Dance Battler

""They're breakdance-fighting!""

- Mugatu

A Dance Battler is someone who looks like they're dancing when they get into a fight. This takes quite a bit of effort to make it look plausible, but it's not unheard of. Being a good dancer requires a degree of agility, flexibility, and coordination, three things that can go a long way in a fight as well. Plus, it looks cool.

There are several ways to go about this:
 * 1) The character is a practitioner of the martial art known as Capoeira, which combines elaborate defensive movements with well-timed attacks. This is the route usually gone down by a Fighting Game character, e.g. Elena, Bob Wilson, Eddie and Christie, etc.
 * 2) The character is a superbly-skilled dancer and just happens to know how to fight as well, fusing the two, e.g. Duck King, Dee Jay, etc.
 * 3) The character either practices Drunken Boxing or is just really drunk.
 * 4) The character is just plain nuts.

Either way, it can be annoying to fight someone like this, since it's hard to tell what's an attack and what's just a fancy step.

A telltale sign you're fighting someone like this in a Fighting Game is that they're always sweeping one foot and then the other behind themselves.

Not to be confused with "Dance Battle", a phrase sometimes used to refer to Rhythm Games. Compare She Fu, which can be combined with the Dance Battler style.

A reasonable skill to teach someone in the Wax On, Wax Off method. Gives a whole new meaning to "Dance Sensation". Compare/Contrast Musical Assassin and Magic Dance. Often goes hand-in-hand with Confusion Fu. If the Dance Battler can Summon Backup Dancers, be very worried. Let's Dance usually is not meant literally, but can be.

Anime and Manga

 * Seigfried in Kenichi: The Mightiest Disciple essentially uses a more defensively orientated version of this. He encourages his opponents to get in close and attack him, then secretly uses dancing-like skills to dodge their blow and fling himself around to fake being hit. This lets him wear down and psyche out his opponents, who come to believe he's incapable of feeling pain.
 * Mugen from Samurai Champloo is untrained in any sort of fighting style, but possess enough raw power and ax-craziness to do whatever feels right to him and still come out on top. His geta sandals have metal plates on the soles, so he can block swords with them. The producers call it the "Champloo Kendo" fighting style.
 * Spike from Cowboy Bebop is sometimes seen doing this.
 * Jeet Kune Do was developed by Bruce Lee (also an accomplished dancer) as a deliberately showy style, so it fits the trope. Impressive on film, at least as difficult to achieve in animation.
 * Ranga, the Idol Singer Ringo's Angel in Kidou Tenshi Angelic Layer, was built to resemble a belly dancer and incorporates dancing into her attacks.
 * L of Death Note, inspired by the more talented Naomi Misora. Both are Capoeira practitioners.
 * The manga Double Arts features the main leads Kiri and Elraine developing a dance-based fighting style, from which the name of the series is taken.
 * A couple characters in One Piece fight this way, a prominent example being Sanji, who fights entirely with his legs and whose style is based partly on Savate (martial arts developed by French sailors). And then there's Mr. 2 Bon Kurei, who practices Okama Kenpo (basically, weaponized ballet), and
 * Fakir, Kraehe and Mytho in Princess Tutu, all ballet dancers, fight much in the same manner as they dance.
 * Bleach
 * Kaien Shiba's fighting style is said to resemble traditional dance.
 * The anime hints that Nemu Kurotsuchi's fighting style might be similar to Capoeira.
 * In Fullmetal Alchemist, Envy is The Brute, a graceless fighter reliant on force alone. In the 2003 anime version, however, where he's The Dragon, he becomes a graceful user of capoeira, who literally dances circles around Ed during their final battle.
 * Fresh Pretty Cure, by the nature of the season's motif.
 * Action Girl Lenalee Lee from D.Gray-man.
 * Mahoujin Guru Guru's Old Kita Kita Man could be this... well... he at least dances when battles take place, anyway. Though he later learns all that dancing has made him strong enough to fight monsters.
 * Rin Ogata from the Rideback series, who uses her ballet training to make the Fuego mech dodge and evade swarms of combat automatons.
 * Bob Makihara in Tenjho Tenge both practices Capoeira and is able to use the mystical power of rhythm to predict attacks. The series quasi-Big Bad tries to justify the trope, pointing out that much of modern military terminology grew out of dancing, that almost every culture with martial arts had them grow out of an earlier dancing tradition, and that dancers typically make excellent martial artists.
 * In Samurai Deeper Kyo, Shinrei possess his own fighting style, his "dancing sword technique".
 * In Gun X Sword, Fasalina pilots her Dahlia of Wednesday by... erm... pole dancing
 * In Rurouni Kenshin, Aoshi's fighting style involves an elaborate form of kenbu, which is at its core essentially sword dancing. It doesn't look at all like dancing, though.
 * Touma's second Cherubim (the purple one) from Aquarion fights in a way meant to be reminiscent of this.
 * The lanky white Cherubim (which Touma's is a Palette Swap of, ironically enough) fight this way in general. Impressive enough visual-wise to get past their Conspicuous CGI status.
 * Gunnm (aka Battle Angel Alita) has a character who uses Capoeira.
 * Neon Genesis Evangelion: Shinji and Asuka develop a perfectly sychronised dance/figth number in order to defeat twin Angels, which they perform in their Humongous Mechas.
 * Similarly, when it's Anko's turn to fight in the Bokurano manga, she uses her dancing experience to make Zearth move gracefully and swiftly so she can catch up with the enemy.
 * Pokémon has had Ash develop the "Counter Shield" technique, which basically amounts to any Pokemon called to do it breakdancing while using a special attack, which creates a spinning vortex of the said attack, which keeps an opponent's attack from making contact.
 * Also Ash's Totodile uses this style to dodge attacks.
 * Let's not forget Rudy from the Orange Islands who makes his Pokémon dance as an exercise. He even has a Starmi who is "proficient in modern dancing" to help it dodge attacks and even has enough spinning power to generate an Electric attack despite being a Water type.
 * There was also an episode about a girl whose Bellosom fought and dodged this way.
 * Takuto from Star Driver incorporates pirouettes and corkscrew flips in his fighting style. You know, the one he uses while piloting a giant robot.
 * T.K. from Angel Beats! performs this break-dance style ...while sliding down the ledges of stairs!
 * In Naruto, the anime and games portray Killer Bee's fighting style laced to the core with hip-hop arm gestures that causes it to resemble capoiera crossed with muay Thai, while armed with 8 swords and Tailed Beast power. This goes hand-in-hand with him being in a perpetual "rap" state of mind. The fact that he raps while fighting causes his opponents to think he's completely bonkers. They may be right.
 * Makie from Blade of the Immortal is the deadliest and most graceful fighter, fast enough to end each slaughter without a single drop of blood on her clothes.
 * Fabiola from Black Lagoon does Capoeira moves to dodge bullets while dual-wielding shotguns.
 * The Para Para Brothers from Dragon Ball GT combine this with Magic Music. Their dancing and music can hypnotize their opponents into dancing as well, leaving them unable to defend themselves from attack.
 * Possibly Linna from the original Bubblegum Crisis: she was trained as a dancer and some of her combat moves in early episodes look fluid enough to be based on dance steps, but she doesn't appear to be practicing a dance-inspired combat style.

