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1[[quoteright:220:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Oda_Nobunaga_1296.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:220:''"If the cuckoo does not sing, kill it."'']]
3
4->''"Destroy everything equally."''
5
6Credited as being the first of the Three Unifiers of modern UsefulNotes/{{Japan}}, Oda Nobunaga (June 23, 1534 - June 21, 1582) was one of Japan's most successful warlords. He started as a son of a minor daimyo (and earned the nickname "The Fool of Owari" due to his [[ObfuscatingStupidity childhood and teenage antics]]), with a number of factions within his own province opposing him. Eventually, he would not only crush those factions but also proceed to conquer over a third of Japan, with the rest well positioned to fall to him. That ended on June 21, 1582, when his retainer UsefulNotes/AkechiMitsuhide attacked him at Honno Temple; Nobunaga, his eldest son, his bodyguards and his [[{{Uke}} wakashu]], Mori Ranmaru, died that night. Summaries of his campaigns could be seen below.
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8Although noted for many things, including [[TheStrategist a mastery of tactics]] (most famously at the Battle of Okehazama: Nobunaga's forces, numbering at most 3000, defeated an army of around 25,000 through [[CombatPragmatist a combination of daring, misdirection, a brilliant surprise attack, and more than a little luck]]), [[StuffBlowingUp revolutionizing the ways Japanese armies used firearms]], and completely changing the economic system of and the way wealth was counted in Japan, Nobunaga is chiefly remembered for his ruthless and brutal nature, and it is these traits that dominate most depictions of him in any period pieces or games. Nobunaga's actions leave him ripe for playing the part of the villain, as his most infamous deeds include the burning of powerful Buddhist temples critical of him, and the slaughter of the thousands of men, women and children that lived in them. Even the kinder portrayals of him tend to show him as a man fueled by ambition and greed, in many others it is either speculated or explicitly said that he has either [[HistoricalVillainUpgrade become a demon or made a literal]] DealWithTheDevil to carry out his ambitions. See DemonKingNobunaga.
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10Although he did not live to see the conquest of all Japan finalized, Nobunaga's actions all but ended [[UsefulNotes/SengokuPeriod over a century of near-constant civil war]] among the lords of Japan for dominance. After his death, his general Hashiba Hideyoshi (later known as UsefulNotes/ToyotomiHideyoshi) finished the conquest, and another general, UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu (also his in-law, as Nobunaga's daughter Tokuhime married Ieyasu's son Nobuyasu), founded the Tokugawa shogunate that ruled Japan from 1600 until 1868.
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12Amusingly enough, his most famous descendant, Oda Nobunari, is one of Japan's top male figure skaters, and is most known for crying at the drop of a hat, and getting caught driving his moped drunk. He has a cameo in an episode of ''Anime/YuriOnIce'', playing himself as a commentator.
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14In fiction, he is almost always a BigBad, EvilOverlord and ZeroPercentApprovalRating dictator who receives a HistoricalVillainUpgrade. Even when he's not getting the villain upgrade, he's at best an eccentric {{pragmatic|Hero}} AntiHero who sees the old traditions as outdated and wants to sweep them aside to pave the way for the future (which, considering the abundance of traditionalists back then, made him stand out or considered an oddball). Furthermore, expect him to embrace everything that would modernize warfare and the country, complete with having no qualms about utilizing foreign goods/help (a big part of Nobunaga's success was his unprecedented use of muskets, and unlike his successors he was rather open to Jesuit missionaries), and being fully willing to [[ShootTheDog engage in some necessary brutalities]]. Also ''probably'' a reason [[BabyNameTrendKiller why the name "Nobunaga" is rare in Japan these days]] (unless you're Creator/NobunagaShimazaki).
15----
16
17!!Some of the more notable people close to UsefulNotes/OdaNobunaga during his rule
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19* '''UsefulNotes/ToyotomiHideyoshi''': Probably the most famous and most trusted vassal of Nobunaga. Once upon a time Hideyoshi was just Nobunaga's sandal-bearer until his sheer competence eventually led to him becoming one of Nobunaga's most trusted generals. See his article for more details.
20* '''UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu''': Nobunaga's father, Nobuhide, busted him out of being a hostage to Imagawa for all of five minutes before the Imagawa forced him to send Ieyasu over. Once they come to age, they become important allies. See his article for more details.
21** The characters of three men are compared in a famous ''senryu'', the straightforward bloodiness of Nobunaga, the craftiness of Hideyoshi, and the patience of Ieyasu:
22--> ''Nakanunara koroshiteshimae hototogisu.'' ([Nobunaga:] If the cuckoo does not sing, kill it.)
23--> ''Nakanunara nakasetemiyou hototogisu.'' ([Hideyoshi:] If the cuckoo does not sing, coax it.)
24--> ''Nakanunara nakumadematou hototogisu.'' ([Ieyasu:] If the cuckoo does not sing, wait for it.)
25* '''UsefulNotes/AkechiMitsuhide''': Nobunaga's eventual betrayer and the cause of his downfall, although they used to be trusted allies. See his article for more details.
26* '''Mori Ranmaru''': His [[{{Uke}} wakashu/page]], coming from the Mori clan (differing from the Western Mouri clan led by Mouri Motonari) which has a record of serving the Oda; in particular his father Yoshinari was a veteran retainer of Nobunaga. The Nobunaga-Ranmaru pederasty (same sex lord-page) relationship is probably one of Sengoku Period's most famous, due to such kind of passionate love affairs being quite popular in the Edo period. Ranmaru perished in Honnoji along the other pages and attendants who was with Nobunaga when the temple was invaded by the Akechi soldiers. If Ranmaru gets into fiction, he's more likely to be portrayed as a DudeLooksLikeALady if he's in teen age, otherwise, he's an AdorablyPrecociousChild (he was 17 when he died). He's also prone to getting an outright GenderFlip.
27* '''Maeda Toshiie''': Renowned spearman and Nobunaga's vassal since the beginning. As a page in his younger days, he was purportedly also involved in the same pederasty with Nobunaga as Ranmaru (although he's eventually allowed to have a legal wife, Maeda Matsu, later). Eventually supports Hideyoshi and becomes one of his Five Regents, and the most powerful one, his death is the final catalyst for the eventual Battle of Sekigahara, and Tokugawa overthrowing the budding Toyotomi dynasty.
28* '''Shibata Katsuie''': Formerly a supporter of Nobunaga's brother during his days as the Fool of Owari. Once Nobunaga proved his worth, he switched sides and becomes one of his most trusted vassals, later dying against Hideyoshi in Shizugatake. If he gets into a Sengoku-based fiction, he tends to be the {{Foil}} to Ranmaru; most likely getting the portrayal of a gung-ho [[TheBigGuy big guy]] with BoisterousBruiser elements while being an OldRetainer. [[VideoGame/SengokuBasara With a few exceptions]]. This is mostly taking account from how he was very fierce in battles, earning the nickname [[RedBaron "Oni/Devil Shibata".]]
29* '''Oichi''': His little sister and considered one of [[WorldsMostBeautifulWoman Japan's greatest beauties]] and having one of the most tragic life stories for the time. First sent off to Azai clan to secure an alliance, marrying daimyo Azai Nagamasa - despite it being a political marriage, it ended up being [[HappilyMarried famously happy and harmonious]]. Later the Azai betrayed Nobunaga, and the alliance fell apart. [[note]]The story of Oichi sending a bag of beans to warn Nobunaga of Azai's betrayal was considered dubious legend by historians.[[/note]] In the end she was sent home with three daughters, at the request of Nobunaga himself, and her husband committed suicide and her only son executed as the Azai were defeated. Almost 10 years later, after Nobunaga's death, she married the aforementioned Shibata Katsuie as a ploy to raise his stakes in the power struggle among the Oda vassals. Eventually Katsuie lost to Hideyoshi in a later battle. He urged Oichi to flee as well with their daughters, but she chose to remain behind with him and commit ritual suicide. Her daughters, however, were sent away for their safety.
30** Her daughters end up in unique places too: The eldest Chacha/Lady Yodo becomes Hideyoshi's concubine that gave birth to his heir Hideyori; the second, Hatsu, married into the Kyogoku clan; while the youngest, Go, eventually married UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu's son and eventual Shogun, Hidetada.
