Hybrid Monster



"I'm sorry, no, I won't take it. If we accept orc zombies, then we open the gate to all kinds of crap. What's next? Centaur dragons? How about demon fairies? Maybe buffalo elves? Heck, why not whale vultures? I'm going to make a stand for plausible monsters everywhere. Who's with me?"

- Black Mage, 8-Bit Theater, #406

The logical conclusion of Half-Human Hybrid, Monster Mash, and Mix-and-Match Critters. A Hybrid Monster is a creature made up of two or more mythological, alien, monster, or fantasy creatures... or all of the above!

Despite the near infinite combinations possible, there's only a few variants of these creatures:
 * Natural Breeding: Two creatures, perhaps themselves once human or Half Human Hybrids, or completely different species (never mind races) get it on and produce a child. Maligned Mixed Marriage optional. Expect this to be part of a Mary Sue's parentage. Common subtypes include: Vampire-elves, vampire-werewolf, dragon-elf, angel-demon, etc.
 * Transformation: An already non-human creature gets an incomplete Baleful Polymorph, is infected with The Virus, bitten by a Werewolf, or grafted with cybernetics or subjected to genetic engineering. What happens here is you have a "common" base type which gets superseded by a second one. Common subtypes include: Vampire-elves (again), < >-skeleton, < >-zombie, cyborg-demon (more common than you'd think), and Mutants of any such species in general.
 * Biological Mashup: Two already existing creatures become one already existing creature. Often from a spell Gone Horribly Wrong or a Teleporter Accident. Common subtypes include: Tuvix. End of line.

Note: This is NOT Ninja Pirate Zombie Robot, it can be considered a Sub-Trope of it, but differs in that it relates exclusively to non-human creatures. Compare Shapeshifter Mashup and Partial Transformation. May lead to authors using Hybrid Overkill Avoidance to limit this.

Anime and Manga

 * Mahou Sensei Negima has the Griffin Dragon.
 * The Darkness of the Book of Darkness at the end of Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha A's, likely a result of the Wolkenritter collecting Mana from alien magic beasts as well. Its body included the black wings and upper torso of Reinforce, the rocky protrusions and and metal plates of the giant turtle-like beasts, and the tentacles of the Sand Worms, along with other parts like giant red horns and spider-like legs it got from who-knows-where.
 * The monster from WXIII:Patlabor The Movie 3 is part human, part alien & later absorbs a Humongous Mecha as well. It also inexplicably has fish & lobster bits.
 * Ranma ½ has Pantyhose Taro's cursed form, which in his first appearance is a Yeti/Bull/Crane/Eel hybrid. By his second appearance he has also added Octopus.
 * In Pokémon Special, there is a stone statue in Eterna City that features a cross between Dialga and Palkia. This is later explained as people once thought the two beings as one.
 * And of course, there's the Zapmolcuno Biological Mashup in the first arc of the manga, a chimera created by Team Rocket by fusing the bodies of the three Legendary Pokemon, Zapdos, Moltres, and Articuno.
 * Speaking of Pokemon, Venastoise from the anime deserves a mention.
 * The Hybrid Bakugan of Bakugan Battle Brawlers are sort of the biological mashup variety in that they were created from the collision of two elemental planes. As a result, all six of them are sort of cruel mockeries of their combined elements with personalities to match.
 * Heck, Tayghen gives a whole new definition to Vagina Dentata
 * Digimon Adventure 02 took quite a shine to this trope - it pretty much started with Chimeramon (and by extension, its evolved form Millenniummon from the Wonder Swan games), then proceeded to combine this with Fusion Dance for Paildramon and Silphymon.
 * The Nyokai from The Twelve Kingdoms. The more varied animal parts they have, the better. Special mention goes to Taiki's own, Haku Sanshi: she has the head and torso of a White-Haired Pretty Girl, the eyes of a fish, the tail of a lizard, and the lower body of a leopard.
 * Even her personality is Hybrid. The transfer to Wa (Neo-Japan) changes her mode of thinking from gentle mama-tiger to homicidal guardian who knows how to cause car accidents. And somehow, the demon lord that guards Taiki (don't ask) doesn't seem to care...

