Although only a limited number of copies of the books themselves were printed, the tale was retold through various mediums, including oration and live performance, leading to its popularity among many social classes at the time.
Kabuki plays based on
Hakkenden were often performed, and
ukiyo-e depicting kabuki actors playing the roles of eight warriors were also popular.
Hakkenden, and Bakin's work at large, maintained much of its popularity amongst common people throughout the 19th century, but drew some academic criticism in the
Meiji era for its didacticism and one-dimensional characters, as novelists and scholars sought to modernize Japan's literary style. Notably, in literary reformer
Tsubouchi Shōyō's influential book
Essence of the Novel, published 1885–1886, Bakin is lauded for both his style and his role in popularizing novels, but imitation of Bakin's work is cited as a widespread problem among novelists of the time. In the 20th century
Hakkenden became a strong influence on
manga works, particularly those based on adventure quests. For example it influenced
Akira Toriyama's
Dragon Ball (1984) and
Rumiko Takahashi's
Inuyasha (1996), which both have plots about the collection of magical crystals or crystal balls, the latter also starring a human/dog hybrid similar in origin to the Dog Warriors.
Literature •
Teisō Fujo Hakkenshi (1834-1848) •
Koi no Yatsufuji: Dansō Satomi Hakkenden (1837), a
parody. •
Setsubai Kōtan: Inu no Soushi (1848-1881) is a simplified
gōkan edition of the novel by
Ryuutei Senka. •
Kanayomi Hakkenden (1848-1867), a competing gōkan edition of the novel. •
Hakkenden Gojitsudan (1853-1857) - roughly "Hakkenden: The Sequel", a novel by one of the authors of
Kanayomi Hakkenden which centres on the Dog Warrior's children and grandchildren. •
Ninpō Hakkenden (1964), part of
Futaro Yamada's
Ninpōchō series, features descendants of the original Eight Dog Warriors. •
Shin Satomi Hakkenden (1982) is a retelling of the story.
Television •
Satomi Hakkenden (1964), produced by
Fuji TV •
Satomi Hakkenden (1964), produced by
NET •
Shin Hakkenden (1973), a puppet-based adaptation •
Denshi Sentai Denjiman (1980), a series which established many conventions of the long-running
Super Sentai franchise, is reported to have taken inspiration from
Hakkenden. This includes replacing the unified taskforce protagonists of earlier installments with a team of strangers brought together by destiny. •
Corrector Yui (1999) is a
magical girl anime with motifs drawn from the 70s
Shin Hakkenden series. •
Shin Hakkenden (1999), an animated series distinguished from similarly-named adaptations by its spelling . •
Fukaku Kugure: Hakkenden 2001 (2000) •
Satomi Hakkenden (2006) •
Hakkenden: Eight Dogs of the East (2013), a partial animated adaptation of the
manga of the same name. •
Six Hearts Princess (2016), an anime featuring a group of eight
magical girls themed after the Dog Warriors - each embodying one of the Confucian Virtues and having a peony mark somewhere on their body.
Film , 1954) •
Hakkenden (1913) •
Satomi Hakkenden (1937) •
Tonchinkan Hakkenden (1953) • ''
Sorcerer's Orb'' (1954) - Japanese title "Satomi Hakkenden" • ''You'un Satomi Kaikyoden: Zengo-hen'' (1956) •
Satomi hakken-den (1959) •
Message from Space (1978), which transplants the story to
space opera •
Legend of the Eight Samurai (1983), an adaptation of the novel
Shin Satomi Hakkenden and in Japan titled simply "Satomi Hakkenden". •
The Hakkenden (1990), an
OVA. •
Fuse Teppō Musume no Torimonochō (2012), an animated adaptation of
Fusé Gansaku: Satomi Hakkenden which mixes the
horror stylings of the 2010 novel with elements of the original
Hakkenden in order to recast it as a
supernatural romance.
Theatre The novel has also been adapted into
kabuki theatre several times. • In August 2006, the
Kabuki-za staged a performance.
Comic Books •
Dragon Ball (1984) uses Fuse's beads as the basis of the titular Dragon Balls, a collection of seven crystal spheres with different markings which can be brought together to summon a wish-granting
dragon. After use, the balls scatter in a manner similar to the scene of the Dog Warriors' birth. •
Nansō Satomi Hakkenden (1993) •
Yatsufusa Koi Shou (1994) by
Shinohara Udou •
Hakken Densetsu: Yōkai Satomi Chūgaku (1999) by
Kanako Inuki is a horror manga series based on the story. •
Hakkenden: Eight Dogs of the East (2005) is a
shoujo manga based on the story. •
Hakkenshi (2005), a work by
Okamura Kenji focused on the character of Inuzuka Shino. •
Sengoku Satomi Hakkenden: Episode Zero (2009) by
Tatsuya Egawa. •
Manga de yomu: Nansō Satomi Hakkenden (2015), focused on the character of Inue Shinbei. •
Eight Dogs (2016) is a comic based on the unofficial sequel novel
Ninpō Hakkenden, published in
Comic Ran Twins.
Video Games •
Yōma Ninpōchō (1986) is an
arcade shooter game inspired by the 1983
Shin Satomi Hakkenden film. •
Idol Hakkenden (1989), a
visual novel for the
Famicom where eight idol singers assemble in a similar manner to the Dog Warriors. •
Makai Hakkenden Shada (1989), an
action RPG for the
PC Engine with gameplay similar to the
Ys series, developed by
Data East. •
Satomi Hakkenden (1989), a
role-playing game for the
Famicom developed by
Alpha Denshi and published by
SNK. •
Shin Satomi Hakkenden: Hikari to Yami no Tatakai (1989), a
role-playing game for the
Famicom developed by Micronics and published by
Toei, based on the 1982 novel
Shin Satomi Hakkenden and
its film adaptation. It features the gimmick of allowing the player to start as any one of the Eight Dog Warriors in different locations across the map, with the goal of eventually uniting the entire party. •
Romancing SaGa (1992) features a
nonlinear story of eight player characters who exist in the same world, the number being chosen in reference to the similar storytelling of
Hakkenden. •
Ōkami (2006) features a story arc in which the player character is recruited by a woman named Fuse to collect the "Satomi Power Orbs" from eight trained dogs who serve her family. • In
Fate/Grand Order the novel forms the basis of the Jun/July 2022 event
Nanmei Yumihari Hakkenden, starring a
Kyokutei Bakin who became a Heroic Spirit with powers based on elements of his magnum opus. == Translations ==