Comic Books

 * DC:
 * Vibe, a member of the Justice League of America during its Detroit phase, used breakdancing moves as part of his fighting style.
 * Sticking with The DCU, Bolshoi of The People's Heroes used ballet as the basis for his martial art.
 * He later adds to this with actual prowess in the martial arts. He still gets bits chopped off him. Thank goodness for modern reattachment surgery.
 * Heck, even Intrepid Reporter Lois Lane once used dance battling while impersonating a ballet dancer.
 * Marco from The Question Quarterly.
 * Capoeira is among the many fighting styles Batman has mastered.
 * Marvel:
 * Dagger (of Cloak and Dagger fame) has a fighting style that heavily incorporates her ballerina training.
 * Deadpool has managed to beat the Taskmaster by virtue of being type four.
 * When The Runaways have an adventure in 1910's New York, one of the heroes they meet is Lillie "The Spieler" McGurty, who can fly to the rhythm of music. One of her first scenes has her fighting a gang of strikebreakers and she literally dances on their heads.
 * Other publishers:
 * An Archie comic had him and Reggie driven to laughing fits over Veronica's "sissy" male ballet dancer friend - until he singlehandedly subdues a gang of tough guys with his moves.
 * It was in Dennis the Menace too. Dennis went to ballet school and learned a lot of keen new fightin' tricks he never knew before.
 * Xiong Mao, from the French comic Freaks' Squeele, uses a martial arts style called Flamendo. It is described as "a martial arts style with all the trappings of dance".

Fan Works

 * There is a Buffy the Vampire Slayer fanfic (set post-Season 7) out there called Two Slayers-- One Heart (Version 3.0) that features a dancer-turned-slayer who later adds capoeira to her repertoire.