Comic Books

 * Marvel Zombies had just about every Marvel Comics hero and villain turn into a zombie. Which was a space virus. We'll let you ponder the ramifications of Zombie Wolverine, Zombie Human Torch, and Zombie Hulk for yourself.
 * One of its titles crossed over with Army of Darkness Ash, it ends the comic with him escaping to a world where all the heroes are infected with lycanthropy.
 * So how would that affect say... Werewolf By Night, Beast and Tigra?
 * Disregarding, Two-Edge from Elf Quest would technically qualify, being half-elf, half-troll.
 * The titular Monster Plus is a one-man Monster Mash - he's a vampire werewolf Frankenstein's monster zombie mummy witch doctor. Originally, he was just a Frankenstein's Monster, but when you get into the kind of scrapes he does you pick up some unique skillsets and/or bite marks.
 * You could arguably include his enemies Hitlerfist and Supermane; Hitlerfist is the monster with Hitlers for hands, while Supermane is, well, Superman with a lion head.
 * Hulkling of the Young Avengers is Half-Kree and Half-Skrull.

Film

 * This is the driving force behind the plot of Underworld, Lucian wants to create a hybrid of the (biological) vampires and werewolves so he can finally win the war between both species in his (the werewolves) favor.
 * The sequel gets interesting in this regard. While Michael is a Werewolf-Vampire hybrid, Marcus becomes a Vampire-Werewolf hybrid (which means he gets wings, but is still nocturnal). Selene herself gets "hybridized" with Alexander's blood, making her not so much a Vampire-??? as pure Badass, as well as immune to sunlight.
 * The Predalien in Alien vs. Predator.
 * Technically, the warrior aliens we are so used to seeing in the Alien series would be a alien-human hybrid (The Newborn from Alien Resurrection also would count), and the creature from Alien 3 would be an alien-dog hybrid.
 * The Fly has Brundlefly, a six foot, 185 pound, acid spwewing man/fly hybrid.
 * Splice has Dren, a female creature that is part human, and any number of other animals, depending on how many 'plug and play' samples were inserted into her DNA at the time of her conception.
 * The talking-donkey/dragon hybrids from Shrek 2 qualify.
 * In The Monster Club, vampires, werewolves and ghouls can all mate together. These hybrids can then mate to produce further hybrids.

Literature

 * The City of Dreaming Books has harpyrs, a cross between a harpy and a vampire.
 * The Xanth series abounds with this, due to the magical love springs which created the world's Half Human Hybrids in the first place.
 * Although the White Witch from the Chronicles of Narnia claimed to have at least partial human ancestry, she was actually a hybrid of giant and jinn (genie).
 * In one of Christopher Stasheff's books, there's a dracogriff. He's half griffin, half dragon. Unfortunately, this is not quite as awesome as it sounds, since griffins and dragons are bitter enemies and he's hated by both.

Live Action TV

 * The cockatrice on Merlin was originally going to be one of these - . But somewhere along the way it just became some kind of dinosaur thing. The makers apparently saw sense and cast the creature pictured as the Questing Beast, of which it is a fairly mythologically-accurate portrayal.
 * Big Bad Burajira Tensou Sentai Goseiger uses these as his MOTWs. Examples include an Ortaurus (Orthus + Taurus) and a Uniberus (Unicorn + Cerberus).
 * Power Rangers Mystic Force has Phineas, who was a Troblin. Half troll, half goblin. Surprisingly nice guy, all things considered.
 * Eve, the Mother of all supernatural monsters from Supernatural, is finally released from Purgatory and spent some time combining various monster traits. Dean calls them Jefferson Starships, because they're horrible and hard to kill.
 * Besides the aforementioned Tuvix, Star Trek: The Next Generation featured at least one half-klingon half-romulan. Also, of most species featured in the Borg's species registry, there exists (or existed) a cyborg-zombie variant.
 * Except for the Kazon, the only species ever deemed unworthy of assimilation. In a universe with thousands of species, that's a major burn.