31* '''[[IHaveManyNames Nouhime/Kichou/Kochou/Sagiyama-dono]]''': Nobunaga's first wife, a Princess of the Mino clan and direct daughter of the Viper of Mino, Saitou Dosan. Her mother belonged to the Akechi clan so she was a relative of Akechi Mitsuhide, although the actual degree of closeness is not clear. (Regardless, they're often depicted as cousins.) Some believe her marriage with Nobunaga was an unhappy one, or that she was barren and didn't give any children to Nobunaga, but these are only speculations and theories. The fact is that there's barely any records of her existence after her marriage to Nobunaga, so not much is known about her or her relationship with her husband[[note]]One of the more famous anecdotes in favor of them being more HappilyMarried goes like this: Before their marriage, Saitou Dosan warned Nouhime about Nobunaga's status as the Fool of Owari, granting her a knife or sorts, and if Nobunaga really proved himself to be an idiot, then "Kill the Fool" with the knife. Nouhime eventually for reasons decided not to go through with it, usually after Nobunaga proved that [[ObfuscatingStupidity he's the competent kind of 'Fool'.]][[/note]], though some paintings depict her in joining the likes of Ranmaru in a LastStand at Honnoji, dying in process like a YamatoNadeshiko fulfilling her duty to defend her home. Fictional works tend to portray her and Nobunaga as HappilyMarried, unless DemonKingNobunaga is at play, in which she mostly gets a LoveMartyr treatment.
32* '''Saitou Dousan''': Originally Toshimasa (with Dosan being his lay-monk name), Dosan would be Kicho's father and thus Nobunaga's father-in-law. Despite his reputation as "the Viper of Mino" (allegedly for his shifting loyalties and his tendency to have enemies poisoned), certain historical records would also label Dosan as an able administrator, at least better than the original warlords of Mino he overthrew. Despite decades of rivalry with Nobunaga's father, Oda Nobuhide, he would later choose to marry Kichou/Nouhime to Nobunaga for political reasons. Nevertheless, it is alleged that Dosan and Nobunaga eventually found each other more agreeable. Indeed, [[LikeASonToMe to the point that supposedly Dosan willed the entire province of Mino to Nobunaga rather than his own son]], that it led to Dousan's overthrow and assassination by his firstborn, Yoshitatsu. Partly for political reasons and vengeance on Dousan's behalf, Nobunaga would invade Mino and drive out his Saitou in-laws into exile and irrelevance.
33* '''Yasuke''': While not exactly a household name compared to others, this guy holds the honor of being the first black African seen in central Japan who rose to become a weapon-bearer in Oda Nobunaga's retinue, making him History's earliest example of a [[WesternSamurai foreign-born Samurai]]. Though it should be noted Yasuke was never made an actual Samurai, for he was not bestowed with a last name, a steady salary measured in koku, given actual land or required to commit seppuku after the Honnō-ji Incident. Yasuke's service with Nobunaga was also relatively short, lasting just a little over a year between 1581 to 1582. Yasuke first arrived in Japan alongside the Jesuit missionary Alessandro Valignano, where the novelty of an African man within the capital caused such a sensation amongst the locals[[note]]According to a series of written reports between the Jesuit missionaries, there was a riot in Kyoto where a horde of peasants broke down the door of the Jesuit Church and nearly trampled each other to death in a mad dash just to catch a ''glimpse'' of Yasuke.[[/note]] that Nobunaga caught wind of it and requested that the "cafre" be brought to him. At first, Nobunaga refused to believe that Yasuke's black skin was natural and ordered that he be stripped and washed to make sure he wasn't just painted by the priests with ink. But the more his servants scrubbed, [[{{Irony}} the darker Yasuke's skin became]]. After clearing up this confusion, Nobunaga became greatly impressed by Yasuke; who was exceptionally tall[[note]]Matsudaira Ietada's Diary specifically noted that Yasuke was around 6'2" in height, making him much taller than the Japanese men of the era, who were typically around 5’2"–5’5" on average.[[/note]], spoke a respectable amount of Japanese, knew some [[SleightOfHandiness party tricks]], and was described having TheStrengthOfTenMen. This lasting impression led Nobunaga to ask Valignano to transfer the African man over to him and the rest is history. Yasuke accompanied Nobunaga into the Battle of Tenmokuzan and was present during the Honnō-ji Incident and the resulting skirmishes, but in the end he was captured by Mitsuhide's army. It is said that Mitsuhide decided not to kill Yasuke reasoning "black slaves are mere animals, moreover not Japanese" [[note]]黒奴は動物で何も知らず、また日本人でもない故、これを殺さず[[/note]] and either shipped him back to the Jesuits or put him under the care of a 'Nanbanji' (Christian Church in Japan). There are no records of his remaining life after the battle, [[TheUnsolvedMystery leaving his ultimate fate an enigma]]. While Yasuke tended to be left out of early media due to SmallReferencePools, he's since then become a [[BreakoutCharacter popular figure]] in modern {{Jidaigeki}} with franchises such as ''VideoGame/{{Nioh}}'' and ''VideoGame/GuiltyGear''[[note]]Nagoriyuki from ''VideoGame/GuiltyGearStrive'' is confirmed to be the historical Yasuke, albeit a version of him that [[HistoricalBadassUpgrade became a]] [[BeethovenWasAnAlienSpy Vampire]] {{Ronin}}.[[/note]] significantly elevating Yasuke's profile in pop culture.
34* '''[[NoNameGiven Lady Ikoma/Kitsuno]]'''[[note]]Her name was not actually given in any reliable historical documents, and the name "Kitsuno" was believed to be the result of a modern forgery.[[/note]]: Nobunaga's favorite concubine. Since Nouhime above was barren, Nobunaga had to do something to secure a descendant. And that was where Kitsuno came in, giving birth to Nobunaga's children and generally well liked by Nobunaga himself. She was thought to have been quite sickly in life, and died at a relatively young age. Some legends even claim that she was Nobunaga's [[OneTrueLove true love]], so much that Nobunaga cried for days when she died.
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36!! Notable Campaigns of Nobunaga and the enemies he faced.
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38* '''Okehazama''' (vs UsefulNotes/ImagawaYoshimoto): This is Nobunaga's first grand battle where he made his name known to the world (or in his time, just around Japan). Yoshimoto led his 25,000 men towards Kyoto, passing through Owari, and Nobunaga's men didn't even reach 10,000. Thankfully, since Nobunaga was familiar with the area, he had territorial advantage. After one RousingSpeech listed in his Quotes page, he took 2,000-3,000 men to ambush Imagawa's core army resting at the gorge at Dengaku-Hazama (the rest is stationed at the castle for decoy). And he has the Devil's luck that there's a thunderstorm rain, severely debilitating the Imagawa's mobility and giving them cover. Nobunaga's men struck in sudden surprise, killed Imagawa Yoshimoto and demoralized his whole army that they were sent running back to the Imagawa territory of Suruga, and then the clan never recovered. After this battle, Nobunaga reunited with his childhood friend [[UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu Matsudaira Takechiyo (currently Matsudaira Motoyasu, later Tokugawa Ieyasu)]] and forged an alliance.
39* '''Inabayama''' (vs Saitou Tatsuoki): To expand further his power and the dangers present by the Saitou clan, Nobunaga chose to invade the clan of his wife Kichou/Nouhime (made seemingly more okay that Tatsuoki's father, Yoshitatsu, committed {{Patricide}} to Kichou's father Saitou Dosan, that Nobunaga respected). This battle also showed Nobunaga's keen eye for talent, where he deployed [[UsefulNotes/ToyotomiHideyoshi Kinoshita Tokichiro (later Toyotomi Hideyoshi)]] to build a castle in Sunomata in just one day, with full trust that with the latter's talent, it became possible. Not only that, Tokichiro also went on to sneak behind the castle gates and opened the gate for Nobunaga's main force to assault the castle. Once the campaign concluded, Nobunaga improved the Inabayama castle and re-christened it 'Gifu Castle'. As a bonus, ex-Saitou genius strategist Takenaka Hanbei also enlisted to him via Tokichiro.
40* '''Kanegasaki-Anegawa-Odani''' (vs Azai Nagamasa & Asakura Yoshikage): Spanning throughout several years, this is a rather important campaign on Nobunaga after he marched to Kyoto with the request of the Ashikaga shogun, Yoshiaki, to escort him back to the throne thanks to his brother Yoshiteru being assassinated. Once Nobunaga restored Yoshiaki's position, he then realized that Nobunaga just made him a [[PuppetKing Puppet Shogun]] and in return made a call-to-arms to many warlords to strike at him. The first to answer was the Asakura clan under Asakura Yoshikage. Nobunaga responded in kind, but just when he was about to clash, the Azai clan that was formerly linked with the Oda via marriage between Azai Nagamasa and Nobunaga's sister Oichi decided to stick with their old alliance with the Asakura and backstabbed Nobunaga in Kanegasaki. Although Tokichiro ensured Nobunaga's escape via good leadership of his back guard, a ninja still managed to sneak and sniped Nobunaga to heavy wounds. [[{{Understatement}} Boy, was Nobunaga pissed...]] As a result, he called for help to his ally UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu to strike at both Azai-Asakura, clashing at the river Anegawa. Nobunaga came out victorious as the Tokugawa struck at the Asakura, allowing him to strike at Azai. The clash continued to the Azai home at Odani, where Nagamasa made his last stand. However, he let Oichi and her daughters return home while he fought to the bitter end and committed seppuku.
