


That poor anthropomorphic bunny didn't even know what hit him. It also became Fridge Horror when Kame Sennin blew up the moon just a few chapters later. In Dragon Ball, after defeating the anthropomorphic rabbit Monster Carrot, Goku sends him to the moon where he's forced to pound treats for children.Doraemon had an episode discussing moon rabbits and visit a future amusement park on the Moon to find them.The ending song of CLANNAD, "Dango Daikazoku," is about a family of dumplings/rice cakes, and mentions bunnies waving to them from the moon.Buddha depicts a traditional Buddhist version of the legend, where a rabbit sacrifices itself to feed the Buddha and he places its image on the moon in memorian.She is utterly obsessed with rabbits to the point where she even draws picture boards of other characters as bunnies and the special soul that looks after her false body when she goes off fighting is the bunny-themed "Chappy"-soul. Her zanpakutou is a snow/ice-type weapon that is also moon-themed (with at least one of its known attack powers being moon-based). Rukia has a strong moon theme (described by the author in art as the "white moon" to Ichigo's "black sun"). A girl in Beastars briefly wonders if the legends about rabbits living on the moon are true to which her classmate asks how they would breathe.Adventures of the Little Koala: The episode "The Moon Goddess" has the eponymous character take the form of a cute rabbit girl.One of their most famous legends state that the rabbit we see was thrown there as an insult to the arrogant and cowardly moon god, so that its luster will not be equal to the noble sun god's. The Aztecs and other Mesoamerican cultures also saw the rabbit in the moon (minus mortar) and had their own tales on what it is and how it came to be. While the Asian version of this legend is the most widespread in modern times, they weren't the only ones who saw the rabbit in ancient times. The idea of a rabbit on the moon resonated so well that it spread to other countries under Chinese cultural influence like Japan, Korea and Vietnam, though in their version, the rabbit isn't pounding the elixir of life but simple rice cakes instead. A myth that came from China, legend has it that the rabbit we see serves under the moon goddess and pounds the elixir of life for the immortals. If you look at it in a certain way, you may notice that its shape resembles that of a rabbit standing over a mortar.
#DANGO DAIKAZOKU HOODIE FULL#
Observe the full moon sometime and take note of its shadows.
