Non-Human Undead



When most people think of The Undead, they tend to think of the formerly human rising up from their graves or something similar.

This trope, on the other hand, is about those whose life started out "fantastic" even before they joined the ranks of the dead. Whether they were an Elf, a Dragon, a Demon, or even something completely divorced from reality, the one thing common among them is that they're all dead (or at least resemble some combination of some sort of traditional undead and it's own base species) and still kicking.

You may even see an Undead God. In that case, run, run as fast as you can.

See Raising the Steaks for undead animals (where examples of such should go there instead of here).

See Hybrid Monster, when two living fantasy species are combined. Contrast Hybrid Overkill Avoidance. Also, compare Mechanical Monster and Ninja Pirate Zombie Robot.

The Grim Reaper and other Psychopomps can be one, depending on their origin.

Dracolich is a specific subtrope when the creature turns out to have been a dragon.

Anime and Manga

 * in Nora..
 * One interesting case In Yu-Gi-Oh is in the first tournament. Yugi defeats Kaiba's Blue Eyes Ultimate Dragon by fusing his Mammoth Graveyard into it... which, because both are incompatible types, was slowly weakening the resulting fusion and would cause it's eventual death. After this, the rule is never referenced again.
 * Inuyasha has had undead demons. They tend to get fleshier the more strength they recover.

Film

 * Black Sheep involves zombie sheep who turn humans into weresheep.

Literature

 * In one of The Dresden Files books, Harry encounters an extremely strong ghost he calls the Nightmare, and suspects it's one of these.
 * Then there was the time when he pulled out his trump card against a necromancer Big Bad.
 * A Song of Ice and Fire gives us the Others, who are humanoid enough, and their wights, who are basically their victims risen as zombies. They don't just raise humans, however, and ride horses who are described as having their entrails frozen to their bellies. And if that wasn't bad enough, the rangers at the Battle of the Fist have to deal with a zombie bear.
 * Xanth has featured zombie versions of just about everything, at one time or another.
 * The Zombie Apocalypse in The Rising and City of the Dead has demonic spirits animating pretty much every corpse over a certain size, human and otherwise. Most notably, one character is killed by a zombie sewer crocodile biting his head off, while the last two humans are offed by zombie rats.

Tabletop Games

 * Dungeons and Dragons
 * The Dracolich (Lich dragon), which originated in the Forgotten Realms (it can now be found in most settings). There are also vampire, ghost, zombie, and skeleton dragons.
 * The groaning spirit (banshee) is the "spirit of an evil female elf".
 * Ravenloft introduced vampires created from non-human creatures such as elves, dwarves, gnomes, halflings and even Dragonlance's kender. Although to be exact, it's more that they gave them variant powers and weaknesses, as most of these races already could be turned into vampires.
 * The death tyrant is an undead beholder.
 * The adventure I2 Tomb of the Lizard King had a lizard king who was changed into a vampire by a Wish spell.
 * Orcus, the demon lord of the undead/occasional Undead God. Although as of late he's mostly alive. And PISSED.
 * Atropals are the undead fetuses of unborn gods (colloquially referred to as Undead Aborted God Fetuses).
 * Vampire Mind Flayers suck blood with their tentacles. Fortunately (maybe), vampirism destroys most of their intelligence and turns them into animalistic predators. Also, alhoon are mind flayer liches. They keep all their mental faculties; they need them for spells and psionics.
 * And zombies and skeletons can be made from just about anything that leaves a corpse. In fact, many types of undead in 3rd Edition are created though applying a template to an existing creature, so you can wind up with medusa vampires, giant mummies, beholder ghosts, gnoll death knights, and many, many other combinations.
 * Necromentals are undead elementals.
 * Visages are undead, raised from outsiders (this is type of creatures, including, but not limited to, angels, demons, devils and most servants of gods).
 * Bloodfiends are vampire demons.
 * Kyuss, The Worm That Walks, created many types of those (in addition to his better-known worm-infested zombies), usually in the form of gigantic vermin like scorpions or, well, worms.
 * In Eberron, the Elves of Aerenal have their own versions of undead called the Deathless. These act as their rulers through the Undying Court, and are animated by positive energy rather than the usual Negative energy used by regular undead. Similarly, Forgotten Realms has baelnorns, a type of good-aligned elf liches.
 * And many, many monsters that are considered as undead but were not living creatures at all (like nightshades), are composed from many creatures, or are specifically created from nonhumans.
 * Warhammer 40000 gives us the normal variant of undead, Undead Daemons created from the souls of those killed (NOT turned into the undead) by the undead plague, undead statue robots (wraithguard and wraithlords) Undead Wizard Statue Robots (Wraithseer and Warlock Titans). Undead Robots (necrons) and Undead Mecha (Dreadnoughts to a degree and Nurgle Titans). Surprisingly no Undead Dragons (then again, their fantasy counterpart fills in whatever holes it has).
 * Shadowrun has a number of metahumans affected by HMHVV (Human Meta-Human Vampiric Virus), its equivalent of undead. They include the banshee (former elf), goblin (former dwarf), wendigo (former ork) and dzoo-noo-qua (former troll).
 * It should be pointed out that HMHVV infectees are not actually undead. They are mutants, yes, but not undead. As one of the fundamental laws of magic in Shadowrun is that you cannot raise the dead, "True" undead do not exist. Most undead are either dead bodies animated by magic (Think fleshy, magical robots), or possessed by something. The Sheddim (Corpses possessed by spirits from the far planes) are one such examples. As are Zombies (Corpses animated by mages). Cyberzombies are people kept artificially alive through cybernetics, magic, drugs and spirits. Their body is technically "dead", all that mojo is needed to keep it going. Note that all the above can be metahuman, or not.
 * In the Yu-Gi-Oh! card game, there are quite a few non-human undeads, including the variants of legacy cards (i. e. Summoned Skull -> Archfiend Zombie Skull, Red Eyes Black Dragon -> Red Eyes Zombie Dragon, etc.). Early non-human cards classed as zombies included dragons, boats, and clowns (what?).
 * GURPS has the Zombie Vehicle spell which is designed with spaceships in mind.
 * Magic the Gathering has an immense number of these, mostly various types of zombie. Zombie goblins, centaurs, plants and fungi have all been seen as base cards. And because cards exist that resurrect creatures and give them the zombie subtype, any kind of creature in the game can theoretically be raised as zombies, from skeletons and ghosts to elementals and artifacts. It's probably best not to think too hard about it.