41* '''Ishiyama Honganji/Mt. Hiei''' (vs warrior monks of Ikko-Ikki and Tendai sects): This is actually too complicated to summarize into a bite-sized article. Nobunaga's campaigns against the militant monks are the justification of many DemonKingNobunaga treatments, but as with many things in history, nothing is ever that simple. The warrior monks have been disruptive to both the locals and Nobunaga's conquest, and they have been a constant thorn on Nobunaga's side--such that even his tested commanders (such as Sakuma Nobumori and Araki Murashige) failed to decisively suppress them.[[note]]Sakuma would later be dismissed from service over this, despite lifelong service to the Oda. Araki, for his part, rose in revolt over being removed from command--[[CurbStompBattle with predictable results]], although he would survive into old age during the reign of Hideyoshi. (Coincidentally, Araki is related through marriage alliances with the Akechi.)[[/note]] He had to agree on a cease fire with Azai-Asakura for the moment (he would come to stomp them personally in a later date) so he could concentrate on vanquishing these disruptive monks. Bringing forth his army, he invaded Mt. Hiei, where the monks' main headquarters Enryakuji was located. Nobunaga then ordered his men to burn the mountain, and history recorded somewhere between 1000-3000 people were put to death -- men, women, and children alike. This burning of Mt. Hiei is the reason why Nobunaga has his Demon King reputation, as Mt. Hiei was a holy site revered by the people for many centuries. Setting it on fire would be like if you burn down the Vatican today. [[note]]To be fair, the Enryakuji monks were not sitting ducks. They were a force that regularly interfere with the court, and also themselves known to be a menace. They have no tolerance for other Buddhist sects, and regularly murdered the monks of Honganji to the point that Honganji had to flee Kyoto and relocate to Ishiyama in the first place (which is why, quite ironically for this article, Enryakuji and Honganji actually hated each other's guts).[[/note]] Ishiyama Honganji proved to be a much tougher foe. Unlike Enryakuji, which is only concentrated one site, they control a network of temples and militant groups all over Japan, and its main headquarters at Ishiyama had strong defences that is very difficult to breach. After 10 years of on and off battles against the Honganji forces with no end in sight, Nobunaga showed that he's not only a powerful man in battlefield, but also in politics. He brought down an imperial decree on Honganji, and evicted the chief abbot Kennyo, thus putting an end to the feud.[[note]]Many fiction overlap Enryakuji and Honganji, and also depict Honganji as being destroyed by Nobunaga's forces. While it's true that Honganji ended up in flames as well, it's not very clear who set the place on fire, as reportedly all its inhabitants already left the precincts. Some even said the monks themselves lit it on fire, not willing to allow any of their belongings to fall into Nobunaga's hands.[[/note]]
42* '''Nagashino''' (vs Takeda Katsuyori): Another part of Nobunaga's important battles where he crushed another mighty clan. Beforehand, UsefulNotes/TakedaShingen made great advances to the capital and trounced UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu in Mikatagahara. Unfortunately for the Takeda, the legendary Shingen died mid-way, and was replaced by his son Katsuyori, who was actually pretty capable, but [[OvershadowedByAwesome just had problems in living up to his father's awesomeness.]] Nobunaga took the opportunity to team up with Ieyasu, and launched an attack against their common nemesis the Takeda at Nagashino. The Tokugawa set up camp as the vanguard, running [[TheBait distraction operations]], while the Oda behind them put up palisades to defend against the incoming cavalry and prepared their guns. [[note]] Despite what anime, games, and drama tells you, the infamous "rotating volley" of 1000 gunmen taking turns shooting is just a legend. A [[OlderThanSteam really old legend]], but legend all the same.[[/note]] It's a common misconception to say that Nobunaga won this battle because he was the only person around who regularly used guns in warfare but he wasn't. He just had more of them, and better bullets too[[note]]Nobunaga's openness to Jesuit missionaries bore fruit in this moment. Because of their relationship, Nobunaga has access to more guns and bullets in both quality and quantity.[[/note]]. The guns mowed down the Takeda cavalry, and the Takeda never truly recovered as a powerhouse after this battle, and some years later, Nobunaga would pursue and corner Katsuyori in Temmokuzan, where he committed seppuku.
43* '''Tedorigawa''' (vs UsefulNotes/UesugiKenshin): Nobunaga received report that trouble was brewing in one of the Oda outposts that bordered the Uesugi territories, and so he sent Shibata Katsuie to take care of it. The domain had turned to Uesugi before Shibata arrived there, and so the Oda forces was surprised to find themselves face to face with UsefulNotes/UesugiKenshin himself. They were routed into Tedorigawa river, and had to withdraw. Kenshin, who didn't know that Nobunaga wasn't actually there, was utterly disappointed about how easy of a fight it had been. He died the very next year, so who knows what he could or would have done moving forward.
44* Sieges of '''Kozuki, Itami/Arioka and Takamatsu''' (vs the Mori clan): While noted patriarch Mouri Motonari has long since passed, the Mouri clan was under the able leadership of his grandson Mouri Terumoto and his uncles (Kikkawa Motoharu and Kobayakawa Takakage), talented generals on their own right. The Mouri, implementing a defensive strategy, would instead enable/supply smaller clans on the way of the Oda machinery and halt their advance (the ones involved here being the Ikko-Ikki as discussed above, a treasonous Araki Murashige, and their castellan Shimizu Muneharu (for Itami and Takamatsu, respectively). Kozuki, in turn, was held by TheRemnant of their old rivals the Amako, who Nobunaga and Hideyoshi promised support to. Strictly speaking, the campaigns themselves were part of the overall Oda conquest program, but have been mostly implemented personally by Hideyoshi. The campaigns would also involve another of Hideyoshi's notable strategists, Kuroda Kanbei ([[BadassInDistress who was in fact held hostage]] in Itami due to initially offering terms to the Araki). The results of the campaign was a mixed bag: the Amako were defeated by the Mouri, Araki was smoked out and Kanbei rescued, and Takamatsu was going pretty well for Hideyoshi, up until...
45* '''Honnoji''' (vs UsefulNotes/AkechiMitsuhide): While not exactly a grand battle, it's an important one because this was where Nobunaga finally bit the dust. Nobunaga mostly had his plan of unification under control so he decided to take a vacation with UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu. In the middle of vacation, Nobunaga received a report from Hideyoshi, who asked for reinforcement to help quell the Mouri clan. Nobunaga sent in his general Akechi Mitsuhide to lead the early vanguard where he would take a small portion of his forces for a little business at Honnoji. Mitsuhide suddenly made a 180 turn and then surrounded Honnoji and attacked Nobunaga's dismal forces. Despite fighting for his life bravely, Nobunaga knew there was no escaping this, and so he [[BetterToDieThanBeKilled committed seppuku, instead of letting the enemies take his head and humiliate him]]. And so, the life of the first unifier of Japan came to an end. Most fiction said that he told Ranmaru or other vassals to burn the temple he resided while he put his own life to end, but nobody actually knew who set the place on fire, with some accounts claiming that fire burst from the kitchens (implying a completely accidental fire).
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47----
48
49!!Tropes as portrayed in fiction:
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51* AntiHero: Even at his softest and most moral Nobunaga is almost always presented as someone who isn't above ruthlessness and making an example of others, even with close allies. In this case he's usually a PragmaticHero or UnscrupulousHero, presented as someone forced to into [[IDidWhatIHadToDo ruthlessness and bloodshed due to circumstance]] or has to do so for the [[IveComeTooFar greater good of stopping even more bloodshed.]]
52* CatchPhrase: Modern age seems to think that there are these two phrases Nobunaga likes to spout: First, [[VerbalTic he likes to end his sentences with "de aru ka"]] ("Is that so?"). This was based on his [[DeadpanSnarker smartass]] response when he was introduced to his father-in-law Saitou Dousan for the first time. Second, he seems to like uttering the phrase "Zehi mo nashi/zehi mo oyobazu" ("It can't be helped."/"It was inevitable."). The one is based on his response when he received reports of Mitsuhide's rebellion at Honnouji, and was largely considered his "last words" (which, of course, really depends on which historical record you're reading from).
53* CloudCuckooLander: He was certainly feared and respected in his lifetime, but he also confused his contemporaries with his antics. He earned the nickname "fool of Owari" and a widespread reputation to match in his youth, and from there got stranger still. He had an offbeat, acerbic sense of humor, comparing friends and foes alike to derogatory animals and even named his own heir "strange one" in his infancy for his apparently odd or ugly face. He had a reputation for speaking warmly and openly to his lessers, while often being curt and rude with officials and officers. He was also flagrantly blasphemous towards Buddhism and the gods, yet traded freely with and sometimes even welcomed Christians, which was utterly unthinkable among Daimyo at the time. He went so far as to openly admire and collect western fashions and technology. Ultimately, it was likely his peculiar behavior and out of the box thinking that got him as far as it did in life. The blasphemy towards Buddhism might also factor in why the trope DemonKingNobunaga was made in response.
