Literature • The animated skeleton features in some
Gothic fiction. One early example is in the short story "Thurnley Abbey" (1908) by
Perceval Landon, originally published in his collection
Raw Edges. It is reprinted in many modern anthologies, such as
The 2nd Fontana Book of Great Ghost Stories and
The Penguin Book of Horror Stories. • An
anthropomorphic depiction of Death which looks like a skeleton in a black robe appears in almost all volumes of
Terry Pratchett's fantasy series
Discworld, including five novels where he is the lead character. • In the manga
One Piece,
Brook, who is one of the main characters, is an animated skeleton after consuming the Revive-Revive Fruit.
Film and TV • Undead skeletons have been portrayed in
fantasy films such as
The 7th Voyage of Sinbad (1958),
The Black Cauldron (1985),
Army of Darkness (1992),
The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993),
The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra (2001), and
Corpse Bride (2005). • An extended battle scene against an army of skeletal warriors was produced by animator
Ray Harryhausen for
Jason and the Argonauts (1963) and is remembered as one of the most sophisticated and influential
visual effects sequences of its day. • Undead skeletons always appear as funny characters in
Thai fantasy folk television dramas. They are often referred to as
"Na Phi" ("uncle ghost").
Games ''. • Animated skeletons have been used and portrayed extensively in
fantasy role-playing games. In a tradition that goes back to the
pen-and-paper game
Dungeons & Dragons, the basic animated skeleton is commonly employed as a low-level
undead enemy, typically easy for a player to defeat in combat. Thus, in games which make use of them, such enemies often appear relatively early in the gameplay and are considered a suitable opponent for novice players. In these contexts, they are commonly armed with medieval weapons and sometimes wear armor.
Environmental humanities scholar Matthew Chrulew commented on skeletons, as well as other undead and
vermin in
D&D "figure the abject and excluded", representing "most clearly a
bare life [as coined by
Giorgio Agamben] that may be killed without hesitation; violence against such wholly other creatures is completely deproblematized." • In the PlayStation
action-adventure series
MediEvil, the protagonist is an animated skeleton knight named Sir Daniel Fortesque. • In the 1999 cult classic
Planescape: Torment,
Morte is a character who joins the protagonist on his quest and is essentially a sentient, levitating human skull with intact eyeballs who cracks wise and fights by biting. • In the 2011
Minecraft video game, skeletons appear as bow-wielding monsters that shoot players with their bows and burn under the sunlight unless they wear helmets. Sometimes the skeletons spawn with stronger bows or random armor, or can be summoned by players in a world with cheats enabled to wield a melee weapon, or no weapon at all. Variants include the Wither Skeleton, which causes the player's
health points to wither away, the Stray, a frozen variant found in snowy biomes, and the Bogged, a
poisonous variant found in
swamp and
mangrove swamp biomes. In the spinoff game
Minecraft Dungeons, there also exists a variant that acts as the guards of The Nameless One, a
necromancer boss enemy and the king of the undead. In this form, they are equipped with glaives, shields, and iron armor, and are referred to as Skeleton Vanguards. • In the video game
Fable III, there exist a race of antagonistic characters called "hollow men" which are featured throughout the game. • A duo of animated skeleton brothers plays an important role in the
role-playing game Undertale. Named
Sans and
Papyrus, the brothers' dialogue text is printed in
Comic Sans and
Papyrus fonts, respectively. • Following a poll taken during their
Kickstarter campaign,
Larian Studios added a playable skeleton race in their 2017 RPG
Divinity: Original Sin II, as well as an ancient skeletal character named Fane. • The
Mario series has some
Koopa Troopa-skeleton themed enemies known as
Dry Bones, where after they get hit, they return to their form.
Bowser also has a skeleton form known as
Dry Bowser, debuted in
New Super Mario Bros., and featured in other games such as
Mario Party and
Mario Kart. •
The Legend of Zelda series features an enemy called Stalfos, armed skeletons who serve as regular enemies and occasionally as minibosses. Variations such as Stalkids and Stalblins also appear in various games in the series. • In
Heroes of Might and Magic 3, skeletons are recruitable troops from the Town Necropolis. • The mobile games
Clash of Clans and
Clash Royale feature numerous types of skeletons as troops. •
Grim Fandango, set in the "Land of the Dead", includes a protagonist and love interest illustrated as living skeletons. • The
Golden Axe series commonly employs enemy skeletons wielding swords and shields, with strength levels conveyed by their varying color of bones. ==See also==