat Conquest (Chris Casamassa/Ed Boon), Mortal Kombat: Defenders of the Realm, Mortal Kombat: Rebirth/Mortal Kombat: Legacy (Ian Anthony Dale/Ed Boon)

Originally known as Hanzo Hasashi, he is the son of a former clansman who chose to live as an assassin, yet he is very devoted to his family and generally goes on and about the game, serving his own purposes and none other.

One of the most recognizable characters of the game, he starts off as your typical Anti-Hero, looking for revenge on Sub-Zero for having killed him. In the first issues of the game, Scorpion is shown to fail and be sent to Netherealm. He has a Heel Face Revolving Door relationship with the second Sub-Zero, his former nemesis' younger brother. In 4, he ends up entangled in the machinations of Quan-Chi, who turns him against the younger Sub-Zero again. From Deadly Alliance onwards, he strikes a deal with the elder gods to destroy Onaga in exchange for his clan's revival.

In Mortal Kombat 9, Scorpion pretty much keeps the same role as the previous games, with the notable difference of being more willing to be Quan Chi's soldier, as Quan Chi's treachery has so far not been detected by him.


  • An Arm and a Leg: Played literally straight in one of his fatalities, and then followed by neck snapping in Deception.
  • Animal Motifs: Scorpions, duh.
    • As a kind of fix for his Animality in 3 not being a scorpion, the MK team gave him a giant scorpion form as one of his Fatalities in 4/Gold.
    • In the DC crossover and MK9, it's also in the mask.
    • The raised arm from his fighting pose in the first four games and the hilt of his swords (starting in Deception) evoke a scorpion's stinger, while the pauldrons on his shoulder for both costumes in 9 are also modeled after a scorpion.
  • Anti-Hero (Type IV or V)/Anti-Villain (Type I): The best example in the entire series. Most characters in the series are either fully good or fully bad, but Scorpion is a True Neutral, participating in the games' events for his own purposes. While he has exhibited a little bit of a conscience and his actions (unintentionally) help the good guys, he's when all's said and done in it for himself and no one else.
    • The reboot slides him further into outright good guy territory towards the end of MKX. While he risks making an enemy of everyone during his vengeance on Quan Chi, he goes out fo his way to order the Shrai-Ryu to "Wound, not kill" so only Quan Chi has to die. He also buries the hatchet with Sub-Zero the younger, who reveals to him the truth of his murdered family's actual perpetrators, so they are no longer enemies.
  • Arch Enemy: Quan Chi.
  • As Long as It Sounds Foreign: They went right with "Hanzo" for a first name, but his surname, Hasashi, is not even a word.
    • The reboot does not even care, and his last name is uttered a few times as if it were an actual word.
  • Author Avatar: In a sense, he could be considered to be one for series' co-creator Ed Boon. Boon has gone on record several times noting that Scorpion is his favorite character and he even provides the voicework for Scorpion's "GET OVER HERE!"/"COME HERE!"
  • Back from the Dead: After being killed by Bi-Han (the original Sub-Zero), Scorpion is back as a wraith at the start of MK1.
    • Inverted in the reboot. By Mortal Kombat X, he's brought back to his actual life when the process that made him a renevant is reversed.
    • Papa Wolf: He had a family as a human, but they were killed, and he believed their deaths were caused by the Lin Kuei, hence his grudge against them. He goes back on his vow to protect the younger Sub-Zero after Quan-Chi implicates him in the murder of Scorpion's family. His son is later kidnapped by Quan-Chi immediately after being brought back to life in his Armageddon ending.
    • None of this changes in the reboot, and he outright invokes this as his reason for wanting Quan Chi dead in MKX:

You misdirected my vengeance! You cost me my one chance to be reunited with my wife and son!

  • Badass
  • Berserk Button: Sub-Zero. Coming back from the dead just because you have beef with a guy obviously makes said guy cause a reaction when mentioned or showing up.
    • It doesn't help that Scorpion at least once remarks that he might've been able to save his wife, son, and fellow Shirai Ryu if only he were still alive.
    • Also, his encounter with Sub-Zero's younger brother and successor in 9:

Scorpion: "What is this? You are not Sub-Zero!"
Sub-Zero: "I am his family and clan. I fight for his honor."
Scorpion (furiously): "He had no honor! And you will die as he did!"

"Come here!"
"Get over here!"