54* CombatPragmatist: Nobunaga almost always prefers convenient and effective tactics over stuffy old maneuvers. His use of firearms alone made him a force to be reckoned with.
55* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: His antics led his own family to dismiss him as nothing but "The Fool of Owari" and thought he'd bring ruin to the Oda clan. He proceeded to bring a golden age to his clan with extraordinary leadership and cunning.
56* CulturedBadass: Aside of his military successes, Nobunaga was into various cultures, both traditional and foreign ones (despite crushing the former that don't like the latter). One of his favorite plays is most likely the Atsumori Noh play as he's reputed to perform such dances and often cited one of the stage's paragraphs to express his life views as if it's one of his other CatchPhrase (because he didn't invent it):
57-->''Mankind's 50 years, when compared to years in Geten[[note]]Geten refers to the lowest level of heaven according to Buddhism. 50 years of human life is equal to just one day in Geten, and the lifespan of the inhabitants of Geten is many hundreds of years. For beings who can live for hundreds of years, 50 human years, i.e one day, is nothing but a blip in time.[[/note]], it is but a very dream and illusion. ''
58* {{Fanboy}}: While he's also known as some sort of Western Otaku, there's one traditional Japanese thing that Nobunaga is a fanboy of: Sumo. He's known to organize sumo tournaments purely for his and his men's entertainment and generously rewarded the champion of those tourneys.
59* ForeignCultureFetish: Nobunaga is known to be very welcoming with Europeans in a time where others are wary of them [[note]]Had to specify, because there are also Chinese traders and visitors around, who are technically foreign, but not as disdained as the Euroepeans are.[[/note]]. He's very open and tolerating to Christian missionaries and protected them against the objections and threats of Buddhist sects who detested the rival religion intruding on their turf. When the missionaries came to visit him, Nobunaga personally served them the food and refreshments and took them on tours around his castle (as opposed to ordering his attendants to do it).
60* FromNobodyToNightmare: His origins are usually those of an upstart daimyo everyone looked down on. By the time of his death he was revered by his allies and feared by his enemies.
61* GoodIsOldFashioned: Regardless of what his moral position is, one thing that Nobunaga represents is the power of innovation and change, rather than being bound with old traditions; he encouraged change and progress, unorthodox tactics or anything else to make way for progress; historians speculate that had Honnoji not happened, the course of Japan's history might change radically since Nobunaga might end up welcoming foreigners earlier to modernize Japan instead of blocking it from outer influence (what UsefulNotes/TokugawaIeyasu did to preserve the older traditions and his rule). It's not to say that he completely disregards tradition. He has enough respect for it, but at the same time he doesn't let himself be tied down by it.
62* HistoricalBadassUpgrade: Often portrayed as having super powers and being a OneManArmy due to making a pact with demons or being revived by supernatural forces in many manga. In addition even relatively realistic works portray him as being a MasterSwordsman. He undoubtedly was trained in Japanese swordsmanship but sources don't indicate if he was the master duelist fiction portrays him to be.
63* HistoricalHeroUpgrade:
64** On some occasions, and it tends to exclude his KickTheDog moments. Many positive portrayals of Nobunaga either skipped out the burning of Mt. Hiei or portray it as a necessary ShootTheDog moment, where Nobunaga really had no choice but to initiate such brutality otherwise the war in Japan would not end.
65** One of the things you can be sure that writers would gloss out was the falling out between him and his sister. In any Sengoku-based fictions, Nagamasa's son were either AdaptedOut or Nobunaga just skipped the part of executing him, allowing him to act more like a good big brother that lent his sister a shoulder to cry on after she experienced such a crappy fate for her happy marriage.
66*** Historically speaking, it's not known for certain whether Nagamasa's son was also Oichi's son or not (as he purportedly had another consort), so in the rare occasions that this was actually discussed, people also justify Oichi having no reaction on the boy's death by this fact. Instead, they only focus on Oichi's feelings towards her husband.
67* HistoricalVillainUpgrade: One of the biggest victims of this in all Japanese history, to the point that [[DemonKingNobunaga he has his own dedicated subtrope]] though recent depictions have taken a more nuanced and sympathetic tone with him. Of course, as mentioned repeatedly on this page, there are plenty of reasons why he usually plays the villain.
68* KarmicDeath: His death at the Honnou-ji Temple Incident still remains a classic case of this. In the words of Professor Kenneth G. Henshall:
69--> ''For a man who loved burning down Buddhist Temples, it was the height of irony that he would himself die inside a burning Buddhist Temple, betrayed by men whom he trusted at least a little more than the rest.''
70* MagneticHero: Whether villain or hero, Nobunaga is always presented as a charismatic individual that draws others to him with their loyalty being genuine.
71* TheMusketeer: While a samurai, Nobunaga is always shown to have a particular affinity for guns. His use of them revolutionized Japanese warfare and forced other clans to adapt or face defeat.
72* TheNicknamer: He was known for this in reality, referring to Toyotomi Hideyoshi as "monkey" and "rodent" for his appearance and mannerisms, calling Maeda Toshiee "dog" as a pun on his childhood name and nod to his loyalty [[note]]And possibly in reference to a Japanese JustSoStory that dogs and monkeys don't get along, regarding how different he and Toyotomi were in temperament.[[/note]] and called Chōsokabe Motochika "a bat in an island with no birds". In fiction this trait is sometimes expanded or exaggerated.
73* PetTheDog: Even if portrayed as a villain, Nobunaga is still shown to have genuine friendships with others.
74* TokenBlackFriend: He was very fond of Yasuke, a African slave formerly in the service of Alessandro Valignano that Nobunaga negotiated to be brought into his personal retinue as a {{Samurai}}. Nobunaga even gifted Yasuke a house with his own servants/pages, which is a ''glowing'' endorsement when compaired to how he initially treated Hideyoshi, who was Nobunaga's ''sandal-bearer'' prior to carving out a more respectable position for himself.
75* TookALevelInBadass: Practically the TropeCodifier for the Warring States Period. After Okehazama he goes from some random lord in Owari derided as a buffoon to TheDreaded on the battlefield due to introducing new tactics and strategies many clans weren't equipped to counter as well as his charisma that gains him many allies.
76
77----
78!!Appears in the following works:
79
80[[foldercontrol]]
81
82[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
83
84* ''Manga/OnePiece'':
85** Admiral [[spoiler:(now Fleet Admiral)]] Akainu/Sakazuki is VERY similar both personality and method-wise to Nobunaga. He is even paired with two other admirals who fit the Hideyoshi (Kizaru) and Ieyasu (Aokiji) characters.
86** Kozuki Oden, former and deceased daimyo of the Kuri region in the Land of Wano and [[spoiler:Momonosuke]]'s father. While Oden was definitely more moral, his vast list of insane accomplishments and wholly uncontrollable behavior resembles Nobunaga. And just like Nobunaga, Oden dies before he can see his dream come true, sacrificing himself so that his retainers and children complete it for him in the future. "Oden" also happens to be a viable alternate reading for the kanji "Oda".
87* In an early episode of ''Manga/{{Inuyasha}}'', Kagome is startled when a handsome, idealistic young samurai gives his name as Nobunaga. She eagerly asks for his autograph, only to see in disappointment that he is ''Amari'' Nobunaga; when she asks about Oda Nobunaga, the other Nobunaga objects to being mistaken for "that idiot." This has been [[YearZero used by fans to put a date]] to the story, since there's a very limited period of time when Oda Nobunaga was known, but considered not to be a big deal.
88* Nobunaga doesn't directly appear in ''Blood Reign: Curse of the Yoma'', but the story takes place at the height of his conquests, and he influences the story since the main character is a ninja serving the Takeda clan when it opposes Nobunaga, and because the brutality of Nobunaga's conquests is giving power to the Yoma demons. At one point the main character thinks about Nobunaga's brutality and wonders if he is a demon. While he's doing this, Nobunaga and his army are seen in a montage, and all of them have {{glowing|EyesOfDoom}} {{red eyes|TakeWarning}}.
89* Nobunaga is a major antagonist in ''Manga/SamuraiDeeperKyo''. Voiced by Creator/ShowHayami, who even voices Akechi Mitsuhide's ''Basara portrayal'', to top it off.
90* In ''Manga/{{Drifters}}'' Nobunaga is one of the titular Drifters, famous personalities from Earth taken from their rightful time to do battles in other worlds. As one of the main characters he is portrayed as a CoolOldGuy and, despite [[CardCarryingVillain very much reveling in his role of "Devil King"]], is one of the Drifters [[AntiHero that are on the side of humanity]], particularly teaching them how to make gunpowder and about all the cool things one can do with it.