Video Games

 * Moric the Necromancer's undead Dracelon from MARDEK 2. Comes from Moric and Rohoph's homeworld of Anshar; it's basically a dragon with three legs plus a Wave Motion Tuning Fork claw. Moric's droma servants are probably undead too.
 * He even added cybernetic parts to the dracelon, making it an alien dragon zombie cyborg.
 * The MARDEK series so far has also featured zombie versions of normal dragons, monsters (which are a specific species in this Verse), and fumerats.
 * The Valkyrie Profile series features zombie dragons as bosses and subbosses.
 * There are zombie dragon bosses in Breath of Fire III.
 * The roguelike game Nethack has zombie and mummy giants, elves, dwarves, orcs and gnomes along with the regular ol' human variant.
 * You can also zap most corpses with wands of undead turning to bring monsters and animals back to life.
 * The humorous text-based adventure game, Kingdom of Loathing, has an undead monster in the Misspelled Cemetary area called The Bonerdagon. It's an undead dragon made of bones, but it might also be an undead dragon made of boners.
 * Cthulu had a "star-spawn" named Dagon, and he was bad enough when made of terror...
 * In the Super Mario series, there are various Non Human Undead creatures. A staple of the series is the Dry Bones, a reanimated Koopa skeleton. The Paper Mario series adds variations of Dry Bones, along with other Non Human Undead (e.g. Bonetail from The Thousand Year Door and Bonechill of Super Paper Mario)
 * War Craft III has the undead Scourge side, and their ranks include more than undead humans. They also have undead spider-men called Crypt Fiends, undead elves called banshees, and a super flying undead dragon with ice breath. Plus, generic skeletons can be made with the corpses of any species. Frozen Throne later has Skeleton Orc creeps.
 * Later on in World of Warcraft, when Death Knights became playable it meant that you could have an undead version of every race: dwarves, gnomes, werewolves, goblins, elves... You could even have an Undead Death Knight, meaning a human who died, was raised from the dead, then was killed and THEN risen from the dead again.
 * Any kind of living creature in Dwarf Fortress can have a zombie or skeletal version, including monsters like dragons, giants, and imps.
 * Final Fantasy XII loves undead monsters, even if they're not human. Many of the monster types have an undead version. Examples include undead wolves, undead war horses, undead vampire bats, undead slimes, and undead bombs. There's also the requisite undead boss who is a Conjoined Twins demon with visible skull.
 * Final Fantasy IX had a Flying Seafood Special Zombie whale.
 * And in Final Fantasy I, there was the boss of the Castle of Ordeals, a Zombie Dragon, as well as a few other monster undead.
 * Cave Story featured the Undead Core, which was possessed by the evil Doctor. Also, Ballos.
 * In Diablo 2 necromancers can get the ability to animate the corpses of their enemies as they were in life instead of somehow ending up with humanoid skeletons, as happens before this.
 * In Battle for Wesnoth the sprite and characteristics of a living corpse depend on who it was before death: mounted corpses move faster, gnome corpses have better defence in mountains, and so on.
 * In the Resident Evil series, the T-Virus infects everything. Zombie dogs, birds and plants are common, and we've seen oversized mutant snakes, sharks, worms, crocodiles, lions, an elephant...
 * One of the two inhabitants of the Nether in Minecraft are Zombie Pigmen, which are Exactly What It Says On the Tin.

Western Animation

 * Transformers Prime gives us Zombie Humongous Mecha.
 * D'Compose of the Inhumanoids is a giant undead dinosaur-looking Eldrich Abomination whose merest touch can transform others into giant, undead abominations until revived by sunlight.