    • This Is for Emphasis, Bitch: His "Get over here!" line had "Bitch!" put at the end in Shaolin Monks. There was even a "get the fuck over here!" variant! Of course, this happened very rarely, making this and the former additive probably the only times in MK that there's been profanity.
  • Code Name: Before becoming the hellspawn known as Scorpion, Hanzo was given the title of "Sasori" by the Shirai Ryu's Grandmaster. Sasori is the Japanese word for "Scorpion."
    • Quan Chi considers it his actual name in MK9. Though when Hanzo realizes he was duped while undead and Quan Chi murdered his family, the name becomes a Berserk Button.
  • A Day in the Limelight:
  • Dem Bones: As revealed during his signature Fatality, under Scorpion's mask his head is actually a Flaming Skulls.
  • Downloadable Content:
    • In 9, his klassic skin from MK1/2/3 and his classic "Toasty!" fatality.
    • And Your Reward Is Clothes: Before being part of the Klassic Pack, buying Gamestop's regular edition of 9 gave you these items.
  • Everything's Better with Penguins: To make up for the Scorpion Animality already being taken by Sheeva (supposedly, the dev team did not had Ultimate in mind when making MK3) Scorpion's Animality form Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3 is a penguin which lays explosive eggs.
  • Exact Words: In Deception, the Elder Gods promised to bring back Scorpion's clan if he agreed to help them by slaying Onaga. Scorpion fulfills his part of the bargain, and the Elder Gods bring back Scorpion's clan... as undead abominations. Cue the Rage Against the Heavens.
    • Raiden attempts to get them to bring them back as fully alive in MK9, but Quan Chi ruins the opportunity.
  • The Faceless: As the series went on many masked ninjas have been revealing their faces at least once in one of the installments, save for some who are still covered, Scorpion is one of those, his facial features as Hanzo have never been properly shown (properly in this case meaning someone who isn't Daniel Pesina from the very first game as he played many other characters in it). Hanzo still has to show his true face sometime in the future.
    • Finally averted come MKX, where we get to see him as a human.
  • Guest Fighter: Aside from the above cameos, he also appears in several other Midway Games titles: arcade game The Grid (alongside Sub-Zero and Noob Saibot), Psi Ops the Mindgate Conspiracy (as an unlockable skin), NBA Jam: Tournament Edition, and MLB Slugfest 2006 (alongside Sub-Zero; both are accessible only by means of cheat codes).
  • Deadly Change-of-Heart:
    • Raiden, having a premonition that Sub-Zero will become a greater force for evil if killed, tries to convince him to spare Bi-Han!Sub-Zero by offering to revive his family; and Scorpion agrees. Unfortunately, after defeating Sub-Zero and intending to spare him, Quan Chi goads Scorpion into killing him by showing him a vision of Sub-Zero murdering his wife and son. Sub-Zero becomes the wraith Noob Saibot, and Scorpion stays in Quan Chi's employ.
    • Like Sindel, the Arcade Ladder ending had Scorpion eventually find out the truth on his own, and then rather than tormenting Quan Chi in the Netherrealm, he flats out burn him dead.
    • Inverted. Thanks Raiden beign able to reverse Quan Chi's magic that made him a renevant in MKX, he finally gets to make a proper Heel Face Turn.
  • Highly-Visible Ninja: Scorpion's bright yellow garb isn't exactly stealthy, which is ironic, considering that out of all the "ninjas" in the series, Scorpion is the only one who was once a ninja. The original manual tried to justify if by saying that he modeled his uniform after the Lin Kuei's and chose the yellow color as a Take That to the clan, calling them cowards. Unfortunately, in Japan the color yellow symbolizes courage.
    • The reboot keeps the same color scheme for him, and the same reason of mockery (minus the "yellow for cowardice" part), at least initially, but it merely serves as a mean of telling the Shirai-Ryu and Lin-Kuei apart by the end of MKX. The colors are also much moe muted than the original canon version.
  • Iconic Item: His signature "rope with a tipped Kunai at the end".
    • Slashed Throat: In MK2, Scorpion uses it to slash the opponent's throat as part of a Fatality. Then he follows up by cutting the enemy in half.
    • Your Head Asplode: As a way to finish off his opponents in Deadly Alliance, by means of violently pulling on the rope attached to the kunai that he just lodged in the enemy head.
    • Variable-Length Chain: In MK9, a chain replaces the rope of his rope-kunai combo weapon.
  • Impaled with Extreme Prejudice: His fate in the aftermath of the Battle of Armageddon (as seen in 9's intro).
  • Kick the Dog: Challenge #20 in 9 has Scorpion beat up Mileena, because she made a teddy bear for him and HE HATES TEDDIES!
    • In a more serious moment, he knew Raiden wanted to keep Quan Chi alive to undo the other renevants the sorcerer had created, but he was too focused on killing the guy to care. And by doing so played into Quan Chi's Thanatos Gambit that brought Shinnok back to life.
  • Large Ham
  • Like a Badass Out of Hell
    • Oddly enough, the powers he had as a hellspawn are still with him when he regains his humanity in MKX, implying they were to some extent natural abilities to begin with.
  • Me's a Crowd: In one of his fatalities from UMK3, he drags his opponent into Hell, where several copies of Scorpion maul the enemy. Cue Black Screen of Death.
  • Monochromatic Eyes
  • Neck Snap: His Hara-Kiri (and the final blow of one of his fatalities) in Deception.
  • Ninja: Of all the MK "ninjas", he's the only one who was from Japan. Sub-Zero directly says this to Quan Chi in Mythologies.
  • Ninjatos Are Just Better: Starting with Deadly Alliance, he finally uses one. He also carries an additional one on his back, although he only starts using the second katana in 9.
  • No Campaign for the Wicked: Averted, he has a chapter in the Story Mode of 9 (Chapter 3), though he is more of a neutral character.
  • No-Holds-Barred Beatdown: Hounded Quan Chi throughout the Netherrealm after 4 and delivered many of these on the sorcerer (Scorpion drew on strength from the 5th plane of the Netherrealm, whereas Quan Chi's sorcery was weakened). It was only by enlisting the aid of Moloch and Drahmin that Quan Chi was able to narrowly escape death by the vengeful specter's hands.
  • Now Buy the Merchandise: His Friendship in 2, in which he invites the player to "Buy a Scorpion doll!"
  • Offscreen Teleportation: He would later adopt vanishing in a swirl of flame instead.
  • Off with His Head: In Deception, he borrows the original "Spine Rip" fatality from Bi-Han and rips the enemy's head off with the spine still attached.
  • One-Winged Angel: Inferno Scorpion from Shaolin Monks, essentially Scorpion without his mask and damaged skin. He reappears in 9 on the 232nd floor of the Challenge Tower as an opponent for Kano.
  • The Only One Allowed to Defeat You: To Bi-Han.
    • Revenge: His hatred of Bi-Han is just as important as (if not more so) the memory of his family. In MK9, Nightwolf, while empathizing over his familial ties and his need to avenge them (Nightwolf claims that his ancestors were wronged as well at some point in the past), calls him out for Revenge Before Reason. Raiden then promises to make an appeal to the Elder Gods to return Scorpion's family and the entire Shirai Ryu clan to life should he not kill the elder Sub-Zero. It almost works (even with Scorpion dragging Sub-Zero to the Netherrealm)... until Quan Chi misleads Scorpion by falsely accusing Sub-Zero to have killed Scorpion's wife and son, causing Scorpion to lash out in rage and murder his foe anyway.
      • And this switches back over to Quan CHi in MKX when he finally learns the truth about what really happened to his family.
  • Our Zombies Are Different: Scorpion is a classic vengeance-driven revenant.
  • Palette Swap: Of Sub-Zero, originally. The same is true in reverse.
  • Pet the Dog: Aside from his love for his family, he discovered back in 2 that Sub-Zero was actually the younger brother of Bi-Han—the man he had killed in the last tournament—when he saw Kuai Liang sparing the life of his opponent. He decided to become the Lin Kuei's guardian from there on out of atonement.
  • Playing with Fire

"TOASTY!"

Bi-Han (Sub-Zero V)

"Now you will feel death's cold embrace!"

Debut game: Mortal Kombat (Daniel Pesina)
Other appearances as Sub-Zero V: Mortal Kombat Mythologies: Sub-Zero (John Turk), Mortal Kombat 9/X (Jamieson Price)
Non-game appearances: Mortal Kombat: The Movie (François Petit), Mortal Kombat: Annihilation (J.J. Perry), Mortal Kombat: Legacy (Kevan Ohtsji)

A professional assassin, recently revealed to be originally named Bi-Han, of the legendary Lin Kuei clan. As his name implies, he has the ability to control ice. After succeeding in killing Scorpion, his rival, he is hired by Quan Chi to reclaim Shinnok's amulet. Along the way, he fights four of the Earthrealm gods (including Fujin), but before moving onward, he is confronted by Raiden, who reveals Quan Chi's true intentions. Furious at Quan Chi for duping him, he travels to the Netherealm to stop the evil plot, and on the way encounters Sareena, one of Quan Chi's Oni servants, and befriends her. He defeats Quan Chi, but this does not stop him from reviving Shinnok, and after retaking Shinnok's amulet in a surprise move, he escapes the Netherealm through a portal, leaving Shinnok trapped again.

Later he is hired by Shang Tsung to enter the Mortal Kombat tournament. He makes his way up the ladder until he faces a newly revived Scorpion, who exacts revenge by burning him alive.

Thus was the life of Sub-Zero.

NOTE: Tropes regarding the younger Sub-Zero and Noob Saibot should go into the Mortal Kombat 2 character sheet.


Scorpion: "I will have my revenge, but I will not kill Sub-Zero."
Sub-Zero: "Will not? Or cannot?"

Scorpion: "You! The Shirai Ryu are dead. You shall suffer as they did."

Sub-Zero: "To hell with your clan."

Scorpion: "No... TO HELL WITH YOU!" (drags Sub-Zero into the Netherrealm)

"Let's get something straight here: I am not a Ninja. I am Lin Kuei!"

Kano

"Oh, I got a knack for survival. You, on the other hand, are going to die here."

Debut game: Mortal Kombat (Richard Divizio)
Other appearances: Mortal Kombat II (cameo), Mortal Kombat 3 (Richard Divizio), Mortal Kombat: Special Forces (David Allen), Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance, Mortal Kombat: Deception (cameo), Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks, Mortal Kombat: Armageddon, Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe (Michael McConnohie), Mortal Kombat 9/X (Michael McConnohie)
Non-game appearances: Mortal Kombat: The Movie (Trevor Goddard), Mortal Kombat: Defenders of the Realm (Michael Des Barres), Mortal Kombat: Legacy (Darren Shahlavi)

Kano is the leader of the Black Dragon organization, a criminal empire of cut-throat madmen. A portion of Kano's face is covered with a metal plate as a result of wounds he sustained at the hands of Major Jackson Briggs prior to the events of the series, with the plated eye being a glowing red orb capable of emitting laserlike beams. He entered Shang Tsung's Mortal Kombat tournament after hearing rumors that Tsung's palace was filled with gold and other riches; after the final battle between Shang Tsung and Liu Kang, Kano teamed up with Sonya and Johnny Cage to fight Goro. During the battle, the island began to crumble because of Shang Tsung's defeat, and before they knew it, Kano and Sonya found themselves in a forest in Outworld. They were found and captured by Shang Tsung. Kano managed to save his own life by convincing Shao Kahn to accept him as a weapons instructor for his armies, and later, during the events of Mortal Kombat 3, Sonya tossed Kano to his surmised death from the roof of a high building, only for Kano to be healed back to life by Motaro.

