Follow TV Tropes

Following

Land Shark

Go To

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cl9pq4puyaec1s7.jpg

Sharks are fearsome creatures. With their rows upon rows of sharp teeth and their ability to move at incredible speed, it's natural for many to treat them as a fearsome threat in any setting. Well, not quite any setting — with ordinary sharks, just fleeing ashore is enough to take you out of harm's way. Thus, the realm of fiction has unleashed a whole new twist on the classic predator: sharks, but on land!

In many settings, land sharks have adapted their bodies to burrow straight through the earth like a normal shark swims through water. While they can exist elsewhere, land sharks are often associated with areas that feature a lot of open ground, such as hill-dotted plains or deserts. In these environments, they often act like the ambush predators they are in real life, creeping up on prey before bursting through the ground to pounce.

While land sharks often have animalistic body plans, some depictions have them go the extra mile by becoming humanoid. In this state, depictions of land sharks sometimes forego swimming through the ground thanks to their newfound limbs giving them bipedal movement. As such, Shark Man exists as a Subtrope, with their design sometimes being used for land sharks when fully out of the ground. Sometimes, the Land Shark opts for a body plan between the naturalistic and the humanoid, in which they walk on their tailfins.

A Subtrope of Threatening Shark (which itself folds into Fiendish Fish) and Terrestrial Sea Life. Comparable to the Sand Worm, a similar creature archetype throughout fiction.

Not to be confused with rich jerks that buy up land to perpetuate Villainous Gentrification, Community-Threatening Construction, and other unpleasantries. Or the brand of beer.

If the shark is capable of flying or levitating above the ground, see Flying Seafood Special.


Examples

    open/close all folders 

    Anime & Manga 
  • Gyo: Downplayed, given the fact its treatment isn't exclusive to them. After being exposed to a virus, a shark was among numerous fish converted into gas-spreading zombies, with a mechanical device allowing them to walk on land. Even if it needs a pair of spider-like prosthetics to move, its spread of noxious fumes nevertheless make it a dangerous predator.
  • The Seven Deadly Sins: Sandcrawlers are carnivorous desert monsters capable of swimming through ground as if it were water and which look like hybrids of seals, sharks and amphibians. They're around the size of a person at their smallest and typically prey on small creature and thus are considered low on the danger level. However, they are very territorial and attack anything that enters their domain, such as people and horses. Furthermore, they can grow very big; those that mature into full-blown adults are known as Earthcrawlers, can be dozens of feet long and are extremely formidable. There have even been documented cases of not only buildings but also Tyrant Dragons in the stomachs of the larger ones, which exceeded 100 feet in size. Earthcrawlers can even get so big that they can easily swallow a regular sized giant in one bite with room to spare.

    Comic Books 
  • Marvel Comics: A bio-engineered variant of the archetype was once used by M.O.D.O.K. Superior to attack Santa Monica, with them taking the appearance of sharks with canid limbs. While a pack of them was merely used as minions for the villain, the same can not be said for Jeff, an infant member of their race that was adopted by Gwenpool. While ultimately a minor character, his extreme cuteness has awarded them a fair amount of breakout success, up to including a starring role in his own webcomic.

    Fan Works 
  • Anyone: While never actually seen, a few sharks in Australia have developed quirks that let them leave the sea, talk to tourists, and break into houses.
  • Dungeon Keeper Ami: "Backfire — Part 1" reveals that undead sharks can go on land. However, their effectiveness is unstated and likely low.
  • Hyrule Conquest: The Zola faction's sludge sharks are sharks made out of mud that can walk around on land.
  • Pokemon: Shadow of Time: Emphasis is placed on Gible's status as a land-shark, to the extent that the Jaws theme plays whenever he is digging through the ground.

    Films — Animated 
  • BoBoiBoy: The Movie: J-Rex appears as a mechanical hybrid of a T. rex and a shark note , with a shark's body and a T. rex's limbs. The Tengkotak gang dispatch it from their spaceship to dispose of the heroes who followed them to the floating island.
  • The Croods: A New Age: When the Punch Monkeys are transporting Grug, Guy, and Phil back to their lair, they pass through a canyon populated by Land Sharks, creatures that resemble a cross between a shark and a crocodile (having legs, tusk-like fangs, and spiny scutes on their backs).

    Films — Live-Action 
  • The titular threat of two different films of the same name, with both being bio-engineered beings who were unleashed onto the public to become typical shark movie threats. Notably, neither of the films has the shark sprout limbs, instead having them swim through the ground and breathe air. The 2020 film also has it gradually mutate into a Kaiju.
  • Sand Sharks: A group of prehistoric sand sharks appear as the main antagonists.
  • Snow Monster vs. Ice Shark is a Behemoth Battle movie where a snow-based gargantuan shark fights a yeti.
  • Snow Sharks takes the finned terrors and instead has them swim through the snow to attack unsuspecting humans. Somewhat, more justified than many examples as rather than flesh and blood sharks, they're ancient guardian spirits.

    Literature 
  • After Man: A Zoology of the Future: One of the animals depicted is a tunnelling sand predator known as a desert shark, although it's actually a mammal descended from something like a shrew. In appearance it resembles a naked mole-rat, but with a shark's head shape and teeth. They swim through the sand with their strong, paddle-shaped limbs and feed on rodents whose burrows their track down by smell.
  • Slimer, by John Brosnan, centers around "Charlie", a mutated shapeshifting great white shark. By the time the main characters encounter him, he's a Shark Man who can change into a fully human form, but early on, he was a more conventional shark who could climb out of the water to attack his victims.
  • Snow Shark is about a seemingly ravenous man-made shark designed by the military to attack its victims in snowy terrains. It ends up accidentally being released into public territory that just so happens to be only a few miles away from a heavily populated snow lodge.