Film

 * River Tam in Serenity. Her Waif Fu fighting style was created with the aim of appearing dance-like, as both the character and her actress Summer Glau are dancers.
 * Tony Jaa fights a Funny Afro JKD stylist at one point in Ong-Bak.
 * And he fights a capoeirista (with no afro) played by Lateef Crowder in this clip from his other film Tom Yum Goong, known as The Protector or The Warrior King in English.
 * The 1993 movie Only the Strong was perhaps the introduction of many action fans to the art of Capoeira and starred Marc Dacascos as a Green Beret who has to clean up his hometown using the aforementioned art, eventually fighting a Big Bad who uses the same style.
 * At the climax of the movie Zoolander, Hansel (He's so hot right now!) and an enemy goon partake in "Breakdance Fighting", which for the most part just involved doing little dance moves while punching or kicking people in between.
 * Michael Jackson dance fights his way through several gangsters in the "Smooth Criminal" sequence of Moonwalker, and again in the video to "You rock my world".
 * Ed the Ted and his gang in Absolute Beginners. Arguably justified in that it's a musical.
 * Never Back Down is a fight movie. In one scene, we have a dreadlocked Dance Battle guy and his uninteresting looking opponent. After half a minute of showboating, however, he manages to frontflip himself right into a thunderous single punch, which lays him right out.
 * The 'Ninjitsu" practiced by the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles in the films borrows from several martial arts (including Capoeira), but also heavily from from modern breakdancing (Which allows them to make full use of their heavy shells).
 * The Thai film Raging Phoenix features several scenes with both b-boy and traditional Thai dance-based fighting styles.
 * West Side Story. 'Nuff said.
 * In the AIP "Beach Party" movies, dancer Candy Johnson sends adversaries hurtling with a toss of her hip.
 * Mei from House of Flying Daggers. Her actress Zhang Ziyi is not trained in martial arts but is a trained dancer so the filmmakers incorporated dance into all of Mei's action scenes.

Literature

 * In Mary Renault's 1972 novel The Persian Boy, the title character, Bagoas, kills an assailant with a particular move we've seen before - in his dance rehearsals.
 * Steven Barnes's Aubrey Knight books Streetlethal, Gorgon Child, and Firedance feature martial artists whose practice improves by learning dance, martial arts disguised as dance and a dance tradition which includes martial arts unbeknown to its practitioners.
 * Most of the viewpoint characters in Steve Perry's Matador science fiction series practice a dance/martial art known as sumito.
 * The 'Stick and Bucket' dance from the Discworld series, as performed by the Lancre morris men: we never get to see what it does, but any dance that has a step called 'KILL!' and can be reliably used to fend off The Fair Folk must have something going for it (not to mention the Noodle Incident attached).
 * Thank Offler the Fair Folk become quite entranced with music. Still, even getting close to one is just begging to lose face, literally.
 * It was mentioned in passing Moist von Lipwig's main squeeze, Adora Belle Dearheart, was trained as a ballerina when she was younger and can therefore kick like a mule, presumably quite high. Combined with stiletto heels pointy enough to pierce skin without much effort...
 * P.C. Hodgell's Chronicles of the Kencyrath books feature a matched set of dance and combat moves that are very closely related, to the point that one training game is to switch back and forth between dancing and sparring.
 * In William Gibson's short story "Johnny Mnemonic," the Lo Teks have a fighting floor that is wired to shift and produce musical beats based on your footing, with the intention of turning brawls into a sort of dance. Molly Millions fights a Yakuza assassin on the floor, and its strange characteristics give her an advantage.
 * In Steven Erikson's Malazan Book of the Fallen series, there exists a cult that worships the gods of shadow. As part of their worship, they learn something known as "The Shadow Dance". Lostara Yil, a former member of the Cult of Shadow, thinks that the Shadow Dance is merely just some ritual until she discovers that it's very effective at killing dozens of people without much problem.
 * Apsalar was here. So were lots of other people, until she arrived.
 * In the Liaden Universe, the menfri'at, taught in some places as strictly dance, is both a dance and a self-defense discipline for pilots.
 * The Wheel of Time: Whenever someone witnesses a Blademaster in action his or her movements will be described as dance-like; if the opponent is also a Blademaster, the battle will be described as looking more like a dance than a fight.
 * In Regina Doman's novel Alex O'Donnell and the Forty Cyberthieves, the heroine performs a traditional Vietnamese fan dance, using fans with hidden blades.
 * In A Song of Ice and Fire, Arya Stark is trained by Syrio Forel to be a "water dancer", a Fragile Speedster kind of warrior.
 * In Seanan McGuire's Discount Armageddon, main character Verity Price is a ballroom dancer/martial artist, and she lets the dancing bleed into the martial arts because of how much the two have in common.