Eventually, Kahn's forces were defeated. Earthrealm was free, and so was Edenia. Shao Kahn's act of promoting Kano, however, proved to be a lucky shot, as Kano was a very competent general. During the events of Deadly Alliance Kano declared his allegiance to the Sorcerers; however, he was attacked and apparently captured by Red Dragon member Mavado.

In Armageddon's Konquest mode, Kano is found by Taven to have been held prisoner by the Red Dragon Clan for quite some time. Before escaping their facilities, Kano explains to Taven that the Red Dragon Clan had been experimenting on him, in an effort to create Human-Dragon Hybrids, yet without apparent effects on Kano.

Kano is pretty much the same as in the previous games in Mortal Kombat 9, but is a more willing soldier to Outworld than before, even going so far as to sell the forces of Outworld Earthrealm weapons to help in Shao Kahn's invasion of Earth. Pretty much, he's a race-betraying prick.


  • ...And Show It to You
    • Beat Still My Heart: His infamous "Heart Rip" Fatality. He holds the heart up for everyone to see, including the victim in several games.
    • Eye Scream
  • Archenemies:
    • The Special Forces. He's quite... "invested" in his rivalry with Sonya,[1] and Jax is responsible for the metal plate on his face. Still true in the reboot.
    • The Red Dragon clan. They're long time enemy of Kano's Black Dragon Clan.
  • Badass
  • Bald of Evil: His appearance in MK3.
  • Beard of Evil: In most of his appearances. Started as a 5 o'clock shadow (shaven clean in MK3), and became a full beard since MKvsDCU.
  • The Brute
  • Chronic Backstabbing Disorder: He will take any offer that allows his own preservation.
  • Cyborg: Only insomuch as needing a synthetic eye that has also been outfitted with a heat-emitting beam (justified as the Black Dragon cartel has a high proficiency in areas of technology). The rest of him is human.
    • He's a little more cyberized in the reboot, with his chest also bearing some enhancements.
  • Disney Villain Death: His fate in the Battle of Armageddon.
  • Dual-Wielding: His weapon style has him wielding a pair of Butterfly Knives.
  • Eye Beam: It took three games, but he finally showed he was capable of doing it, in Fatality form, and later as a special move from Deadly Alliance onwards.
    • In the intro to Armageddon, he kills Stryker with one.
  • Giant Spider: Kano's Animality in MK3.
  • Handwraps of Awesome
  • Image Song: "Kano, Use Your Might" where the vocalist sings about great Kano is, how she is on his side, and describes him as a fallen angel.
  • Knife Nut
  • Large Ham: Especially in the first movie.
    • In the games, too. Rich Divizio has stated he played Kano as over-the-top as possible.
  • Neck Lift: His Chokehold move.
  • Only in It For the Money: His reason for joining Shang Tsung's tournament and for siding with Outworld and selling stuff for them.
  • Pet the Dog: In 9, he's the one who saves Kabal (his former Black Dragon cohort) from dying and surgically implants him with his mask and breathing apparatus after Kintaro roasted him alive.
    • Additionally, when he heard of Kabal's apparent demise at the hands of Mavado, it is said that he would have most likely hounded the Red Dragon leader and had his head if not for his post in Outworld as the leader of Shao Kahn's armies. Kabal had long since forsaken the ways of the Black Dragon.
  • Psycho for Hire
  • Race Lift: After Trevor Goddard's portrayal in the movie, he was changed from American-Japanese descent in the games to Australian.
  • Rolling Attack: The Cannonball attack, in which he tosses himself at the opponent while keeping arms and legs folded into his body.
  • Sigil Spam: In Deadly Alliance and Armageddon, the back of his vest sports the emblem of the Black Dragon clan.
  • Trademark Favorite Food: According to Richard Divizio (the actor who portrayed Kano in all of the titles using digitized actors), Kano enjoys White Castle hamburgers (it's probable that this is Divizio's favorite meal as well).

Johnny Cage

"I make this look easy!"

Debut game: Mortal Kombat (Daniel Pesina)
Other appearances: Mortal Kombat II (Daniel Pesina), Mortal Kombat Trilogy (Chris Alexander), Mortal Kombat 4, Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance, Mortal Kombat: Deception (cameo), Mortal Kombat: Armageddon Mortal Kombat 9 (Jeff Pilson)

Non-game appearances: Mortal Kombat: The Movie (Linden Ashby), Mortal Kombat: Annihilation (Chris Conrad), Mortal Kombat: Rebirth/Mortal Kombat: Legacy (Matt Mullins)

Johnny Cage is a Hollywood movie star. Originally entering the Mortal Kombat tournament to display his fighting skills and prove himself to skeptical movie critics and the movie-viewing public, Cage becomes one of the brave and loyal warriors for Earthrealm.

In Mortal Kombat, When Shang Tsung's island fortress began to crumble because of his defeat to Liu Kang, Raiden saved Johnny and dropped him off at a boat that belonged to the Special Forces Agency near the island. Not long after that, Cage traveled into Outworld to join the other Earthrealm warriors in MK2. Defeated, Kahn ordered his forces to kill the Earth warriors. Johnny’s comrades were fortunate to make their way back to Earthrealm. Johnny, however, was not so lucky and was killed by Kahn's forces. Raiden then resurrected him temporally during the events of Trilogy and permanently during the events of MK4. However, Johnny was killed once again during the final assault on the Deadly Alliance's Tarkatan warriors.

Later, he is, as well as many other warriors, restored to life one more time by Onaga and made into his slave. Some time later, he was freed from this state by Ermac and the spirit of Liu Kang, in time to join the Armageddon.

Mortal Kombat 9 sees Cage have a much more... err... outgoing personality, but it also makes him much more heroic, being a genuine part of the heroes' team. He also serves as a sort of Audience Surrogate, as he's one of the few normal humans amidst the Fantasy Kitchen Sink cast.


  • Amicably Divorced: To an extent with Sonya in MKX. Taking about their failed marriage is a sore point, but they do have a fairly cordial working relationship otherwise.
  • Awesome Ego: Zigzagged. He's hilarious (in the reboot especially) because he's so egotistical, but he annoys the hell out of a lot of characters, good and bad, as a result.
  • Arrogant Kung Fu Guy
  • Back from the Dead: Constantly. Lampshaded when, prior to joining the battle against the Deadly Alliance, he was (unwillingly) starting to film Mortal Kombat: The Death of Johnny Cage, in which he was repeatedly killed and brought back to life.
    • He was one of the few heroic characters to survive the story mode in MK9.
  • Badass Boast: From the story mode of Mortal Kombat 9:

Johnny Cage: "Most people think my films just use a lot of special effects and wire work; they don't realize, I am the special effects."

  • Born Lucky: While other kombatants can justify their special powers for they went through a Training from Hell, some are Physical Gods themselves, and the rest are sorcerers and Ninjas/McNinjas; Johnny Cage has no background for how he got his energy blasts, he's simply naturally gifted, in MK9 it is made even more obvious how his powers are so natural, Johnny initially is in disbelief about the whole Mortal Kombat and other realms thing, and yet he doesn't mention or see his powers as being equally unbelievable.
    • The funny thing in all this is the whole reason he's there is because of people calling him out and saying he's all flash with no substance. He insists that his energy powers are legit and will prove it at the Mortal Kombat tournament... yet thinks nothing of them in spite of that.
    • Turns out he's an even more literal version of this come MKX. He is descended from Mediterranean warriors who all had the same abilities he did, but they only become fully manifest during a time of deepest need, like seeing a loved one about to die. And as his daughter finds out in the same game, it's hereditary.
  • Brainwashed: To serve Onaga in Deception.
  • Butt Monkey: Rendered as such after Mortal Kombat II, likely as punishment for his actor (Daniel Pesina) advertising a rival game, Blood Storm, while in full costume. Even the dev team doesn't take him seriously.
    • Inverted in the reboot, where he's arguably one the most beloved good guys by the developers, to the point a lot of MKX's storyline hinges around him. Shinnok even considered him such a Worthy Opponent he too pains to avoid Cage getting the upper hand later on in the same game after he got defeated by Cage the first time.
  • Casanova Wannabe: In the first chapter of MK9:

"I'm taking you down, I'm taking you down, I'm taking you out, and [looks at Sonya] I'm taking you out... for dinner."

