Yokai Art- Night Parade Of One Hundred Demons __full__ Jun 2026
So, the next time you walk down a dark street and hear a strange noise behind you—don't run. Hold your breath. Squint your eyes. For just a moment, the hidden world bleeds through. And if you are lucky, or cursed, you might just see the parade passing by.
Traditional red or blue demons with horns and loincloths, often acting as the leaders of the procession. Yokai Art- Night Parade of One Hundred Demons
The story is light and serves mostly as a vehicle to introduce new environments. It does not take itself too seriously, featuring standard anime tropes and lighthearted dialogue, but it provides enough context to keep the player moving forward. So, the next time you walk down a
The immense popularity of the Hyakki Yagyō theme only grew, and the Muromachi-period model was faithfully copied and reimagined numerous times throughout the Edo period (1603-1868) and beyond. Many of the finest surviving examples of these scrolls are held in major museums worldwide, each offering a slightly different interpretation of the classic theme: For just a moment, the hidden world bleeds through
The "One Hundred Demons" is a misnomer. It doesn't mean exactly 100 creatures; in Japanese, "hyakki" implies "a great many" or "an overwhelming host." The art of the Night Parade is the art of chaos—an overflowing, tangled crowd of the uncanny.
As a key figure, Sekien solidified the taxonomy of yōkai, creating encyclopedias of monsters that brought the "One Hundred Demons" into the homes of ordinary people.
The spirit of the Hyakki Yagyō did not fade with the modernization of Japan. It simply migrated into new media. Today, the imagery of the Night Parade forms the DNA of global Japanese entertainment.