Which Names Of Demons Are Popular In Anime And Manga?

2026-02-03 21:56:10 125

3 Answers

Uma
Uma
2026-02-06 06:18:49
I get excited by how often certain demon names pop up across manga and anime — they become these shorthand signals for power, mischief, or tragedy. For me the classics are unavoidable: 'Satan' shows up in everything from the comedy flip of 'The Devil is a Part-Timer!' (where he’s hilariously mundane) to the grim, cosmic role he plays behind the scenes in 'Blue exorcist'. Those two takes alone show how flexible the name can be.

Then there are other memorable labels that carry personality: Mephisto Pheles and Amaimon from 'Blue Exorcist' are stylish and theatrical, while Amon from 'Devilman Crybaby' brings raw, ancient destructive force. On a different note, Kurama (the fox demon) and Hiei from 'Yu Yu Hakusho' bring that old-school shonen demon vibe — complex, sometimes noble antagonists. Naraku from 'InuYasha' is a textbook manipulative demon antagonist, and the whole Demon Clan in 'The Seven Deadly Sins' gives us names like Meliodas and Zeldris that get reused in fanarts, cosplay, and memes.

Beyond those, mythic names such as Lucifer, Beelzebub, Lilith, Asmodeus, and Astaroth crop up a lot — sometimes as straight transplants from Judeo-Christian Demonology, sometimes reimagined. I love seeing how creators twist those legacy names: a Lucifer who’s charming, a Lilith who’s tragic, a Beelzebub who’s comedic. It’s endlessly fun to spot the lineages and then watch creators flip expectations. For me, it’s part of the thrill of rewatching and rereading — hunting for how a familiar name is being reinvented.
Abigail
Abigail
2026-02-07 03:53:05
I keep a mental shortlist of demon names that keep showing up in anime and manga, and it’s a surprisingly fun mix of myth and original creations: classic mythic names like Lucifer, Beelzebub, Asmodeus, Astaroth and Lilith; iconic series-specific names like Mephisto Pheles and Amaimon from 'Blue Exorcist', Amon from 'Devilman Crybaby', Naraku from 'InuYasha', Kurama and Hiei from 'Yu Yu Hakusho', and Meliodas and Zeldris from 'The Seven Deadly Sins'. Beelzebub also gets its own straw-hat-wearing, baby-form twist in 'Beelzebub', which shows how creators can flip a terrifying name into something bizarrely endearing.

What I find coolest is watching how a name carries expectations — Lucifer usually implies pride or rebellion, Lilith often signals a tragic or independent feminine power, and an original name like Amon gets associated with raw destructive force because of how it’s written. People in the community will cosplay, make AMVs, or remix these names into memes, and that cycle of reuse keeps the names alive in new ways. Personally, I love seeing old myths and new ideas collide, and these names are little bridges between those worlds.
Jack
Jack
2026-02-09 20:00:47
I’ve always enjoyed tracing the roots of demon names and watching how creators borrow, remix, or subvert them. Some names are basically cultural shorthand. Lucifer, Beelzebub, Asmodeus and Lilith appear so often across manga and anime that they almost become archetypes rather than discrete characters. When a story uses one of those names, you can usually expect a nod to the old myths, even if the character ends up being totally different.

At the same time, original demon characters have become iconic in their own right. Take Mephisto Pheles and Amaimon from 'Blue Exorcist' — they’re playful and theatrical, and their personalities make those names stick. Amon from 'Devilman Crybaby' feels like an embodiment of raw mythic power, while Naraku from 'InuYasha' is a study in malice and manipulation. 'The Seven Deadly Sins' repurposes demon-lore into an entire clan with Meliodas and Zeldris, which shows how flexible the concept can be for world-building.

I also notice regional differences: japanese folklore gives us oni and yokai names that function like Demons in Western stories, and shinigami sometimes get lumped into the same conversation despite being different mythic roles. The takeaway for me is that names matter — they set tone and readers/viewers bring baggage to them. Watching creators play with that baggage is one of my favorite parts of fandom, and I still get a kick out of spotting clever twists.
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