  • Cool Shades: While they were always part of his character, with official art always depicting him wearing shades, he only started wearing them during fights from Trilogy onwards.
    • In the first movie, he values them more than any worldly possession. Then Goro broke them, and the rest is history:

"Those were five-hundred-dollar sunglasses, asshole!"

    • In his MK9 victory pose, his shades break in half. No problem: he just takes out a brand new pair and puts it on!
    • In MKX, if he fights Goro, one of his intro quotes is point out Goro still owes him a pair of shades.
    • Sunglasses at Night
  • Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass
  • A Day in the Limelight: In Mortal Kombat 9, he's the focus of the first chapter.
  • Deadpan Snarker: Seems to be this at first, in tone with his movie self, as seen in MK9.
  • Establishing Character Moment: In Mortal Kombat 9, he spends his first few fights goofing off, preening and grandstanding, hitting on Sonya, and generally making an ass of himself... but is horrified when Shang Tsung demands he "finish" a fallen opponent.
  • Kangaroos Represent Australia: He turns into one to kick his opponent off screen as an Animality in MK Trilogy.
  • Fake Ultimate Hero: Much to his fans' chagrin.
    • Armageddon tries to take the "fake" part out, by having him being the first of the heroes to see Shinnok back into the scene, and then rallying the band of heroes for the final battle. But since we don't know much about the game's story, we just leave what happened between this point and the all-out battle to imagination.
  • Fighting with Chucks
  • Full-Name Basis
  • Groin Attack: His "Split Punch" signature attack, a special move where he does the splits and plants his fist directly into his opponent's balls.
    • Also, the first part of his X-Ray move is a three-punch combo to the groin. Ouch.
  • Hair of Gold: Up until MK4 he was a brunette; Deadly Alliance onward made him blond, but he went back to dark hair in 9.
  • Half the Man He Used To Be: His Torso Rip fatality.
    • In Shaolin Monks, he has a fatality where he will punch the opponent in the groin several times, mugs for the camera, punches the groin for a bit like a speed bag, and then does one final monster punch that pulverises the entire pelvic region, effectively cutting the unlucky victim in half.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold/Took a Level in Jerkass: Zig-Zagged, especially come MK9
    • His bloated ego reaches Joke Character proportions in MK9.
    • During Jax's chapter in 9, Johnny, Raiden, and Jax find themselves stuck at the Kombat Armory, when he probes Jax's relationship with Sonya.[2] Johnny, being himself, makes his intentions with Sonya a little less than subtle. This prompts Jax to challenge Johnny to a fight right there and then. However, afterwards, he brushes it off later and even good-naturedly jokes about it after they find Sonya.
  • Johnny McCoolname: His real name is John Carlton.
  • The Lancer of the Five-Man Band
  • Meaningful Name: It's probably more than coincidence that Kage in japanese means shadow and Johnny Cage is the master of many "shadow" techniques himself.
  • The Messiah: Of all people, Johnny starts showing shades of this in the timeframe leading up to Armageddon, especially thanks to Raiden's corruption.
    • Reatian it to degree in the reboot, where he essentially takes the role from Liu Kang in MKX, Since Liu Kang is now a renevant.
  • Off with His Head: His classic Fatality, in which Cage delivers a savage uppercut that tears his opponent's head off.
    • The intro of MK9 inverts this: he's shown decapitated.
  • Power Incontinence: His ending in 9. His body begins to emit large, destructive bursts of energy in uncontrollable spasms, and neither Raiden nor Nightwolf are able to soothe them. Eventually, Raiden takes Johnny Cage to Seido to control his powers, which will result in him becoming more powerful than humanly imaginable.
  • Papa Wolf: He does worry about his daughter Cassie in MKX, but largely trusts her to fend for herself, though anyone trying to threaten her will make him mad. It even gets to the point where if they do fight each other, he confesses reluctance to actually doing so.
  • Person as Verb: Tried this with himself in Shaolin Monks and MK9. "You just got Caged"
    • It stuck in MKX, where he and even his daughter use it as a battle taunt.
  • Pungeon Master: In the Movie, he is particularly prone to Incredibly Lame Puns, to the point that he's basically the comic relief of the film.
    • Is the same to slightly lesser extent in MK9 and especially MKX.
  • Red Herring Shirt: In 9, he lives.
  • The Rival: Of Goro. Becomes canon after the movie.
  • Sharp-Dressed Man: His alts. in 4, Deadly Alliance, Armageddon, and 9.
  • Ship Tease: Especially in the first movie, towards Sonya. In MK9, he tries to conquer her. They do marry in MKX, but they split up later due to it not working out.
  • Shotoclone
  • Speed Echoes: Several of his Shadow moves have this effect.
  • Unfazed Everyman: During his chapter in 9's story mode. Also doubles as the Audience Surrogate for those new to the series, as he's just as out-of-the-loop as newcomers probably will be.
  • Walking Shirtless Scene

Sonya Blade

"I guess I'll have to do this the hard way!"

Debut game: Mortal Kombat (Elizabeth Malecki)
Other appearances: Mortal Kombat II (cameo), Mortal Kombat 3 (Kerri Hoskins), Mortal Kombat 4 (Kerri Hoskins), Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance, Mortal Kombat: Deception, Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks, Mortal Kombat: Armageddon, Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe (Dana Lyn Baron), Mortal Kombat 9 (Dana Lyn Baron)
Non-game appearances: Mortal Kombat: The Movie (Bridgette Wilson), Mortal Kombat: Annihilation (Sandra Hess), Mortal Kombat: Defenders of the Realm (Olivia d'Abo), Mortal Kombat: Rebirth/Mortal Kombat: Legacy (Jeri Ryan)

A member of a top United States Special Forces unit known as Outer World Investigation Agency (OIA), Lt. Sonya Blade is a beautiful, stern, tough-as-nails Earthrealm warrior. Her impulsiveness is catalyzed by her superior and good friend Major Jackson "Jax" Briggs. Sonya represents a very emancipated and headstrong woman, but for all her stubbornness and pride, she deeply cares about the lives of her friends and comrades.

Sonya and her team were in hot pursuit of Kano at the time of the original game; after following him to a remote island they were ambushed by Tsung's personal guard. To keep her team safe, she agreed to compete in the Mortal Kombat tournament. Shang Tsung, however, had no intention of fulfilling his end of the bargain and had her unit killed. After Tsung's defeat, she and Kano were taken prisoner to Outworld to appease the emperor, Shao Kahn, only to be later rescued by her comrade Jax. The two privates were among the few chosen warriors left to oppose the invasion of Earthrealm in MK3. Sonya meet her old nemesis Kano on top of a skyscraper during the invasion; in the fight that ensued she managed to hurl Kano off the roof to his apparent death.

In Mortal Kombat 4, Sonya and Jax, having formed the Outworld Investigation Agency, team up with Raiden and Liu Kang to free Edenia from the Fallen Elder God Shinnok's grasp and prevent him from coming to Earth, as well as to capture the last known member of the Black Dragon Clan, Jarek, who apparently dies in his attempt to kill Sonya.

Years later, Sonya would once again heed Raiden's call, this time to travel back to Outworld -- for Sonya, this coincided with her search for two missing OIA operatives, Cyrax and Kenshi. She is killed in a fight with the Deadly Alliance and its minions, only to be resurrected and enslaved by Onaga, along her fallen comrades. She would eventually be freed from Onaga's control by Ermac and Liu Kang, in time to participate in the events of Armageddon.

Mortal Kombat 9 sees Sonya being pretty much the same tough lady she's always been, although her pursuit of Kano is massively derailed by the events of the game, making her take a much more active role in the defense of Earthrealm.



Liu Kang

"Show me what you can do."