Live-Action TV

 * Zack Taylor, the first Black Ranger in Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, catered to this with an original martial art called Hip Hop Kido.
 * From Power Rangers RPM: Eka Darville, who plays Scott Truman (Ranger Operator Series Red), is a pretty good break dancer and incorporated a lot of Capoeira-like moves in his fights. It's averted in the case of Olivia Tennet, also an accomplished jazz, tap, and hip hop dancer, as her character (Dr. K) does not perform many physical stunts (except in "Doctor K" and "If Venjix Won").
 * When Catherine Sutherland ("Kat") started doing more of her own stunt work, she started incorporating some of her ballet training into it.
 * In the Super Sentai series Battle Fever J, it's taken to the extreme; all the members use different dance styles in their attacks - Battle France uses tapdancing, Battle Cossack does Cossack jig dancing, Battle Kenya does a strange breakdancing-tribal dance fusion, Battle Japan uses Chinese kung fu katas, and Miss America uses disco moves to fight. However, this is partially justified in that the FBI agent who employed them regularly trains them in Martial Arts.
 * Faith, when she beats up a whole discotheque in one memorable Angel episode that has unfortunately been yanked off of Youtube.
 * And Buffy in the Musical Episode "Once More With Feeling". Also worth noting is Dawn's attempt to escape from the Puppet Minions, which is presented in the form of a ballet dance.
 * Purdey, heroine of the short lived The New Avengers series in the seventies and played by Joanna Lumley, was a former ballerina who practiced a very balletic fighting form, complete with pirouettes and high kicks.
 * A particularly cheesy example is the battles in Pretty Guardian Sailor Moon, especially the "karaoke battle" to "C'est la Vie".
 * Only because the Senshi needed some way to synchronize their moves.
 * Ryutaros (Gun Form) in Kamen Rider Den-O combines this with A-Team Firing and Gangsta Style, which together are less than the sum of their parts. His aim is, to put it lightly, horrible.
 * In the 1966 Batman series, Batgirl was played by Yvonne Craig, a trained ballerina. In contrast to Batman and Robin's usual rough-and-tumble fighting, Batgirl's fighting style was elegant, full of high kicks and spins, and even ballet-style lifts by Robin or Batman to set up attacks.
 * On Community, Jeff locks horns with an overbearing tough guy and they schedule a fight; Britta sees it all as classic repressed-gay behavior. When the tough guy's gang breaks into music-video style fighting choreography, she's even more convinced.
 * Kamen Rider Fourze's JK is shown to be a good break dancer in the opening, and finally busts out his moves when attempting to dodge an attack from Pegasus Zodiarts and defeating three Zodiarts when he's forced to use the Power Dizer.
 * Stargate SG-1 has the Jaffa martial art Mastaba (seen most prominently in "The Warrior"), which is actually capoeira with the serial numbers filed off. The producers actually hired some professional capoeira instructors for the episode.

Professional Wrestling

 * Stacy Keibler was trained in jazz, tap and ballet dancing from a very young age, and on those occasions when she competed as a wrestler she tended to use a lot of cartwheels and pirouetting spin kicks.

Tabletop Games

 * GURPS has an Option that allows you to incorporate uses of dancing skills in melee combat.
 * Dungeons & Dragons:
 * The Dervish Dancer Prestige Class has a vaguely Arabian Nights-flavor to it, including dual wielding scimitars (and much more easily than a non-Dervish Dancer would, too; pictured above).
 * The Battledancer Base Class from Dragon Compendium is, judging from the fluff, directly based off Capoeria. Gameplay-wise it handles like a Monk with some of the special abilities replaced by Bardic Music.
 * This is actually an update from the equally obscure class from AD&D (notable for the eventual progression to nine attacks out of every two rounds, or double that if hasted, in an age where most others topped out at two attacks per round). The less adventurer-friendly abilities, mostly the ones that required a group of other dancers to perform, were justifiably removed in the transition.
 * The second edition Sourcebook The Complete Book of Elves introduced Bladesingers, elvish sword dancers who do quite well in combat.
 * The classes from the Tome of Battle can learn from a school allowing them to use a number of special abilities based on their concentration checks. How does this relate to Battledancing? Well, there's a 1st level spell called Undersong that changes concentration checks into perform checks. Used together, they allow characters to perform saves or deal damage based on your perform check. In short, you can be dodging attacks with dance and singing people to death.
 * The feat Snowflake Wardance from "Frostburn" and the item Slippers of Battle Dancing from "Magic Item Compendium" can both make Bards more effective if they dance in combat.
 * Eilistraee is the Drow goddess of swordplay and dance (among other things). Some rituals of worship and divine magic of her priesthood call to both of these aspects.
 * Dwarven goddess of battle luck and joy of the fray Haela Brightaxe appears constantly dancing and juggling a two-handed sword. Frequently clad only in her long silver hair and beard, at that.
 * MERPS (Middle Earth Role-Playing System) also had Dancer and Dervish classes.
 * Wood Elf Wardancers in Warhammer Fantasy Battle. They have a variety of different dances that give them a variety of combat bonuses, eschew armour in favour of magic protective tattoos, and at one point had a special ability that let them move over hostile units by dancing on the points of the enemies' weapons.
 * Harlequins in Warhammer40000 also follow this. Their style of combat describes how they move about the battlefield with dancing gestures, tearing opponents to shreds in the process. The Howling Banshees and Dark Eldar Wytches also have some of this.
 * At the other end of that spectrum, we have the Slaanesh demon Masque, who is almost eternally performing a dance, and claims its victims by literally making them dance themselves to death by exhaustion. Solitaire, legendary figure of the aforementioned Harlequins, is the only mortal who has ever out-danced Masque.
 * Slaaneshi Daemonettes also fight this way, dancing elegantly while decapitating and disembowelling.