91* Oda Nobunaga is the reason Recca's clan all but perished in ''Manga/FlameOfRecca'', possibly as a reference to his more minor Tensho-Iga War but in the manga, his reasoning is still villainous, he heard about the mystical power of the Madogu and wanted to claim them for his own to help him conquer Japan, but the whole Hokage clan chose to hide all the Madogu from him and fight with normal weaponry, resulting the clan's annihilation. At the end of the series [[spoiler: Kurei returns to JidaiGeki Japan and takes his revenge by assassinating Nobunaga at Honnoji (or rather, just helping him commit his planned seppuku), [[GracefulLoser Nobunaga is pretty chill about it and considered it inevitable that Kurei wanted a piece of him]]]].
92* A rowdy young man implied to be Nobunaga appears in the ''Webcomic/HetaliaAxisPowers'' strip "The World of War and the Fool of Owari," in which he tells the anthropomorphic personification of Japan "This is the face of your future ruler." The anthropomorphic personification of Owari is skeptical.
93* Nobunaga is {{gender flip}}ped into a violent redhead with a big sword in ''Anime/BattleGirlsTimeParadox''. She's also one of the main characters, seeking out the pieces of the Crimson Armor to unite Japan. Her [[ChainmailBikini armor]] is largely reminiscent of Comicbook/RedSonja, and she is one of the few portrayals of Nobunaga that is not villainous, wishing to stop the pointless conflict of the Sengoku Period by using the Armor as a vehicle through which she can end the fighting and unify the nation. Voiced by Creator/YukariTamura in the game and Creator/MegumiToyoguchi in the anime.
94* In the historical comedy manga and anime ''Manga/HyougeMono'', Nobunaga is the liege lord of main character Sasuke. He is presented pretty much as he was in life: A very ambitious (and slightly megalomaniac) warlord with designs to rule Japan, and then conquer China and TakeOverTheWorld. He has an interest in western culture, wearing Portugese clothing and citing the myth of the Tower of Babel. He also seems to be highly dismissive of most of his vassals, with the exception of Sasuke whose foolishness amuses him. [[spoiler:He is killed by Hideyoshi at Honno-Ji.]]
95* Another GenderFlip variant occurs in ''Anime/SengokuCollection''. This Nobunaga is a FishOutOfTemporalWater, and a little more naive than the ''Otome'' version. Still portrayed pretty positively, though.
96* ''Another'' GenderFlip: In ''Literature/TheAmbitionOfOdaNobuna'', he became Oda '''Nobuna'''--although her portrayal is a little bit closer to history. The protagonist, [[YouWillBeBeethoven a time traveler who's taken the place of Toyotomi Hideyoshi]], acts as Nobuna's MoralityChain, steering her away from the real-life Nobunaga's more ruthless impulses. And also trying to create a timeline where both Nobuna and Akechi Mitsuhide will survive [[spoiler:which turns out more difficult than anticipated because Mitsuhide has {{yandere}} tendencies and has romantic feelings for both Nobuna ''and'' the protagonist]]. This version is voiced by Creator/KanaeIto in Japanese.
97* ''VideoGame/InazumaEleven'' second series ''GO'' Chrono Stone has the current members of Raimon go back in time to get the power of Oda Nobunaga in order to defeat Protocol Omega 2.0.
98* Nobunaga is the protagonist of ''Anime/NobunagaTheFool'' and he's riding a SuperRobot named "The Fool" while accompanied by Creator/LeonardoDaVinci and UsefulNotes/JoanOfArc who's a {{gender ben|der}}t {{Reincarnation}} of Ranmaru. [[ThisIsYourPremiseOnDrugs Yeah, it's as weird as it sounds.]]
99* In ''Manga/{{Nobunagun}}'', Nobunaga is reincarnated in the modern day as a girl named Shio Ogura, who has a passion for MoreDakka. Nobunaga himself often appears in her dreams or in visions, and the memories often help her figure out new ways to fight.
100* In ''Manga/NobunagaNoChef'', Ken, the main character, becomes Nobunaga's chef after getting thrown back in time from the present day. The Nobunaga here is fairly balanced, an ambitious warlord capable of both kindness and cruelty.
101* In ''Anime/BlackLion'', Nobunaga is actually possessed by alien invaders who equip his armies with high-tech armaments so he can conquer Japan as a beachhead (probably; the backstory isn't covered much).
102* In ''Wrath of the Ninja'', Nobunaga appears to be the chief antagonist for the 3 heroes, conquering Japan with demonic help and seeking to be transformed into a demon himself. [[spoiler:This time, however, there's TheManBehindTheMan, a demon looking to use the bloodshed of war and Nobunaga's cruelty to power the demons themselves, and Nobunaga is just his patsy.]]
103* In ''Anime/NobunagaConcerto'' "Oda Nobunaga" is essentially an entity made up of Saburou (a former high-school student who timeslipped into the Sengoku period and took over the role from the real Oda Nobunaga), and Akechi Mitsuhide (who is in fact the real Oda Nobunaga).
104* An omake chapter in ''Manga/HikaruNoGo'' is dedicated to dramatizing the assassination of Nobunaga (as a school play) by the main characters. The chapter focuses on the ''{{TabletopGame/Go}}'' game played by the ''Go'' Masters Nikkai and Kashio Rigen before Nobunaga on the night before his death. During the game, a triple-ko, an extremely rare position appeared and the game ended in a draw. Because of this, the triple-ko is now considered to be an omen of ill fate.
105* Is one of main characters in ''Manga/NinjaGirlAndSamuraiMaster'', with the main protagonist being a ninja who serves him.
106* He does not make an appearance specifically in ''Manga/RurouniKenshin'', but ArcVillain Shishio Makoto handily serves as a stand-in caricature of his philosophy of SocialDarwinism, glorifying warrior culture, and even his entourage (he has a mistress who is fully supportive of his crueler acts [like certain depictions of his wife No-hime], he has a young apprentice [like Mori Ranmaru], and he even has an ally who tried to be TheStarscream [akin to certain views on UsefulNotes/AkechiMitsuhide]). He even sets up shop in Mt. Hiei, where Nobunaga razed monks and civilians into the fire.
107* In ''Anime/ToukenRanbuHanamaru'', his swords are unusually disdainful of their previous master. He was not kind to them, or to others. However, when [[TimePolice sent back to]] the evening of his death, they do feel a certain melancholy fondness for him.
108* As part of the AlternateHistory of ''Manga/StrikeWitches'', Nobunaga survived the Honnou-ji incident, after which he joins up with Hideyoshi's forces and unifies all of Japan. A semi-official doujin work covers this bit, featuring a HistoricalGenderFlip version of Mori Ranmaru as a Witch who flew Nobunaga out of Honnou-ji.
109* The manga ''Manga/SengokuKomachiKurouTan'' is about a modern day Japanese girl going back in time and being saved/accosted by Oda Nobunaga, who exploits her knowledge of agriculture and other technologies.
110* The ''Franchise/SDGundam'' sub-franchise would get its second character based off of him from the ''SD Gundam World'' series with [[Anime/SDGundamWorldHeroes Nobunaga Gundam Epyon]].
111* ''Manga/OdaCinnamonNobunaga'': Nobunaga is reincarnated as Cinnamon, a Shiba Inu living in modern day Japan and owned by a teenage girl. Other warlords like UsefulNotes/TakedaShingen, UsefulNotes/SanadaYukimura and UsefulNotes/UesugiKenshin are also reincarnated as dogs.
112* ''Anime/{{Yasuke}}'' features Nobunaga in a supporting role in flashback scenes from before his death during the Incident at Honno-ji.
113* ''Nobunaga Teacher's Young Bride'' focuses on a modern schoolteacher descended from and sharing his name with the historical figure, who apparently has the power to reawaken the memories of other figures from the historical Nobunaga's life in ''their'' descendants by touching them.
114* ''Literature/ASaladBowlOfEccentrics'': Sara and Livia are from an alternate world where Nobunaga lived to old age and succeeded in unifying Japan, with his empire and lineage surviving to the present day.
115[[/folder]]
116
117[[folder:Film - Animated]]
118* In the film for ''Manga/GhostSweeperMikami'', both Oda Nobunaga and his vassal blamed for his death, Akechi Mitsuhide, appear. A ghostly Akechi defends his apparent betrayal by explaining that Nosferatu killed the original Oda, transformed himself and took his place, leading to the famed brutality.
119[[/folder]]
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121[[folder:Film - Live-Action]]
122* In Creator/AkiraKurosawa's ''Film/{{Kagemusha}}'', Takeda Shingen, a powerful rival of Nobunaga's (and perhaps a better general), uses a lookalike thief to pretend to be healthy instead of [[spoiler:dead]] in an attempt to discourage an attack on his clan. [[spoiler:Rightfully infuriated, Nobunaga proceeds to decimate the Takeda cavalry led by Shingen's son, [[ReplacementScrappy the hotheaded Takeda Katsuyori]] in the Battle of Nagashino.]]
123* Oda Nobunaga is a key character in the first live-action ''Touken Ranbu'' film, ''Film/ToukenRanbuTheMovie'', who the protagonists are dispatched on a mission to secure the death of during the Honnou-ji Incident after the Historical Retrograde Army try to meddle with it in a bid to change history. [[spoiler: Nobunaga being rescued from his death is what kicks off the main plot of the film]].