Debut game: Mortal Kombat (Ho Sung Pak)
Other appearances: Mortal Kombat II (Ho Sung Pak), Mortal Kombat 3 (Eddie Wong), Mortal Kombat 4 (Joshua Y. Tsui), Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance (cameo), Mortal Kombat: Deception, Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks, Mortal Kombat: Armageddon, Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe (Tom Choi), Mortal Kombat 9 (Tom Choi)
Non-game appearances: Mortal Kombat: The Movie/Mortal Kombat: Annihilation (Robin Shou), Mortal Kombat: Defenders of the Realm (Brian Tochi)

Known as "The Immortal Champion of Mortal Kombat," Liu Kang is one of the best warriors of Earthrealm, and has beaten many powerful foes to prove his valor. Throughout the years, Liu Kang has been portrayed as the main hero of the series, becoming champion after the events of the first game.

Coming home from Tsung's Island after defeating both Goro and the sorcerer, he found many of his fellow Shaolin monks killed in a vicious attack by a Tarkatan horde. Enraged, Liu Kang decided to travel to Outworld alongside Raiden and the other Earthrealm warriors. At the Outworld tournament he met Kitana, and began to fall in love with her. Liu eventually fought Shao Kahn, overpowering the emperor. Shortly after, during the events of Mortal Kombat 3, he found himself the primary target of Kahn's extermination squads. Kung Lao, who went against Shao Kahn, was nearly killed by an powerful spell. An enraged Liu Kang challenged the Emperor, and after the final battle, he defeated Shao Kahn again, forcing him and his forces to retreat back to Outworld.

Years later, upon learning that Kitana's home realm of Edenia had been captured by the fallen Elder God Shinnok, he set out on his own to save her, but he was unsuccessful. Liu Kang returned to Earth, where he began gathering Earth's warriors to save the realm and assist his mentor, Raiden. Eventually, Liu Kang confronted Shinnok and emerged victorious, effectively ending his occupation of Edenia. Liu Kang returned to the Shaolin Temples, believing he has lost Kitana forever. However, the Edenian Princess appeared through a portal from Edenia and thanked Liu Kang for all he had done. She offered him a chance to join her at the throne of Edenia. However, due to the responsibilities as a Mortal Kombat Champion, Liu Kang was forced to decline her offer.

Liu Kang went on to enjoy relative peace for many years afterward. However, the Deadly Alliance would make itself known on Earth by its successful assassination of Liu Kang. His mutilated body was discovered by Kung Lao, and he was laid to rest at the Wu Shi Academy, where a shrine was built to honor the former Champion.

His rest was short however, as a corrupted Raiden restored the monk as a living corpse, which went on a rampage and proceded to slaughter many of Liu Kang's fellow Shaolin monks. Liu Kang's spirit wasn't technically responsible, but he couldn't help but feel responsibile for the actions perpetrated by his corpse. Eventually, he defeated his body, stopping it from doing further harm.

In Mortal Kombat 9, Liu Kang once again is Raiden's chosen champion to participate in the Mortal Kombat tournament.


  • Amazing Technicolor Population: He displays an unhealty skin color combination of green and gray.
  • Back from the Dead: His soul is in Outworld, but his body just kept on fighting without him.
    • Came Back Wrong: His corpse, revived by Raiden. Subverted with his soul, which retains his true essence.
  • Best Served Cold: Shows up in the Armageddon intro to confront Shang Tsung, his neck still snapped from when Shang killed him. After snapping his neck back, it's on. If 9 is any indication, Zombie Liu Kang managed to kill Shang Tsung and prevent him from reaching the top of Argus' Pyramid.
  • Chained by Fashion: By learning the secrets of an ancient cult known as the Houan sect, Raiden was able to use Necromancy and his lightning powers to reanimate Liu Kang's body with the help of bloody ceremonial chains. Unfortunately, these chains are not used as weapons in gameplay (they're only seen being wielded by Liu Kang in the intro to Armageddon).
  • Demonic Possession: Used as fatality in Deception. He transforms his body into a spiritual state and enters the victim's body, possessing it. A second later, the victim rips their own head off to reveal his head replacing it before bowing down.
  • Everything's Deader with Zombies
  • The Undead


Raiden

"Thunder takes you!"

Debut game: Mortal Kombat (Carlos Pesina)
Other appearances: Mortal Kombat II (Carlos Pesina), Mortal Kombat Trilogy (Carlos Pesina), Mortal Kombat 4, Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance (Carlos Pesina), Mortal Kombat: Deception, Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks, Mortal Kombat: Armageddon, Mortal Kombat Mythologies: Sub-Zero (Michael Garvey), Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe, (Richard Epcar), Mortal Kombat 9 (Richard Epcar)
Non-game appearances: Mortal Kombat: The Movie (Christopher Lambert), Mortal Kombat: Annihilation (James Remar), Mortal Kombat: Conquest (Jeffrey Meek), Mortal Kombat: Defenders of the Realm (Clancy Brown), Mortal Kombat: Legacy (Ryan Robbins)

Raiden is the eternal God of Thunder and former protector of Earthrealm. Being a god, he possesses many supernatural abilities and a radically different outlook on life than a mere mortal.

When Earthrealm was young, Raiden was its protector. With the aid of the Elder Gods, Raiden managed to defeat Shinnok, a rogue Elder God who wished to rule it, and managed to banish him in the Netherealm. Some time later, Shang Tsung invited Raiden to participate in Mortal Kombat. Aware of the threat posed by this tournament to the future of Earthrealm, Raiden took human form to compete. One year later, the Thunder God found that he had no choice but to accept Shang Tsung's offer of Mortal Kombat in Outworld. When Shao Kahn reached the Earthrealm by merging it with the Outworld, Raiden was able to protect the souls of his Choosen Warriors, but couldn't join the fight himself. Following Liu Kang's defeat of Shao Kahn, Raiden and his warriors again entered battle when Shinnok escaped the Netherealm to once more wage war against the Gods; when the Forces of Light emerged successful, he was granted the status of Elder God and turned over his position as Earthrealm's protector to Fujin.

As an Elder God, Raiden could not interfere when Shang Tsung and Quan Chi killed Liu Kang many years later. Disgusted at his peers for their refusal to intervene, he renounced his position as an Elder, gathering his warriors to stop the Deadly Alliance. This time, disaster struck the heroes. Raiden confronted the two sorcerers in front of the Soulnado chamber, but was defeated by the Alliance as Onaga, the Dragon King, entered the scene. In a desperate measure, Raiden released his godly essence, the effect of which was a single, massive explosion that apparently killed him but did not harm Onaga. While Raiden's essence soon gathered again in the Earthrealm, since his essence was corrupted because of Onaga, he had now became furious with the way Earthrealm's inhabitants had treated their own realm. He started by punishing Shujinko for his unwilling role in the Dragon King's return.

His doings on Deception caught the attention of the Forces of Evil; Raiden joined their ranks during the Armageddon in an attempt to secretly uncover and prevent any plans that could harm the Earthrealm.

Raiden is the linchpin of the entire plot of Mortal Kombat 9.