Tabletop RPG

 * Dungeons & Dragons loves this trope:
 * There are the basic Half-Elves and Half-Orcs. However, 3.5 edition brings us Bastards and Bloodlines, a book containing of over 30 different half-breeds, from the believable (Mergs [human/merfolk]) to the silly (Aellar [elf/giant eagle]). They also provide the option of creating your own, if you find the options unappealing.
 * The monster sourcebooks contain lots of hybrid monsters, like the Drider, which is like a centaur but with a Dark Elf top half and giant spider bottom half.
 * Also, there are rules for "templates" which graft part of one monster type onto any existing one. This can be used to make half-dragon wolves or half-angel kobolds. Templates can even be stacked, to make stuff like half-fiendish half-troll half-elemental pseudonatural vampiric werecrocodile goblins.
 * There was an essay exploring the possibility of a vampire werewolf,with one of the major points of contention being whether the undead nature of the vampiric template would override the lycanthrope's shapeshifting ability. Of course this requires the templates to be applied in the proper order, as lycanthropy is a disease and undead are immune to all disease, so a vampire cannot contract lycanthropy.
 * And then, of course, there is the dreaded owlbear.
 * Deadlands: Hell On Earth has vampire werewolves in the main handbook.
 * Magic: The Gathering has Zombie Centaurs. Does more need to be said?
 * Yes. Elf Merfolk.
 * And it can fly.
 * And let's not forget the Merfolk Goblin.
 * Gentlemen, behold! Vampire dragons!.
 * Zombie elf, barbarian elf, barbarian zombie, zombie merfolk...Man, the Invasion block was weird.
 * Scourge beat them all: ladies and gentlemen, a Zombie Centaur Aven
 * Malfegor isn't the best, but he sure as hell qualifies, what with being a half-demon, half-dragon... thing.
 * Warhammer Fantasy Battle has, among other things, Dragon Ogres) which, confusingly enough, are not related to normal Ogres at all), Skeleton Giants, Zombie Dragons, Chaos Dwarf Bull Centaurs and Chaos-corrupted versions of just about anything.
 * 40k has the Soul Grinder, essentially a Cyborg Daemon.
 * Shoot it 'til it dies.
 * This happened rarely in the Old World of Darkness—more common in the early editions, but then the writers decided that such a thing was too gimpy. There were some exceptions, such as the Abominations (werecreatures who'd been Embraced, forced to live out a hollow and torturous existence as the natural world rejected them utterly) and the infamous case of Samuel Haight, the Kinfolk turned werewolf with vampiric Disciplines and Awakened magic (who eventually got killed and turned into an ashtray).
 * Largely impossible in the New World of Darkness, where being one type of supernatural creature cuts off the chance of being another type. Werewolves are immune to the static effects of vampire blood because they're shapeshifters (though they can still be addicted to it...), mages are killed if you try to Embrace them, Prometheans don't retain any supernatural qualities of the body used to make them, and so forth.
 * Feng Shui has Abominations: all kind of demons and supernatural beasts or monsters turned into cyborgs by fascist Mad Scientists from THE FUTURE!. They even serialized the production of Jiangshi, the Chinese hopping vampires, calling the cyborg version "Bouncing Benjys." If you use your Arcanowave gear too much, you run the risk of becoming one of these things yourself!

Web Comics
"strip name: Uryuom Sitcoms are Insane. William: The current known record for number of parents to a single child is twelve, and only nine of those were Uryuoms."
 * In 8-bit Theatre, Black Mage expresses dislike for this sort of monster.
 * In The Inexplicable Adventures of Bob, Molly the Monster is a "genetic chimera thingie" combining the DNA of many different creatures, including human.
 * Last Res0rt makes this the default form of the Celeste; literally, they're made up of all sorts of different species, to the point that there's no such thing as a "purebred" Celeste, and they seem capable of mating with any (sentient) species.
 * George the Dragon has the offspring between the titular George and the Loch Ness monster. Plus a lobster, for no explainable reason.
 * El Goonish Shive has the Uryuom "eggs" that mix more or less any critters and produce viable offspring Shapeshifting between parent species' forms. Uryuom is not necessarily a part of this. One of main characters is Human/squirrel/Uryuom/another-alien-creature combining forms at will.