124[[/folder]]
125
126[[folder:Literature]]
127* The historical novel ''Literature/{{Taiko}}'' traces the rise of Nobunaga's general Toyotomi Hideyoshi from peasant to general and regent for the Emperor. Nobunaga, as Toyotomi's lord for much of his life, plays a large role. His defining characteristics are ambition and constant fury.
128* ''Literature/TheAdventuresOfSamuraiCat'' tells the epic tale of Miawaro Tomokato's quest to avenge the death of his lord, Odo Nobunaga, who true to form had irritated a lot of people in his youth.
129* Nobunaga is the BigBad in the novel ''Literature/BloodNinja'', set in 1500s Japan.
130* Appears very thinly disguised as Goroda the Dictator in the backstory of ''Literature/{{Shogun}}''. Notably, Mariko is Akechi's daughter [[spoiler:and never, ever forgives "Goroda's" successor for executing her father]].
131[[/folder]]
132
133[[folder:Live Action TV]]
134* A non-evil version in the ''Manga/KamenNoNinjaAkakage'' (''Red Shadow'') live-action Japanese TV series. (Three {{Compilation Movie}}s were released in English as ''Watari''.)
135* Understandably, being a very popular character in Japan, he is a staple of many {{Creator/NHK}} Taiga Dramas. Some notable appearances include the following:
136** ''Kunitori Monogatari'' (国盗り物語, 1973), based on the novel by Ryotaro Shiba. He would share screentime with his father-in-law Saito Dosan (with whom he shares a ruthless reputation on the battlefield) and the man who would kill him, Akechi Mitsuhide. Hideki Takahashi, later a veteran actor of film and television, would portray Nobunaga in one of his earlier roles.
137** ''Nobunaga: King of Zipangu'' (信長 KING OF ZIPANGU, 1992), portrayed by Naoto Ogata. The series shows him as a rebellious son who actively rejects his father's petty-minded bloodshed, chronicling his way towards becoming the remarkable conqueror and "demon king" he will go down in history as.
138** ''Series/ToshiieToMatsu'' (2002) gives a largely sympathetic portrayal, though it doesn't shy away from Nobunaga's worse moments, either. (It helps that the actor portraying him, Takashi Sorimachi, is quite handsome.)
139** ''Gō: Hime-tachi no Sengoku'' (江〜姫たちの戦国〜, 2011). As the uncle of the titular character (and whose conflict with her father Azai Nagamasa led to the latter's death in battle), his actions loom large in her fate and that of her sisters.
140** ''Gunshi Kanbei'' (軍師官兵衛, 2014), portrayed by Yosuke Eguchi. We see him taking in the runaway [[UsefulNotes/ToyotomiHideyoshi Kinoshita Tokichiro]] and gives him many PetTheDog moments, underlying his preference on merit and progressiveness over clan standing. Tokichiro/Hideyoshi's loyalty convinces the titular Kuroda Kanbei of the righteousness of the Oda unification cause, [[WellIntentionedExtremist even as the body count of its conquests pile up]]. At the same time, he is also actively [[BadBoss overworking his generals and demanding very high standards of them]], [[spoiler:to the point of causing an inferiority complex on his successor, dismissing long-time retainers, or even causing them to rebel out of fear (notably Araki Murashige and, obviously, UsefulNotes/AkechiMitsuhide). The series even implies what eventually drives Mitsuhide's rebellion is just how radical Nobunaga's vision is--[[HistoricalVillainUpgrade with him seeking to eliminate the Emperor of Japan from politics entirely]]. Nevertheless, [[DyingMomentOfAwesome he goes down fighting]] and securing himself to commit {{seppuku}}, [[FaceDeathWithDignity satisfied with how his life turned out]].]]
141** ''Kirin ga Kuru'' (麒麟がくる; 2020), portrayed by Shota Sometani. Despite the storyline covering similar ground as ''Kunitori Monogatari,'' the series chose a significantly-psychological take on his character, following him from being "the fool of Owari" towards the hegemon he became--even implying they're [[ProtagonistJourneyToVillain not as unrelated as usually assumed]]. Nobunaga's "foolish antics" is portrayed as him looking at the lives of regular people up-close (not unlike Prince Hal of ''Theatre/HenryIVPart1''), giving him a unique perspective on the governance issues Owari experiences under his less-than-capable father Nobuhide. However, the series also gives him a massive case of WellDoneSonGuy--with much of his subsequent life and political choices being about pleasing those that he latches onto (with his parents unsuccessfully; with his wife No/Kicho, his father-in-law Dosan, and the protagonist Jubei/Mitsuhide, a bit more successful). This search for approval increasingly consumes him as his power grows (with [[TheChainsOfCommanding the pressures and frustrations that comes with it]]). He is eventually left [[LonelyAtTheTop unsatisfied]], [[SanitySlippage paranoid]] [[EvilCannotComprehendGood and truly confused]] when people begin to disapprove of/betray him one by one ([[TruthInTelevision as they historically did]])--culminating in Mitsuhide's treason.
142* In ''Franchise/KamenRider'':
143** A homonculus version of Nobunaga appears in ''Series/KamenRiderOOO''[='=]s first movie. Exactly ''what'' he is is hard to tell - Nobunaga himself revived by Medals, or a Greeed that ''thinks'' it's Oda Nobunaga? He is portrayed as ambition incarnate, but a pretty nice guy to his friends. However, at times, he [[spoiler:turns into his monster form and kills the descendants of those he blames for his death]], and is seemingly unaware of this when not actively engaged in it. Core Medals given to him by Dr. Maki corrupt him into a Greeed-like being that Eiji has to stop. And even then, he's not really stopped, as his Core Medals go on to create an even bigger problem. Oh, and "Nobu-kun" is the first user of the Kamen Rider Birth belt, to boot.
144** ''Film/KamenRiderXKamenRiderGaimAndWizardTheFatefulSengokuMovieBattle'' is set in a parallel Sengoku Jidai where the Kamen Riders are members of warring factions lead by alternate universe versions of historical figures. In reference to the above movie, Nobunaga leads the OOO faction and is portrayed as an alternate version of Akira Date/Kamen Rider Birth, with actress Mao Ueda playing Ranmaru. Nobunaga doesn't get to do all that much since the Honnoji incident happens shortly after the heroes show up, but before he dies he declares [[Series/KamenRiderGaim Kaito Kumon]] his successor, declaring that the young man's ambition is almost as strong as his own.
145*** As an aside, Nobunaga's daughter Chacha and her husband Hideyoshi also appear in the movie, as parallel versions of ''Series/KamenRiderW''[='s=] Akiko Narumi and Ryu Terui/Kamen Rider Accel. Rather than any important historical points, this mainly seems to have been done because the actors were willing to make a cameo and the staff needed a married couple for them to portray.
146** ''Series/KamenRiderGhost'' offers a fairer portrayal of Nobunaga than past ''Rider'' shows. In an early episode, the VictimOfTheWeek is a businessman who idolizes Nobunaga because his ancestor was one of the warlord's trusted men. However, he gets {{Mind Control}}led by the villains, causing him to act like the stereotypical "Demon King" portrayal; Takeru breaks the man free by reminding him that Nobunaga was AFatherToHisMen, represented by the man's prized possession, a signed commendation Nobunaga gave to his ancestor. This ends up awakening the spiritual power in the commendation, allowing the heroes to summon and channel Nobunaga's spirit through a "Ghost Eyecon," a SoulJar-slash-TransformationTrinket in which he resides until called upon. This Eyecon is mostly used by Kamen Rider Specter; its transformation jingle name-drops Okehazama and its main weapon is the rifle, with its FinishingMove creating a line of phantasmal ''tanegashima'' to let Specter act as a one-man firing squad. Nobunaga, as well as all the others ghostly historical figures in the series, is voiced by Creator/TomokazuSeki here.
147*** In the climax of the post-series movie ''Film/KamenRiderGenerationsDrPacmanVsExAidAndGhostWithLegendaryRiders'', Nobunaga says that Takeru's spirit impressed his fellows Hideyoshi and Ieyasu, and together they create the Tenkatoitsu ("World Unifier") Eyecon that grants Takeru an EleventhHourSuperpower form.
148** ''Series/KamenRiderZiO'' uses Nobunaga more than once to parallel the show's protagonist Sougo Tokiwa, who wants to become a king but may or may not ultimately become the EvilOverlord Ohma Zi-O fifty years in the future.