  • All Asians Wear Conical Straw Hats
  • All of Them: Raiden is a master of all 750 variants of Jujitsu.
  • And Your Reward Is Clothes: His unlockable second costume in 9 is Dark!Raiden.
  • Badass Cape: Gets a pimpin' one in Deadly Alliance and the DC crossover.
  • Battle Aura: In the first game, 4, and Deadly Alliance, his body constantly generates lightning bolts.
  • Big Good
  • A Day in the Limelight:
  • The Cameo: He appears as an unlockable character in Unreal Championship 2 The Liandri Conflict (with Shao Kahn serving as the announcer), NFL Blitz, and NBA Jam: Tournament Edition (alongside Shinnok), as well as making a bonus round cameo in a pinball machine, Bally's 1994 World Cup Championship.
  • Deadpan Snarker
  • Eleventh-Hour Superpower: In the middle of a Book Ends moment in 9, he's re-empowered by the elder gods, and he manages to put the Big Bad in his place. Sadly, this doesn't do anything gameplay wise, aside from making his voice distorted.
  • Enemy Mine: In the intro for Deception, he briefly joins Shang Tsung and Quan Chi when attempting to stop the Dragon King.
  • Everything's Better with Samurai: The motif behind his alt. in Deadly Alliance (which would be passed on to his darker persona in Deception). Among other things, his pants are replaced by hakama and a katana is fashioned to his waist. The costume also reveals Raiden to have Long-Haired Pretty Boy, White-Haired Pretty Boy hair (it's somewhat noticeable in his default costume, but you have to squint).
  • Fallen Hero: Liu Kang sees him as this in 9.
  • God in Human Form
  • God of Good
  • Guilt Complex: Gets one in 9. He constantly misinterprits the message his future-self sent and doesn't realize what it really meant until the final chapter. By then, his attempts to change the original timeline resulted in It Got Worse for many characters. He realises this is all his fault.
  • Hammerspace: He pulls his staff out of nowhere.
  • Heroic BSOD/Despair Event Horizon: Seems to have crossed this threshold in 9 with the deaths of most his allies (including Liu Kang, whom he accidentally killed himself), the futility of his actions to prevent Armageddon (including getting called out by Liu Kang), and the Elder Gods turning their backs on him due to technicalities. He was about to strike up an alliance with Quan Chi, for Fujin's sake!
  • Hot God
  • Hurting Hero: It's hard not to feel sorry for Raiden during the events of Mortal Kombat 9. His actions slowly keep making things worse for Earthrealm, the heroes die one by one under his watch, and the Elder Gods seem to be pulling a major The Gods Must Be Lazy trip. By the end of the game, his actions narrowly prevented Armageddon from happening, but at the cost of practically all of Earthrealm's champions. Even Liu Kang, Raiden's favored champion, is dead (although unintentionally) by his own hand at the end, after having first turned on him for the tragedies he so far caused. He carries the guilt of his actions throughout the entire game and you can tell it takes its toll. By the game's ending, he's emotionally exhausted. And The Stinger at the end just makes it even worse. Seriously, the guy probably needs a hug badly when all's said and done.
  • Idiot Ball: A glaring one in Mortal Kombat 9 has Raiden standing back and doing nothing as Lin Kuei cyber-ninjas attack Sub-Zero and take him away, even going as far as to stop Smoke from helping out. This is despite the fact that, in a nearly identical situation involving Smoke, Raiden didn't hesitate to blast all of the cyber-ninjas with lightning, taking them out and saving Smoke. He stated that if he got involved that it would make the situation worse, but even then that was a weak excuse... especially considering his attempts to not intervene in the game's events were only making things worse.
  • In-Series Nickname: In 9, Nightwolf (one of the few spiritually aware Earthrealm dwellers; he's apparently communed with Raiden a few times in the past) occasionally refers to him as Haokah, the spirit of thunder and lightning in Lakota mythology.
  • Large Ham: Especially in the first movie.
  • Large and In Charge: Second-heaviest of the kombatants at 350 pounds. Goro has him beat by 200 pounds. He is also 7 feet tall according to canon.
  • Late Arrival Spoiler: Same warning as with Liu Kang. If you plan to play Armageddon, remember that Raiden became Darker and Edgier.
  • Megaton Punch: One of his fatalities is an explosive uppercut that literally blows his enemies into pieces.
  • Mentors: To Liu Kang. Perhaps most evident in the movie, the DC crossover, and 9.
  • Mr. Fanservice
  • My Self! What have I done?: After he accidentally fries Liu Kang in self defense in 9.
  • Nice Hat: An iconic feature of the character.
  • The Obi-Wan
  • Out-Gambitted: The ending of 9 shows that Shinnok had been manipulating the events of the story the whole time, and it is strongly implied that he, too, messed with the timeline just as Raiden did (for example, Quan Chi, his servant, was not present in the original events, but features heavily here). So really, Raiden didn't actually make things worse at all, since Future Raiden could not account for the Elder Gods and in retrospect Raiden made barely any significant changes, and his role in the new timeline is actually roughly the same it was in the first.
  • Retcon: Raiden's story in the first title was much more self-serving, as he had been invited by Shang Tsung to compete and does so in order to prove mortals are puny when matched with a god. His ending from that game has him overthrow the tournament and turn it into a showcase of the gods (that eventually destroy the world). Later games throw this characterization out the window and instead portray him as a concerned protector who feels he must participate in order to avert disaster (as this happens after the first movie also changed the entire story of the first game).
  • Physical God
  • Pint-Sized Powerhouse: His friendship from MKII has him summoning a miniature version of himself called "Kidd Thunder!"
  • Senseless Sacrifice: He sacrifices himself and releases his godly essence into a massive explosion in order to kill Onaga, but despite this, the Dragon King is unharmed.
    • His final actions at the end of Armageddon, which set up the events of 9, could also be seen as this, since his past self really does make things MUCH worse before they get any better.
  • Shock and Awe
  • Silence, You Fool: In the first movie. And he's a GOOD guy.
  • Spell My Name with an "S": Depending on the game continuity or the platform in wich he appears, Raiden is sometimes called Rayden, because of copyright issues as a Shoot'Em Up was also named Raiden, or possibly to keep from confusing him with Raiden from the Fatal Fury series. Curiously, sketches from Deadly Alliance also use the Rayden spelling.
  • Teleport Spam
  • Amazing Technicolor Population: His skin is grey.
  • Back from the Dead
    • Came Back Wrong: A less extreme example than most, but according to Fujin, he should have been resurrected as a blank slate. Instead, he comes back Darker and Edgier.
  • Badass Cape: Tattered and torn in Deception and Armageddon.
  • Dark Messiah: After his attempt to destroy Onaga failed, he reconstituted darker, and became disgusted with the humans' doings. Shujinko's screw-up souring him only made things worse.
    • In his non-canon Deception ending, he still kills Shujinko, despite that he managed to save the Earthrealm.
  • Diabolus Ex Machina: His ending in the first game has him destroying the world, constituting a definite What the Hell, Hero?. This predates what would happen six games later.
  • Evil Costume Switch/Paint It Black: Both his main and alternate outfits are more or less unchanged from Deadly Alliance, but the color schemes are now primarily darker colors, mostly black.
  • Evil Sounds Deep: Or at least, Darker and Edgier Sounds Deeper. His narration in Deception (in his ending, where he kills Shujinko) is a fair bit deeper than that of his narration from Deadly Alliance.
  • Face Heel Turn
  • Fling A Light Into The Past: Pretty much what he does in MK9. After the events of Armageddon, he sends a message across time and space to his younger self of the first game's timeframe, in order to prevent the repeating of events. He believes that, with proper warning, his past self will not make the same mistakes that brought the fate of the timeline which ends with Armageddon.
  • Glowing Eyes of Doom: During Deception and onward, combined with Red Eyes, Take Warning.
  • God Is Flawed
  • Good Is Not Nice: He's an Omnicidal Neutral if anything.
  • Heel Realization: Quite possibly the entire reason he attempts to change history in 9, coupled with Shao Kahn's victory. His revival of Liu Kang is one of the key events shown in the flashback message he sends to his past self.
  • Idiot Ball: If he would have been more specific with his message, the amount of casualties suffered on the heroes' side would have most likely been avoided.
  • Taking You with Me: In Deception, he tries to pull this off against Onaga, but in vain. It actually works straight when used as Fatality in that same game.
  • Trailers Always Lie: All promotional art of Raiden in Deception as well as his appearances throughout most of that game's Konquest Mode use his depiction from Deadly Alliance, perhaps as to not spoil the transformation he had undergone there.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: Saving the Earth first by resurrecting Liu Kang and making him as a killing zombie, and then by destroying all the other realms, even those which are dangerless for the Earth itself... yeah.


Reptile

"Your fighting styles are useless."

Debut game: Mortal Kombat (Daniel Pesina)
Other appearances: Mortal Kombat II (Daniel Pesina), Mortal Kombat 3 (John Turk), Mortal Kombat 4, Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance, Mortal Kombat: Deception (cameo), Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks, Mortal Kombat: Armageddon, Mortal Kombat 9
Non-game appearances: Mortal Kombat: The Movie (Keith Cooke), Mortal Kombat: Annihilation (Mark Caso/Sultan Uddin), Mortal Kombat: Conquest (Jon Valera), Mortal Kombat: Rebirth (Richard Dorton)

A green-garbed, human-like reptilian creature. Reptile is said to be physically hideous and repulsive, but he is renowned for his great stealth, impressive fighting skills and unquestioning loyalty. Reptile has an obsession about finding the last remaining member of his race, the Saurians, and freeing his homeworld Zaterra from Outworld's grasp; While well-meaning and sincere, this obsession is so important to him that it causes him temporary fits of insanity.