Video Games

 * Fred Ascare and Paula Abghoul (not the only instance of the Incredibly Lame Pun trope by any means in the Castlevania franchise) from Super Castlevania IV. Also, the Ghost Dancers from Castlevania: Symphony of the Night.
 * Momoko in The King of Fighters XI uses Capoeria... or so she says, but it's hard to tell given that she's so tiny. Robert Garcia is also constantly dancing in his regular stance, although he doesn't use capoeira like the others. He just really likes dancing in place like that.
 * Chizuru Kagura's fighting style seems to resembles the traditional Shinto dances performed during festivals. Makes sense since Chizuru herself is The Ojou and a Shinto priestess.
 * Soiree Meira in King of Fighters: Maximum Impact.
 * Eddy Gordo and his girlfriend student Christie in Tekken both use Capoeira.
 * Christie's grandfather uses the same technique, having taught them both, but is not playable in any of the games thus far.
 * Tiger from Tekken Tag Tournament also uses Capoeira.
 * And as if Eddy wasn't Capoerista enough, who's going to play him in the Live Action Adaptation? Real-life capoerista Lateef Crowder.
 * Elena in Street Fighter 3 uses Capoeira, and before her Dee Jay from later versions of Street Fighter 2 who just likes to dance, and incorporates rhythm into his kickboxing fighting style.
 * And Pullum Purna in the Street Fighter EX series.
 * Interestingly enough, the character Blanka from the Street Fighter 2+ lineup is noted in the manual as utilizing Capoeira, the typical "dance fighting style", although this is only evident in his flips, as he fights more like a beast.
 * In Pokémon Colosseum, Miror B. and his team of Ludicolo dance to a salsa beat while they wait for you to select your next move.
 * Additionaly, his music in XD is disco.
 * Hitmontop's attacks are all based off Capoiera, as well as Hitmontop's Japanese name, Kapoerer.
 * Maractus from Pokémon Black and White is apparently this, judging by its name and Pokédex entry. Lilligant also has shades of this, only learning moves with the word "Dance" in them aside from the moves it starts with. Meloetta's Pirouette Forme appears to be a dance battler, judging by its type, Normal/Fighting.
 * This shows up in the Soul Series from time to time.
 * Talim's discipline is categorized as "Wind Dance" in-game. She is a priestess of a village that controlled wind through ritual dance that involved the use of tonfa-like elbow blades.
 * Tira's fighting discipline is call the "Dance of Death," but this is most likely a metaphor.
 * Finally, there is the Dancer class in Soul Calibur III, which can use tambourine, steel fans, bladed shoes called Grieve Edge, or Soul of _ fighting style, one of which being Voldo.
 * Voldo frequently fights like this. Only it's not so much awe-inspiring as it is utterly creepy-looking.
 * In the Shin Megami Tensei games, there are elemental dances - they hit anywhere from 2 to 5 times, but they hit random enemies... very annoying if a foe can nullify, drain or reflect the damage.
 * Mog in Final Fantasy VI
 * And the Dancer job in Final Fantasy V and Final Fantasy XI.
 * Final Fantasy VII: Crisis Core has the second encounter with Genesis.
 * Rikku's Berserker Dress Sphere in Final Fantasy X-2 does Capoeira movements in her idle animation. There's also the Songstress Dress Sphere which has several dances as offensive attacks though they usually just cause status changes.
 * There's another Dancer job in Final Fantasy Tactics.
 * And Penelo in general.
 * The Calca and Brina dolls in Final Fantasy IV (and its sequel, where they are playable characters).
 * If Kefka's line of "Dance, Dance!" and his actions when casting "Zap-Trap Thundaga" in the Dissidia subseries of Final Fantasy is anything to go by, apparently he utilizes this trope, presumably under Type D (ie, because he's completely insane).
 * Many Fire Emblem games also have a Dancer class, although only the first two series allow them to fight without the use of glitches.
 * Curtis and Isabella from Tales of Legendia are a type 2 example.
 * Vamp of Metal Gear Solid 2 does what is best described as a knife-throwing Flamenco.
 * He's modeled after Joaquin Cortez. It's not all surprising.
 * Raiden does a bit of this too in Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots.
 * Wood elf Blade Dancers/War Dancers in Heroes of Might and Magic V
 * Sonic the Hedgehog has some breakdancing-inspired fight moves in Sonic Battle. As a possible Continuity Nod, one of his taunts in Super Smash Bros Brawl is a breakdance move.
 * Another Continuity Nod happens even later down the line, with Sonic Generations revealing that Classic Sonic used to spin on his hand, and Modern Sonic being able to do this.
 * In Super Smash Bros. Melee and Brawl, Sheik's down smash attack is a breakdance move.
 * In Brawl, Wario as well does a breakdance as a down smash.
 * A class in .Hack//G.U. that uses fans and status ailment magic is called the Macabre Dancer class.
 * BloodRayne mostly just cuts stuff with big blades, but some of her moves could best be described as "Lapdance Battling".