149*** During the ''Kamen Rider OOO'' story arc (of course), Sougo goes to work for the megalomaniacal [[Series/KamenRiderExAid Kuroto Dan]], which makes his erstwhile allies Tsukuyomi and Geiz worry that he's willingly walking the path to become Ohma Zi-O. Later, Sougo's uncle (who has no idea what's happening) tells Tsukuyomi that he's a fan of Nobunaga's; when she asks "But wasn't he a horrible warlord?", the uncle admits that he did do some terrible things, but he also did plenty of good things too, and says that you can't view history from just a single perspective. This inspires Tsukuyomi to trust Sougo, and eventually he reveals that he only followed Kuroto because he wanted to see what a ''bad'' king looks like, so he would know what ''not'' to do when he became TheGoodKing later on.
150*** During the ''Over Quartzer'' movie near the end of the series, the heroes time travel to the Sengoku era and meet Nobunaga himself. It turns out that he was a cowardly womanizer (basically, he never grew out of his "Fool of Owari" phase), and all the military victories attributed to him were actually won by [[YouWillBeBeethoven Geiz while posing as Nobunaga]].
151[[/folder]]
152
153[[folder:Tabletop RPG]]
154* ''TabletopGame/YuGiOh'': Shi En and the rest of the Legendary Six Samurai are based off Oda Nobunaga's life story.
155* ''[[TabletopGame/InfiniteWorlds GURPS: Infinite Worlds]]'': In the Shikaku-Mon timeline, alterations in the dynastic successions in Europe result in Portugal being able to focus more of its energy on colonization and conversion. More Jesuit missionaries in Japan result in more Christian converts and more support for Nobunaga, who lives long enough to finish the conquest of Japan himself and avert the ''sakoku'' (closing of the country to outsiders). Japan adopts Western technology with a vengeance, [[SpaceFillingEmpire colonizes its neighbors]], and ends up top dog in a cyberpunk-flavored world.
156[[/folder]]
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158[[folder:Toys]]
159* The ''Toys/SDSengokudenBushinKourinHen'' toyline is dedicated to making Franchise/SDGundam[=s=] based on known Warring States characters. Oda is naturally the first to be released.
160[[/folder]]
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162[[folder:Video Games]]
163* The setting of ''VideoGame/AkaSeka'' being a FantasyCounterpartCulture lumping multiple eras of Japanese history together, of course he shows up, albeit a person with [[NoHistoricalFiguresWereHarmed no relations to the historical Nobunaga]]. His underlings include Ranmaru, Mitsuhide (who, in this universe, shows no sign of betraying him now or any time soon), UsefulNotes/IshidaMitsunari, Takenaka Hanbē and Kuroda Kanbē.
164* In the ''VideoGame/{{Onimusha}}'' game series Nobunaga is mortally wounded by an arrow during his great victory at Okehazama, but makes a deal with the [[{{Satan}} demon king]] to return to life as a demon and conquer Japan on behalf of the demons.
165* In ''VideoGame/KessenIII'', Nobunaga does a rare turn as the protagonist, depicted in much more idealized fashion, making the traitor whose attack would kill him the antagonist, while using relatively conventional depictions of the rest of the cast. (Unlike ''Samurai Warriors'' however it actually deals with the shogunate at the time.) This game surprisingly contains a lot of TakeThat to treatments toward Nobunaga in general fiction...
166** He appears in the first ''Kessen'' in a cutscene, also in a non-evil depiction, as a vision of the idealistic Tokugawa Ieyasu speaking of his dream of a unified Japan. WellIntentionedExtremist [[UtopiaJustifiesTheMeans of sorts?]]
167* ''VideoGame/SamuraiWarriors'' has Nobunaga as one of many playable characters, voiced by [[Creator/JurotaKosugi Juurouta Kosugi]]. He has a reputation for brutality and is called "The Demon King" as a ''nom de guerre''. Also, the ruff of his armor tends to [[PerpetualMolt shed black feathers everywhere]], he's using a black lightsaber as a weapon, and his victory line is literally an EvilLaugh. However, despite his [[ObviouslyEvil incredibly sinister appearance]], the series as a whole tends to paint him as more of a [[AntiVillain ruthless]] [[AntiHero pragmatist]] willing to do [[WellIntentionedExtremist whatever it takes]] to unite Japan and bring about peace than a genuinely evil bastard, mirroring the complex re-evaluation he has begun to receive in modern times. Nobunaga further seems to get less evil with each incarnation, to the point that Magoichi Saika, a man who loathes him with a passion, finds the rule of Nobunaga preferable to [[NecessaryEvil the chaos that happens after his death]]. Heck, in [[VideoGame/WarriorsOrochi the first installment of the crossover]], Nobunaga is practically the BigGood, uniting humanity behind him into a single Resistance Army to defeat the Serpent King.
168** His love life is similarly complex. His wife wavers between wanting to kill for him and wanting to kill him (their marriage was a setup for his assassination, but she has decided to forego going through with it until she sees what he plans to do), and his relationship with his pageboy, Mori Ranmaru, is much less platonic in the original Japanese. Nobunaga finds ''both'' of them attractive in his quotes, making him a rare video game bisexual male protagonist.
169** He also gets [[HoYay paired up]] ironically in the second game with Akechi Mitsuhide, his future killer. However, in his ending he actually [[spoiler:survives, killing Mitsuhide instead and shows that he is in fact capable of feelings of remorse and regret]].
170*** Also from his ending in the third game, he openly admits that no man could have whatever he wants, and that he knows very well that his age will be overwritten by future rulers. Thus, he's also notably a lot more non-nonchalant and not as stubborn for when the age starts to shift. By the fourth game, he practically ''wants'' to be surpassed just so his rule can have a proper foundation for a more powerful ruler to make use of.
171** The fifth game, which is a SoftReboot, shows a younger version of him, voiced by afore-mentioned Nobunaga Shimazaki ([[CastingGag apparently as a pun because both of them obviously has the same given name]]). This reboot would focus more on his life starting with his "The Fool of Owari" days until his death in Honnoji.
172** Again, via a more prior Creator/{{Koei|Tecmo}} proxy Nobunaga indeed appears again in one of their games. A rare case of a non-evil Oda Nobunaga: the strategy video game ''VideoGame/NobunagasAmbition'', which lets you play as Nobunaga or any of three dozen other daimyo trying to claim the Japanese crown. Nobunaga generally has the best attributes of all of them, though.
173*** In the series' crossover with ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'' and another Koei-proxy title, known as ''VideoGame/PokemonConquest'' in America, Nobunaga is one of the main antagonists. His badassery is not lost here, as he gets to control [[spoiler:not one, but ''two'' [[OlympusMons Legendary]] [[OurDragonsAreDifferent dragons]] (first [[VideoGame/PokemonBlackAndWhite Zekrom]], then [[VideoGame/PokemonRubyAndSapphire Shiny Rayquaza]]) through the course of the game]]. Oddly, this is one of his most ''positive'' portrayals, given that his entire motive is eventually revealed to be [[spoiler:stopping conflict before people grow to view their Pokémon as little more than tools. The final story teams him up with the player character as the eponymous "Two Heroes of Ransei"]].
174* ''VideoGame/NinjaGaiden'' identifies him as the original patron of the Hayabusa clan, funding the construction of their [[HiddenElfVillage Hidden Ninja Village]] to defend the sacred peak of Mt. Fuji from evil forces.
175* Nobunaga is the final boss of the Platform/NeoGeo fighting game ''VideoGame/NinjaMastersHaoNinpoCho'', complete with a pair of flaming swords and a possessed demonic cape.
176* In ''VideoGame/{{Inindo}}'', Nobunaga is the BigBad, and survives the attack on the Honnoji. But through [[HundredPercentCompletion careful play]], he can die when historically supposed to (Shocks!) and be replaced by a [[ReplacementScrappy random guy who appears for no reason with his demon-pet]]. Woowee!
177* The ''Taikou Risshiden'' RPG/strategy series, where Hideyoshi is the main character, has Nobunaga shown as an magnificent lord defying the norm by trusting a peasant-born warrior.
178* ''VideoGame/ShogunTotalWar'' has a non-evil Nobunaga; in the linear campaign the player gets to command several of his more famous battles. The sequel, ''VideoGame/TotalWarShogun2'' also has Oda Nobunaga eventually be born into the Oda clan in its main campaign and ascend as its daimyo (though in typical ''VideoGame/TotalWar'' fashion, the player may allow AlternateHistory to happen, like declaring another individual as heir to the clan's leadership). Additionally, many of the game's historical battles depicts famous victories of Oda Nobunaga (the battles of Okehazama, Kizugawaguchi, Anegawa, Nagashima, and the final siege of Nagashima [[note]]though this one is particularly AlternateHistory as it depicts the Ikko-Ikki forces inside escaping the fire and routing the Oda's army[[/note]]) and Nobunaga is the unique general for the Oda clan in multiplayer.
179* Nobunaga makes a very brief appearance at the beginning of a historical campaign mission in ''VideoGame/AgeOfEmpiresII: The Conquerors'', in which he is assassinated; a ''very'' close look at his sprite shows that he in fact commits {{seppuku}} in his death animation sometimes. The player then receives control of Hideyoshi's troops and the goal is to destroy three castles in Kyoto to avenge Nobunaga's death.