After acting as a stealthy bodyguard to Shang Tsung during the first Mortal Kombat, he returned to his master, Shao Kahn, in order to aid him in the Outworld tournament, under the promise that Kahn would release the remaining members of Reptile's race from slavery if he would unquestioningly do his bidding. Such an opportunity arose During the Earthrealm invasion: he and Jade were to recapture an escaped Kitana, killing her if necessary. He did not succeed, as Jade betrayed him to help Kitana. After the war he was bought to Edenia as prisoner, and subsequently exiled to the Netherealm. Reptile grasped the opportunity to join Shinnok's army, hoping for the rogue Elder God to revive his race. Alas, when he found himself on the losing side once more, he decided to resume his service to Shao Kahn.

Because of his state of separation from the other members of his race, especially his matriarch, Reptile had begun to show signs of devolution, becoming progressively more insane and saurian-like. When Reptile wasn't able to protect his master from the recently formed Deadly Alliance, he went into an even greater madness. Desperately looking for a new master, he eventually came across the vampire Nitara, who shared whit him artifacts and knowleges of his lost people, the Zaterran. This was enough to gain Reptile's trust; she send him to fight Cyrax in order to advance her own agenda. Afterward, when Reptile realized that she was going to leave him behind, he tracked her down to an acient incubating chamber, but she was already gone. All that remained was the almost fully incubated egg of Onaga the Dragon King. The egg hatched, a beam of light struck Reptile as the Saurian's body became the vessel for the reincarnated Onaga.

After the fall of the Dragon King at the hand of the Forces of Light, Reptile found himself free from the villain's possession. At the time of the Armageddon, he seems to be part of the Red Dragon clan's human-reptilian hybrids experimentations. It's not clear if he's willing, but this might have been another way, in his eyes, to get his Saurian race to be restored.

Reptile is pretty much the same he's ever been in Mortal Kombat 9: an assassin for Shang Tsung and foot soldier for Outworld.


  • Alien Blood: It's green.
  • Anti-Villain (Type II): Even though he sides with the likes of Shao Kahn and Shinnok, all he wants is to revive his extinct reptilian race. Later games suggest that over the centuries since his race's destruction, he's been ever so slowly going mad, and attaches himself to whatever authority figure he can. After Shao Kahn's apparent death, he almost immediately enters Nitara's servitude.
  • Bonus Boss: The very first.
  • Butt Monkey/Diabolus Ex Machina: With the exceptions of MKII (as it's his first time), Armageddon, and 9, pretty much every other ending of his can be boiled down to "His employers screwed him over":
    • In Ultimate 3, he gets a promise from Shao Kahn to revive his race if he kills Kitana. He does it, but Shao Kahn breaks his part of the deal. Reptile kills him, but this denies him the chance to know what his true race is.
    • In 4, he gets a denial, again, but this time from Shinnok. He's succeeded during his fight against Earthrealm's warriors, so he talks to Quan Chi in order to make him to convince Shinnok to make Reptile to return back in time to his homeworld before it was destroyed. After an useless speak, Shinnok appears, does a Neck Lift on him, and Reptile's head explodes.
    • And, in (surprisingly) the only canonical ending of Deadly Alliance, he finds Cyrax and Nitara's essence, but not any of them. Later, he's caught by an energy cascade around what was a dragon embryo, his body providing a host for Onaga, the Dragon King.
    • In Mortal Kombat 9's story mode, despite that he survived the events of the game, he seems to exist solely to get his ass repeatedly kicked by the heroes.
  • Downloadable Content: In 9, his classic skin from MK1/2/3 and his classic "Tasty Meal" fatality.
  • Everything's Better with Monkeys: His Chimp Animality from UMK3.
  • Flash Step: His Running Serpent.
  • Hollywood Acid: His vomit is strong enough to melt someone down into a skeleton in under a minute.
  • Imagine Spot: Due to his waning lucidity, Deadly Alliance's Konquest Mode notes that Reptile's imagination tends to get out of hand frequently, causing him daydream about hypothetical battles (such as he thwarting the Deadly Alliance's assassination attempt on Shao Kahn).
  • I'm a Humanitarian: He can swallow an entire human head in one bite, and some of his fatalities has him ripping and eating the opponent's head, chameleon-style.
  • Invisibility: He can turn invisible in nearly every game where he's playable.
  • It Was a Gift: The Kirehashi blade that he uses in Deadly Alliance and Armageddon is an ancient Raptor weapon offered to him as a sign of peace by Nitara. While this was mostly done to get Reptile's guard down and gain his trust so that Nitara could lure him over to her side, this also suggests that there is some sort of shared history between the people of Zaterra and Vaeternus (the Vampire race is said to be a record keeper of the history of other races, but it's unknown how deep their connection with other species were).
  • Jobber: Has a tendency to repeatedly show up during 9's story mode to get beaten up.
  • Ki Attacks: His Force Ball, a projectile sphere attack that is mainly used to set up the enemy for a juggle.
  • Last of His Kind: Well, he and Khameleon.
  • Neck Snap: He has a non-lethal version of this.
  • Now Buy the Merchandise: His Friendship in 2, in which he invites the player to "Buy a Reptile doll!"
  • Overly Long Tongue
  • Red Herring Shirt: In 9, he lives.
  • Rolling Attack: In some games, Reptile could curl himself up into a ball and roll forward, knocking the enemy down.
  • Secret Character: The first secret character in the series. Later became a regular character.
    • Guide Dang It: MK1 required sheer perfection and luck on one specific fight in order to obtain him. Every so often, the game would have him pop out and drop a hint on this. And if you want to know, you are required to be on The Pit stage ("Tip eht fo mottob"), win with a double Flawless Victory ("Perfection is the key") and finish the opponent with your character's fatality ("Fatality is the key") and NOT Block ("Blocking will get you nowhere").
    • Luck-Based Mission: Even after all that, a shadow has to fly past the moon for it to work ("Look to la luna"), which only occurs ONCE IN EVERY 6 CONSECUTIVE GAMES! (unless you're cheating on a console version, in whose case you don't get the bonus points)
    • The Dev Team Thinks of Everything: The only time you're allowed to touch the block button is when inputting Sonya's fatality, the only one in the game that requires block.
  • Shapeshifter Default Form: Inverted. Reptile prefers to take on a more human form, with his resemblance to a human or humanoid lizard varying from game to game. Yet, members of his race can lose their humanoid appearance when separated for long periods of time from their monarchal leader, with hints that Reptile's temporary insanity is what caused his more bestial appearance in Deadly Alliance.
  • The Speechless: In 9, he has no spoken dialogue during the story mode, though he "converses" with Shang Tsung using growls at one point. He does have a few text-based lines in the challenge tower.
  • Sssssnaketalk: He had it in the comics, and it was carried over to 4. For some reason however, he does not have it in Armageddon.
  • Undying Loyalty: Mostly due to his status as an Extreme Doormat and his misguided hopes that he'll eventually be rewarded with the revival of his race, but once Reptile enters the service of most his masters, he is violently determined to protect and serve them. Even more pitiable is the fact that what Reptile perceives as failure starts weighing heavily on his conscience. When he's unable to defeat Cyrax at Nitara's command and flees, Reptile (in an odd villainous variation of Heroic Self-Deprecation) starts beating himself up for being unable to carry out the wishes of another master.
  • Walking Shirtless Scene: In 4, Deadly Alliance, and Armageddon.


Goro

"I will grant you a warrior's death!"

Debut game: Mortal Kombat
Other appearances: Mortal Kombat Trilogy, Mortal Kombat Gold, Mortal Kombat: Deception, Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks, Mortal Kombat: Armageddon, Mortal Kombat 9 (Ken Lally)

Non-game appearances: Mortal Kombat: The Movie (Kevin Michael Richardson)

Proud member of the half-dragon race, the Shokans, Goro was the undefeated Champion of Mortal Kombat, being able to win nine consecutive tournaments over a span of 500 years. He helped Shang Tsung grow ever closer to achieving Shao Kahn's goal of domination over Earthrealm.