 * Duck King from Fatal Fury is an example of the "really good dancer" type, while Richard Meyer and Bob Wilson from the same game use Capoeira. In fact, Richard Meyer is the first Fighting Game character to use Capoeira.
 * Possibly the only shooter example, and a gratuitous one at that: Vanessa Schneider from P.N.03
 * The Fairlions from Super Robot Wars Original Generation 2 used combat moves based on idol dancing. It is, in fact, one incredibly cute beatdown.
 * Suzuka in Endless Frontier is a bit of a variation. While she occasionally can hit enemies with her fan dancing, it's real purpose is to control her Puppet Robot... one with a lot of machine guns.
 * Rouge in Power Stone.
 * Echidna of The Bouncer practices Capoeira.
 * Majora's Mask has Odolwa, the Masked Jungle Warrior, as the boss of its first temple. He's a Type D, perhaps with some Type A thrown in for good measure. Due to his erratic movements, which sometimes stem to leaping to a random point in the room and simply dancing without making any strike, (and the fact he summons dungeon-unique beetle-creatures, which Link has to kill, and swarms of flesh-eating locusts, which he can't do anything about), he's often That One Boss for beginners. He's also an example of Nightmare Fuel for some, particularly due to the fact that he's constantly chanting almost incoherent words throughout the fight. Apparently, translated to English, what he's shouting is "we shall fight!", over and over and over.
 * And of course, there's Majora itself, specifically, Majora's Incarnation. Definitely type D, including it's moonwalking.
 * Ocarina of Timehas Flare Dancers, who "dance as they attack".
 * And the Gerudo/Pirate elite guards from both.
 * A Type-B example: Dancing is just Shantae's way of saying "abracadabra".
 * Disco Kid of Punch-Out!! Wii
 * Touka in Utawarerumono. However, it's noted that her swordsmanship is actually needlessly inefficient, though still excellent, and not as good as it really could be if she stopped trying to make it beautiful.
 * Anji Mito from Guilty Gear uses a sort of 'fan-dance' style using the magical Zessen (Stopping) Fans. Bridget also dances to fight, in tandem with his yo-yo tricks, even dancing in place in his idle sprite. Hence, the two referring to each other as 'performers' when meeting.
 * Boss Example: Courtney Gears of Ratchet and Clank, who also called out her Back-up Dancers for her battle.
 * While Kingdom Hearts's Demyx doesn't dance so much as play his sitar when you fight him, his servant Nobodies, the Dancers, will force Sora into dancing with them to drain his HP.
 * Kingdom of Loathing has the Disco Bandit class, where you use disco moves and disco combos. There's even a recent addition: Rave combos, which combine a breakdancing spin, the Robot, and the Running Man to knock items loose from your enemies (among other effects).
 * In Marvel Nemesis, Fault Zone moves with graceful ballet movements as she attacks an enemy.
 * Nathan Copeland, one of the bosses in No More Heroes 2, although his main weapon is a rocket launching boombox that turns into robotic arms, he is perpetually dancing around the battlefield.
 * This is a perfectly viable option in Toribash, due to its infinitely... flexible nature.
 * Bayonetta is fond of this, though mostly in cutscenes. Most of her fights with Jeanne are dance battles with guns, on exploding rocks while time is stopped.
 * Also, Bayonetta has a literal dance battle (a stripper pose off at that!) with one of the Joy enemies that has taken her form in the middle of a level.
 * Three battle techniques, purchasable at Rodin's shop, are dance moves and Climax attacks, which summon large demons, seem to require both an incantation and a short dance.
 * Some powerups include dance battling in Kirby Super Star, Yo-Yo's dash attack being a good example.
 * Time for a dance battle! Let's Dance!
 * The fighting style of Trident in Eternal Champions is Capoeira.
 * In the Knights of the Old Republic games, Echani martial arts, espcially the ritual forms, are allegedly very close to a dance style. The Mandalorians mock this, calling them "fey dancers with weapons not fit for Mandalorian children." Still, Echani blades are some of the best ones in-game, and the Handmaiden in the second game isn't to be taken lightly.
 * In the downloadable Joker missions of Batman: Arkham Asylum, the Joker seems to use mostly a combination of Capoeira, Drunken Boxing, and lethal novelty toys.
 * Blades in Baldur's Gate 2, and by extension Haer'Dalis, are supposed to fight using theatrical/dance-like fight moves. Not that you can tell with the graphics.
 * Jean from Lunar: Eternal Blue is a literal example. She is a dancing gipsy who has a bloody past as an assainsin.
 * It takes a little practice but in City of Heroes attacking repeatedly and quickly means a prolonged battle can often look more like a dance than a fight.
 * Lucia from Shadow Hearts is a fortune teller who dances while slashing enemies with a fan. She also dances when she casts magic spells.
 * Rufus from Insaniquarium is this, according to his backstory.