180* Nobunaga gets referenced in ''VideoGame/SoulCalibur'' as the one who cut off Yoshimitsu's arm, or at least was there when it happened, and is the one responsible for Yoshimitsu's DoomedHometown.
181* Oda Nobunaga is the Japanese leader in ''VideoGame/{{Civilization}} V''. His skill (Bushido) allows damaged units [[CriticalExistenceFailure to be able to fight on as if they had full strength.]] In terms of his personality, he's one of the most expansionist-minded leaders, he focuses heavily on military training and air power, and he is ''[[ChronicBackstabbingDisorder never]]'' to be trusted.
182* Nobunaga in ''Ikusagami'' inverts this, [[spoiler:plays it straight and then inverts again. Nobunaga is shown to orchestrate battles solely to study Aoi Yasaka, Inugami and the demons and shows a borderline obsession towards them, but Mitsuhide Akechi takes the final boss role.]]
183* In the HGame ''Sengoku Rance'', Nobunaga is shown to be a very compassionate leader and loves his sister dearly. His genocidal tendencies are caused by being possessed by a literal demon.
184* In ''VideoGame/SakuraWarsSoLongMyLove'', Nobunaga appears as the immortal demon lord BigBad. (Ranmaru, meanwhile, is TheDragon and appears as a bunny boy [[CreepyCrossdresser in a dress]].)
185* In ''VideoGame/RoboAleste'', Nobunaga is revealed to be the reincarnation of Lucifer, who will try to destroy the world by revealing his true form. Or so Astaros claims; the ending isn't quite clear.
186* Nobunaga serves as something akin to a BigBad, if not EvilOverlord to the max in ''VideoGame/SengokuBasara''. Though being a ''VideoGame/DynastyWarriors''-esque game defeating him isn't necessarily part of any individual character's story. He's about as stereotypical a villain as you can find, with SpikesOfVillainy and EvilLaugh and speeches aplenty, and little goal beyond "kill/conquer everything", and is voiced by ''Creator/NorioWakamoto'' of all people to drive the point home. He's playable in all the games currently released, fighting in [[TinTyrant European full plate]] and wielding [[SwordAndGun a longsword and a blunderbluss]] and [[CastingAShadow drawing upon dark demonic powers for his specials]]. Unusually for a game set in the Sengoku Period, pretty much everyone associated with the Oda Clan (including his killer Akechi Mitsuhide) are evil, with the exception of his sister Oichi who's a TragicVillain, or possibly his demoted subordinate, Shibata Katsuie (who's too apathetic to do much evil).
187* In ''VideoGame/DeaeTonosamaAppareIchiban'' Nobunaga (or "[=NObunaga=]" as the game spells it) is revived as a missile-shooting cyborg by Martians who want to rule the Earth.
188* In ''VideoGame/{{Payday 2}}'', the player can steal his armor during the Shadow Raid job.
189* The {{Franchise/Nasuverse}} version originated from ''Koha-Ace'', a gag manga, which subjected Nobunaga to its notorious GenderFlip, turning him into a female with a [[TheNapoleon Napoleon complex]] as a parody of the franchise's tendency to do this to famous historical figures. She later popped up in the mobile game ''VideoGame/FateGrandOrder'', a spin-off of ''VisualNovel/FateStayNight'', voiced by Creator/RieKugimiya. That being said, she is also one of the most powerful limited-edition Servants a player can command in the game, with her Noble Phantasm summoning [[MoreDakka "three thousand muskets"]] [[BeamSpam to lay waste to her opponents with]]. According to her official materials, the clan elders tried to [[HeirClubForMen pass leadership over to her younger brother]], but Nobunaga's tactical brilliance, charisma and ruthlessness allowed her wrestle and maintain control for herself (alongside killing those dissenters). Nobunaga later would get a Berserker form [[MsFanservice in a swimsuit]] that somehow [[FourthWallObserver became even more of a gag character]], wielding a fire-spewing ax that's also a guitar and summons a giant burning skeleton. She then got an Avenger form, which combines the above gag-based Archer form, and when she ascends to the second form, she [[GenderFlip becomes a MALE]] (albeit one with a CrossdressingVoice) and when she ascends to the third form, she [[GenderFlip goes back into being female]], but this time as a tall woman with flaming red hair and [[DemonKingNobunaga much more ruthless and using the supernatural power like a demon more.]] Her niece Chacha and younger brother Nobukatsu/Nobuyuki appear as a Berserker and another Archer.
190** As another gag of the series, Nobunaga wasn't the only Oda figure that got included as a Servant in ''Koha-Ace''. Who's the next one? One might think it would be Mori Ranmaru, but it was actually Mori ''Nagayoshi'', his short-lived brother that died at Komaki-Nagakute known for his reckless spirit. Perhaps that was why he got the Berserker class. The fourth GUDAGUDA event also featured Shibata Katsuie as an unplayable Berserker, being a hulking [[TheJuggernaut juggernaut]] of [[OldRetainer an old man.]] Also hilariously, the 4th GUDAGUDA event also featured 'Real Deal Nobunaga', as in, the actual non-genderflipped, less bombastic Oda Nobunaga with his common portrait ([[https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/odacollage3.png The left one over here]]) and [[CensoredForComedy his head blackened out]], giving the Nasuverse version a temporary existential crisis. Ranmaru would end up being included in the sixth GUDAGUDA event under the title 'Mysterious Ranmaru X', as a parody of 'Mysterious Heroine X' parodying the SeriesMascot Altria Pendragon, and Ranmaru gets a case of AmbiguousGender due to the usual popular media not being able to settle on GenderFlip or DudeLooksLikeALady on Ranmaru in general: Mysterious Ranmaru X is referred as female, but other Servants recognize the Proper Human History version of Ranmaru to be male. Yasuke is also briefly mentioned in the sixth GUDAGUDA event during a flashback to Nobunaga's final moments, where he was fighting Akechi's forces in a last stand while Nobu gave Ranmaru the orders to take her head and hide it.
191** Nobunaga later appears in ''Webcomic/FateTypeRedline'', except she is played dead seriously.
192* ''VideoGame/{{Nioh}}'' establishes Nobunaga as a major antagonist alongside BigBad Edward Kelley, [[SpoilerOpening as the opening CG cinematic sets the tone for the game]]. Although the events of ''Nioh'' are set before the Battle of Sekigahara, years after Nobunaga has died, Kelley resurrects him near the climax of the story, hoping to reignite CivilWar with the help of the most bloodthirsty, brutal warlord Japan has even seen. [[spoiler:However, Nobunaga is incensed he's BackFromTheDead, calling out Kelley for doing so, as he isn't interested in forcing the land through another conflict to rebuild something whose time is past, returning to the afterlife immediately]]. ''VideoGame/Nioh2'', on the other hand, chronicles Nobunaga during his younger days.
193* ''VisualNovel/IkemenSengoku'' depicts Nobunaga as a deeply flawed but ultimately sympathetic AntiHero (and potential love interest for the female main character) who has quite understandably earned the hatred of multiple characters for his ruthless killing of countless people but also has just as understandably earned the loyalty and admiration of multiple other characters with his charisma, ToughLove for his men, and [[WellIntentionedExtremist genuinely well-intentioned ambition]] to create a world in which no one has to suffer from poverty or class-based discrimination. The main character, who traveled back in time from the modern day to Sengoku-era Japan, has to reconcile her image of him as an evil tyrant from her history classes with the man who can be cold and terrifying but also unexpectedly kind and caring, and ultimately decides that while she can't agree with all of his actions or beliefs, she can see how [[DarkAndTroubledPast his brutal upbringing]] made him believe that such actions were necessary for the greater good of Japan and understand why other characters like Ieyasu and Hideyoshi are so devoted to him.
194* In ''VideoGame/DragaliaLost'', the faraway nation of Hinomoto is a FantasyCounterpartCulture to feudal Japan; composed of twelve clans themed around the EasternZodiac. Nobunaga is [[GenderFlip a young woman]] who leads the Horse Clan and is Mitsuhide's best friend. She's shown to be a brash BloodKnight and has a strong disregard for cultural traditions -- for example, befriending Mitsuhide despite longstanding tension between their clans. Though it's suggested that the game's Nobunaga is actually a descendant of "the" Nobunaga, since the tension started when Mitsuhide's ancestor betrayed Nobunaga's.
195* In the ''Franchise/AssassinsCreed'' series, Nobunaga was a puppet of the Assassins who used him as part of their proxy wars with the Templars until he obtained a [[LostTechnology Sword of Eden]], thus [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness necessitating his death]].
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199* Travis of ''Podcast/FourPlayerPodcast'' has a loud, blood-thirsty alter ego that he uses sometimes in games of ''Franchise/{{Halo}}'' named Nobunaga. Whether or not he's related at all to Oda Nobunaga has yet to be confirmed.
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