Videogames

 * Monster Rancher, a popular take on the monster-raising genre, has this as the main monster differentiation. In any one game there'll be 20-25 base breeds. Main/Sub is the most common shorthand i.e. Golem/Golem for a Main Golem/Sub-breed Golem "purebreed." If you mix it with a Hare/Hare you might get a Hare/Golem or Golem/Hare. As such there's never less than around 250 monsters in any main game
 * The  Hybrids are part of a major story arc in StarCraft. It started in the secret mission of Brood War with Zeratul , and by Star Craft 2 it has been confirmed that not only are they.
 * World of Warcraft has Cyborg Demons, Zombie Giants, Skeleton Dragons, Vampire Elves, 10 feet tall Zombie Vikings and many more.
 * Druids can shapeshift into a Moonkin, a combination of the wisest (owl) and strongest (bear) animals.
 * Doom has Mancubi, which is a demon with guns for hands and robot legs; Arachnotrons, which are giant brains with robotic spider bodies; and Cyberdemons, which have a rocket launcher for an arm, one robotic leg each, and wires for a midriff.
 * Those aren't really hybrids, they're more like a demonic Hollywood Cyborg. Doom 3 did include a few, though. The Cherubs (half-infant-half-insect, and the Vagary (half-lady-half-spider).
 * Whilst the Castlevania series uses a lot of mythological monsters, it also creates its own, like a monster which is half zombie skull half butterfly. And half naked chick and half dinosaur.
 * Nero Chaos in Tsukihime. Technically, he started out as a human but now shares his identity with 665 other creatures, so the actual humanity he has left is essentially negligible. Capable of some degree of shape shifting between forms and also something of an ultimate killing form that isn't described very well. His body includes dogs, tigers, at least one doorshark, bears, dragons, unicorns, a blue crow, one vampire, some jaguars, giant crab monsters, stags, wolves and who knows what else.
 * Add a deer to the bunch. Or that was for his cat counter-part, Neco-Arc Chaos.
 * Touhou has Keine, a were-hakutaku. Umm... a hakutaku is something like a giant lion with extra eyes and horns. In practice, this really means that on nights of the full moon, Keine grows horns, a tail, changes in power and hair color, and gains new superpowers. Because people don't really know what a hakutaku, much less a were-hakutaku, is, fan jokes tend towards portraying her as a cow.
 * Goosebumps: Escape from Horrorland has terrifying crab-slug hybrids lurking within the labyrinths found inside the park's trash cans. It's never explained what exactly they are or how they came to be; even the name of their species is only found in the manual.
 * Belial, the protagonist of Painkiller Overdose, was fathered by an angel and born from a demon, making him a half-angel half-demon. Which he will constantly remind you of just in case you happen to forget.
 * A recurring monster in the Suikoden series is the Zombie Unicorn.
 * Final Fantasy VI had the Skull Dragon, a skeleton dragon who is an optional boss that you have to defeat to get the Crusader magicite and the powerful Meltdown spell.
 * Final Fantasy XII and Vagrant Story also had skeletal dragons, and the latter threw undead variants of ogres and minotaurs into the mix as well.
 * Final Fantasy XIII gives us, at the very least, cyborg wolves and Behemoths (with Tron lines, no less!); however, as well as "recognisable" hybrids, the game also treats us to a whole menagerie of weird and wonderful mash-up monsters that defy description. In particular, this Troper isn't entirely sure what certain Annihilators like  are supposed to be, but it can't be pleasant.
 * In Strange Journey, the crew of the Red Sprite find a demon in Mitra's palace being tortured by the other demons. An examination reveals it's made with equal parts demon and human DNA. Jiminez, showing a softer side for the first time in the game, saves its life by adding it to his Demonica and names it "Bugaboo" (the only word it can say).
 * RuneScape has Newtroosts, Unicows, Spidines, Swordchicks, Jubsters and Frogeels. You make them yourself, player.
 * Night Stalkers in Fallout: New Vegas are a cross between a coyote and a rattlesnake. They look about as strange as you'd expect.
 * Adventure Quest has Fur Against Fang as a major theme in the Darkovia region. There are also a few Werepyres running around. And then someone had the bright idea to take a Werepyre and add some Dragon to the mix, creating Nightbane the Dracopyre. His bite also infuses ordinary Vampires and Werewolves with some draconic traits.
 * Black Kyurem and White Kyurem in Pokémon Black 2 and White 2.
 * The Chimera of the Tomb from Dark Souls is a white lion with ram horns, four bird wings and a scorpion tail.

Web Original

 * Equestrian Legends has the Kirin. Half pony, half dragon. On a larger note, it's implied that dragons really sleep around and use life-altering magic to make sure the babies survive.

Western Animation

 * "No One Comes to Lupusville", a Real Ghostbusters episode with a Fur Against Fang theme, asks the question, "what happens when werewolves and vampires bite each other?" They wisely don't stick around to find out.
 * In The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy, nerdy Irwin turns out to be half-mummy and one-quarter vampire.
 * He also gets
 * In one episode of Captain Planet and the Planeteers ("Planeteers Under Glass"), there is one futuristic flying cyborg-demon among the Mix-and-Match Critters that only appears in the virtual planet... for a short while anyway, all while the Apocalypse Class is getting spiked up to Class 6!
 * In one episode of Captain Planet and the Planeteers ("Planeteers Under Glass"), there is one futuristic flying cyborg-demon among the Mix-and-Match Critters that only appears in the virtual planet... for a short while anyway, all while the Apocalypse Class is getting spiked up to Class 6!

Art

 * Fredrik K. T. Andersson (creator of the webcomic Pawn) loves this trope, though most of his pictures are NSFW. Said dragontaur even shows up with a potential daughter in law in one of those pictures: Click here (NSFW)