Web Comics

 * In Erfworld, it's a game mechanic practiced by Jillian, the citizens of Transylvito (with a distinctly West Side Story style), the Knights In Stanley's Service (with their distinctive war paint), Wanda and her Uncroaked minions ("Thriller", naturally) and Ansom and his troops ("Staying Alive" - also naturally, as he was fighting Wanda).
 * Stanley says that rocking out is better than dance fighting. "It's Titanic. It's the highest music there is."
 * Played with in Adventurers!!
 * One of the "late-game" characters in RPG World basically has character class "breakdancer". And it's pretty lethal too.
 * Inverted in Nahast: Lands of Strife, where a couple of dances evolved from fighting styles.
 * Sauerkraut and Exlax The Mighty from Trigger Star. Three Words: Barbarian Death Tango.

Web Original

 * The Legion of Extraordinary Dancers is Exactly What It Says on the Tin: A by-the-book Hero's epic that combines a Musical World Hypothesis with Interpretive Dance as combat. As odd as the premise sounds, it comes together surprisingly well. It helps that the dancing is amazing.
 * Gaara Of The Funk in Naruto the Abridged Series.
 * The basis of the Disco Bandit class in Kingdom of Loathing.
 * Forca, a South American student at Whateley Academy in the Whateley Universe, does capoeira and also has force blasts from his hands.
 * In Metro City Chronicles, Hybrid eventually ends up converting her dance skills as a ballerina into a fighting technique.

Western Animation

 * Inverted in a season 3 episode of Avatar: The Last Airbender where Aang and Katara incorporate fighting moves into a dance that ends with them both panting and sweating heavily.
 * Played straight half a season later when, which Zuko is less than enthusiastic about. We later see him using a kick a lot like the one Mugen is doing in the above pic. Except with a lot of fire.
 * It should be noted that Zuko actually used Dance Battling quite often early on in the series. This had the downside of wearing him out within moments as seen in his fight with Zhao, and he eventually stuck to using the more basic forms.
 * Korra has used Dance Battling in the few times we've seen her fight so far - she's extremely graceful and uses lots of leaps and spins, in addition to great sweeping gestures with her arms. This, and all of the Dance Battling from the previous show, is Justified by the nature of bending - the movement of the elements flows with the movement of the bender's body, which naturally sometimes calls for something more complicated and expansive than plain old kicks and punches.
 * Used in Jimmy Neutron when Sheen the Cloudcuckoolander is forced to use dance moves instead of kung-fu.
 * In The Three Caballeros, at the climax of Donald Duck and Joe's visit to Bahia, two men get into what is probably supposed to be a Capoeira fight (which would make sense since the martial art has origins in Brazil). Their shadows even temporarily take the form of two roosters fighting, which is said to be what Capoeira takes it's name from. However, they seem to be doing more dancing than they are fighting.
 * Parodied in The Simpsons; Moe is teaching a "Dance Fighting" class at the Learning Annex, and demonstrates a move that starts out like he's gonna dance, then he pulls out a gun and fires off two shots.
 * The Combo Ninos are capoeiristas in training.
 * Just look out for someone doing a Cossack dance in an old cartoon - there will be butt-kicking.
 * Robin from Teen Titans is this, to varying degrees of realism. The blatantness of it varies, but it's extremely apparent when he's fighting against someone else who excels at martial arts (most notably Red X, who is also a Dance Battler, as he shares Robin's style of fighting) or someone whose fighting style involves being huge and throwing a lot of heavy things at him.
 * Bugs Bunny was fond of this trope - he gets rid of a malicious hobo on a train car using some balletic moves, and ticks off a bull in the ring with a Mexican dance with face-slap percussion.
 * Popeye - "The Dance Contest" and "On Our Way to Rio" are just two cartoons where Popeye uses dance to beat up Bluto.
 * Bob's Burgers - Bob's daughter Tina takes up Capoeira because she has a crush on the teacher.
 * In Duck Dodgers while trying to distract the "Mother Fudd", The Cadet asks "What would Gene Kelly do at a time like this?" So he starts dancing on his giant head.
 * Catwoman briefly demonstrates this in the strip club in DC Showcase: Catwoman.
 * In the ThunderCats (2011) episode "The Duelist and the Drifter" Rascally Rabbit The Drifter pulls this off by combining Nonchalant Dodge and Not Quite Flight skills, at one point cheerily pirouetting in midair in front of a frustrated opponent.
 * Home Movies - in one of their movies, Brendon and Jason fight with JAZZ!
 * In Samurai Jack, the leader of the big party Jack stumbles into in "Jack and the Rave" fights Jack and is easily the samurai's equal in hand-to-hand combat, though unlike other rap-themed fighters, he fights exclusively with his arms and hands, using hip-hop gestures to punch, chop, and defend. (This doesn't seem to be based on any martial arts in particular—his fighting just looks like rapping on fast forward.) The DJ, however, is no match when Jack gets his sword back.