In his tenth title defense, however, he faced and lost to Liu Kang. In the tournament's aftermath he went missing after a battle where he fought Kano, Johnny Cage and Sonya Blade, and was believed to be dead. He would later resurface after Shao Kahn's defeat to lead his fellow Shokans in a war against the Centaurians. Kitana intervened and negotiated both races an uneasy truce and peace accord. When Shinnok and his legion were defeated and Edenia was once again free, Goro and the Shokan race decided to ally with the Edenians.

Years later, during the time of the Deadly Alliance, the united Edenians and Shokans marched on Shao Kahn's weakened army. Goro was exhausted from battle and was struck from behind by Noob Saibot. He was mortally wounded, apparently dying from the injury. So, Princess Kitana held a royal funeral for her former ally. However, Goro was able to survive, being saved from death by Shao Kahn himself, with the promise to return the Shokans to their former glory and the banishment of the Centaurians in exchange for his allegiance. Agreeing to these terms, Goro resumed his place at Shao Kahn's side and helped him to become once again the Emperor of the Outworld during the time of the Armageddon.

Goro is pretty much the same in Mortal Kombat 9.



Shang Tsung

Debut game: Mortal Kombat (Ho Sung Pak)
Other appearances: Mortal Kombat II (Phillip Ahn, M.D.), Mortal Kombat 3 (John Turk), Mortal Kombat Mythologies: Sub-Zero (Richard Divizio), Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance, Mortal Kombat: Deception (cameo), Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks, Mortal Kombat: Armageddon, Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe (James Kyson-Lee), Mortal Kombat 9 (Andrew Kishino)
Non-game appearances: Mortal Kombat: The Movie (Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa), Mortal Kombat: Conquest (Bruce Locke), Mortal Kombat: Defenders of the Realm (Neil Ross), Mortal Kombat: Rebirth (James Lew), Mortal Kombat: Legacy (Johnson Phan)

A powerful and deadly sorcerer and a primary villain in the Mortal Kombat series, Shang Tsung is a demonic shapeshifter who needs to consume souls in order to sustain his health and life. Throughout his unnatural lifespan, he has achieved an intellectual and mental sophistication far greater than that of any other baddie of the series.

Several centuries before the start of the series, a young and promising Tsung was taken to Outworld and trained by the Emperor in the Black Arts. For a time, Shang Tsung would be the Grand Champion of Mortal Kombat himself, but when he lost his title to the legendary Shaolin warrior, the Great Kung Lao, he had to wait several years for his greatest student, the Shokan prince Goro, to restore once more Outworld's domination of the Mortal Kombat Tournament. This time Tsung, now aged and weakened, secured his domain on the Tournament, by becoming its sole Grandmaster and holding future competitions on his private island, a zone in between Earth and the Outworld.

During the tenth Mortal Kombat tournament, the final victory that would enable Shao Kahn to conquer Earth, Liu Kang, a Shaolin Monk, defeated Goro, breaking the streak. Liu Kang then challenged Shang Tsung in Kombat to restore the honour of the once-sacred tournament; Liu Kang prevailed, and Shang Tsung fled to Outworld. He confronted an enraged Shao Kahn and convinced him that, if they challenged Earthrealm to Mortal Kombat in Outworld, they would have to accept or forfeit. Kahn agreed to this plan, and restored Tsung's youth. Despite this, in the Tournament the sorcerer lost again to Liu Kang, who also defeated Kahn. Shortly after, with the aid of his cult of Shadow Priests, Shang Tsung managed to revive Shao Kahn's former queen, Sindel, on Earth, giving Kahn and his forces a way to invade the Realm. Tsung was granted more power than ever before, but during the invasion that followed he lost to Liu Kang once more.

Some time after the merge of the two Realms failed, the fellow sorcerer Quan Chi come to Shang Tsung with an offer: if Tsung helped him revive the lost army of the Dragon King by means of his ability to transplant souls, he would open a "Soulnado" to the Heavens, giving him an endless supply of souls. Tsung accepted, and they formed the Deadly Alliance. Together, the sorcerers not only managed to assassinate both Liu Kang and Shao Kahn, but eventually the duo defeated Earthrealm's champions and triumphed over Raiden himself in a final battle. Their victory, however, would not be savored. Shang Tsung's lust for power and Quan Chi's suspicion finally came to light. The two fought, with Quan Chi emerged the victor, and immediately after that, Shang Tsung had to confront a revived Dragon King alongside the two enemies; in the battle that ensued, Tsung was killed by Raiden's self-sacrificial blast.

His soul, still bound to Kahn, reached the not-so-dead Emperor. Kahn provided Tsung with a host body and then allied with him and Goro in taking his kingdom back. Some time later, during the Armageddon, the sorcerer formed an alliance with Onaga, Shao Kahn, and Quan Chi so that the group may prevent the Forces of Light from obtaining the power that Blaze possessed.

The events of Mortal Kombat 9 happen pretty much the same for Shang Tsung as in the previous games, with an exception.


"Well done. You might tell your fellow Black Dragon that I'm very interested in your merchandise."

(to Goro, after he gets punched in the goolies by Johnny Cage) "You IMBECILE!"

    • There's also his behavior in MK9's story mode, especially after he has his youth restored.
  • Monster Clown: One of his Mortal Kombat 9 Fatalities, which doubles as a Take That to MK vs. DCU's censors.
  • Neck Snap: In Deadly Alliance, he delivers one to Liu Kang, killing him for good. This comes back in the Battle of Armageddon, where Undead!Liu Kang necksnaps him.
  • Older Than They Look: According to Word of God, he was biologically nineteen years old in MKII. He doesn't exactly look like it. [dead link]
  • Only Sane Man: In the DC crossover, he has apparently the strongest self-control of all characters from both worlds, as he never gives up to the rage until Dark Khan reveals himself and makes rage take everybody. But even after that, he managed to bring himself back to normal, while Raiden was still under Dark Kahn's infulence.
  • Playing with Fire: Summons skulls on fire as projectiles.
  • The Punishment: This is what the Elder Gods call his soul-sucking ability. Admittedly it's required to keep him sustained, though he can do much more with it than that and definitely not objecting.
  • Scaled Up: He could turn into a cobra to finish his opponents as Animality in MK3.
  • Shape Shifter
  • A Sinister Clue: Given his weapon style in later games, Shang would appear to be a lefty.
  • Tall, Dark and Handsome: In his younger form.
  • Tournament Arc: He really likes these, to the point that, in MK Versus DCU, when he encounters Captain Marvel in the Netherrealm, he has his allies face off against Marvel one at a time, announcing results between rounds as if it were Arcade Mode ("Captain Marvel wins!").
  • Unlimited Wardrobe: There's no better example in this franchise. Shang Tsung's "main" appearance has changed considerably from game to game, except in Armageddon, which reutilized his Deadly Alliance model.
  • What The Hell, Elder Gods?: For the atrocity of stealing a soul, Shang Tsung was condemned to... do it over and over again. Just to twist the knife, Shang doesn't give a crap about the souls he takes either, and it actually makes him more and more powerful. It's like condemning a murderer to a life as a Serial Killer, and the murderer enjoys killing.
  • Yellow Peril: In the original game, though it's balanced by the fact that the protagonist is also Chinese.
  • Your Soul Is Mine: The Trope Namer, and his iconic Fatality.
    • Also happens in 9 to him. After Motaro's death, Shao Kahn chooses to use Shang Tsung to empower Sindel, fueling the massacre of the heroes.

Introduced in Mortal Kombat

Art Lean


Chan Kang

  1. in Deadly Alliance, he hung a lock of her hair obtained by tearing it from her head during their battle atop the skyscraper in MK3 around his neck as a symbol of their rivalry
  2. Mind you, Jax and co. are mulling around Outworld looking for her whereabouts, as Sonya is scheduled for execution as they speak
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