Real Life
Dance and traditional means of livelihood often share similar movements according to the standard academic theories of dance, especially folk dance. Martial arts are part of the same physical traditions and often share striking (so to speak) similarities.

That is not to say that all traditional dancers are can fight. Very often the dance traditions use larger, more flamboyant and expressive movements designed for visual appeal. And it does not mean all martial artists can dance. But there is a degree of overlap, especially in traditional cultures. Many of the attributes that make a good dancer - strength, endurance, grace, balance, rhythm, timing, physical presence - are also found in warriors.

To further complicate matters many martial arts have an explicit dance component. "War dances" all over the world incorporate movements and emotional content from their combative tradition. The purpose may be to create group identity, impress the opposite sex, entertain, compete non-violently for status or frighten enemies. In some traditions combatants show their form by shadowboxing, often to music. A vastly inferior opponent can step down without losing face or risking injury at this point. Or participants may show a false weakness to the surprise of the opponent when they fight. Or at least it gives the audience a chance to lay down bets.

A very incomplete list of examples by style:


 * Africa and Afro-Caribbean: Many martial arts either originated from dances or were concealed by practicing them as dances, like Maculele, Mandingue, Laghia de la mort, Mayolè and others
 * Brazil: Capoeira is believed to have its roots in West African dance/fighting traditions. It is practiced to music and singing. The practice of Capoeira was generally illegal at the time of slavery. It was hidden in public by disguising it as dance. Capoeira co-evolved with the Brazilian Samba dance tradition.
 * Breakdancing: Supposedly invented as a ritualized substitute for actual combat. Early moves were influenced by Hong Kong action films.
 * China: In recent days many but by no means all forms of Chinese martial arts have evolved from combat to an athletic/gymnastic competitive display which has many of the attributes and requirements of dance performance. The degree to which this has occurred varies widely from school to school.
 * Europe: Most of the dance/fighting traditions are extinct, but some examples of martial dancing with and without weapons still exist in Eastern Europe, the Balkans, Scandinavia and Basque country.
 * Notational systems for dancing and fencing came about around the same time in Western Europe, and had several similarities.
 * India: Too large a place to generalize about, but examples abound. The ancient martial art of Kalaripayitt is very closely related to classical Indian dance and to a number of Yoga traditions.
 * Indonesia, Malaysia and the Phillipines: The dance and martial cultures are nearly inseparable. Whether a particular movement is aesthetic, competitive Olahraga or deadly Silat is more a matter of intention than anything else. Traditionally dance and Silat are performed to the Gamelan orchestra. In the Central and Northern Philippines the connection is more tenuous.
 * Japan: Swordsmen Yagyū Munenori and his son, Yagyū Jūbei Mitsuyoshi, often used terminology of Noh drama's dancing when discussing the timing in swordfighting. The modern Japanese martial art of Aikido is often considered dance-like because of its grace and fluidity.
 * Korea: While there is great academic and hoplological disagreement about Taekkyun as a martial art rather than a game it shares similarities with Korean martial arts and dance
 * Polynesia, New Zealand: Men's dance (Hula, Haka and other names) and martial arts are very closely connected sharing many motions and training methods. New Zealand's All Blacks rugby team does a traditional Maori haka war dance before games. It is unmistakably martial. On several occasions a haka performed by opposing Polynesian teams has led to pre-game fights.
 * Ukraine: Combat Hopak, based on the Ukrainian dance That Russian Squat Dance comes from. Not too much of a stretch, Hopak dance moves largely simulate stylized combat.
 * Spanish duelists have sometimes been compared with this.
 * Eighteenth century drilling resembled this. Its purpose was the pragmatic one of concentrating fire and shock effect, making command easier, and defending against cavalry. At one time some Samurai, who to be fair had been at peace for a long time and no longer HAD to Be Sharp, witnessed it and laughed - until they faced it in a Gunboat Diplomacy incident. Then they stopped laughing and started imitating it.

A very incomplete list of examples of practitioners:


 * Interestingly enough, Bruce Lee was also an award winner in cha-cha. It's this expertise in dancing that gave him his expertise in martial arts footwork. Or possibly the other way round.
 * As the saying goes: "A warrior who cannot dance is awkward both in peace and at war."
 * Bruce Lee developed Jeet Kune Do to incorporate any movements that were effective and felt natural. While it has a philosophy, there is no such thing as the Jeet Kune Do "style." If you felt comfortable doing the cha-cha in a fight, more power to you.
 * John Travolta once said that being a skilled dancer helps him do the choreographed fight scenes in his action roles. Of course, how he'd do in a real fight is anyone's guess.
 * Likewise, Jackie Chan is trained in Chinese Opera, and uses its movement techniques in his fight scenes.
 * Sugar Ray Robinson was a dancer in his youth before becoming a boxer. You can see the influence in his fights, especially when he simply moves around the ring. It's as though he glides across the ring.