    Live-Action TV 
  • Hercules: The Legendary Journeys: These turn up twice:
    • "War Wounds": King Iphicles imprisons some angry war veterans in an "escape-proof" prison that was built on a desert island, and the desert is infested with sand sharks.
    • "Mercenary": Hercules is stranded on a desert island with a criminal named Derk. While traveling across the island, they are attacked repeatedly by voracious predators called "sand rays".
  • Power Rangers Ninja Storm: One of Vexacus' signature moves involves summoning a giant land shark, which he rides on as it tears through the ground toward his enemies.
  • Saturday Night Live: A recurring gag involves the aptly named Landshark. Originally made as a parody of the Jaws series, the series of shorts involves the creature tricking people (mostly young women) into opening their doors, only to be instantly devoured by it.
  • Ultraman Tiga: Subverted with Geozark. While it at first seems to be a Kaiju-sized land shark with a drill-like snout, it is later revealed that the monster is a robot, having been built to excavate the tomb of Evil Tiga and Gardi.

    Tabletop Games 
  • Dungeons & Dragons:
    • In one of the first instances to represent this as an independent species, there is a species of monsters known as bulettes, shark-like beasts with armored bodies. A widely-feared predator, bulettes burrow through the ground in search of sound vibrations. Once it senses one, the bulette will leap out and devour their target, liquefying their bodies with their strong stomach acid.
    • Meanwhile, more traditional sand sharks can be found both in the Dark Sun campaign setting and make the jump to the main game in its fifth edition.
  • Warhammer 40,000: The death world Miral is home to carnivorous jungle-dwelling creatures named Land Sharks, whose description makes them look like eight-meter-long eyeless sharks with prehensile fins. They "swim" through loose soil and undergrowth, their teeth can slice through ceramite armor, and are quite stealthy. Colonel Straken of the Catachan Jungle Fighters was once attacked by one while tracking an Aeldari patrol; it tore off his right arm, only for him to (reportedly) tear off its own throat with his own teeth in return (skeptics believe it's a metaphor for using a Catachan Fang, the most common type of combat blades among Catachan regiments). The incident is the reason why he has bionic prosthetics replacing his right arm, shoulder and the right half of his chest, earning him the nickname "Iron Hand".

    Toys 
  • Transformers:
    • Rippersnapper of the Terrorcons turns into a shark with limbs that allow him to walk on land without issue.
    • Overbite of the Seacons also turns into a shark with limbs, albeit one who's specialized in fighting underwater.
    • Sea Phantom from Beast Wars II also turns into a shark with limbs, being a redeco and repaint of G1 Overbite.

    Video Games 
  • Armed and Dangerous, features a Land Shark Gun, a weapon that fires out sharks which swim through the ground with a Shark Fin of Doom in search of enemies, popping from beneath them and eating them.
  • Deep Rock Galactic: While Nayaka Trawlers don't look much like sharks beyond their "snout" and a vague dorsal fin (actually a grasper in this case), they fulfill the same ecological and gameplay niche as a regular land shark by being an ambush predator that sifts through raw sandstone at extremely high speeds. Rather than biting your limbs off, however, Trawlers just grab on and let the stone fragments they're plowing through do the rest.
  • League of Legends: Rek'Sai and her species, the Xer'Sai, are sand-dwelling predators that borrow a lot of traits from sharks such as sharp teeth, dorsal fins, and an intense carnivorous appetite. Traveling the Shuriman deserts is akin to swimming in shark-infested waters.
  • The Legend of Zelda:
    • The Legend of Zelda: Spirit Tracks: Malgyorg are sand-colored sharks with armored heads that can swim through sand. They are encountered in the Sand Realm, where they attack the Spirit Train in groups of three.
    • The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild: While a bit more whale- and salamander-like than most depictions, the Moldugas take hints of the archetype as well, being found swimming through areas of the Gerudo Desert, where they burrow rapidly through the sand and attack anything that they find walking on the surface. The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom reveals that the ancient Gerudo once used them in warfare as well, with Ganondorf using several of them in the hopes of decimating Hyrule through a stampede.
  • Might and Magic: A card featuring a sand shark appeared in the defunct online card game Might & Magic: Duel of Champions as a usable neutral creature card.
  • Monster Hunter: Multiple monsters in the series provide shark-like beasts for the player to hunt, all of which are dependent on the area they are found in.
    • Cephalos/Cephadrome are Piscine Wyverns resembling a cross of a fish and a Diplocaulus, with finlike wings. Cephali are the lighter-skinned juveniles, while Cephadromes are the darker-skinned adults. They swim through the desert sands in coordinated packs, hunting for prey up on the surface.
    • Ukanlos is a huge flightless wyvern that can use a swim attack after digging through the ground, during which only its dorsal plates are visible. It can also track its targets during this move, making it very difficult to avoid.
    • Monster Hunter 4: Zamites and their adult form, the Zamtrios, are sharklike Amphibians that live in the tundra and burrow rapidly ice. 4 Ultimate introduces a subspecies with stripes like a tiger's who roams the desert sands instead. In battle, they like to rapidly burrow into the ice/ground and then drill up under a Hunter's feet.
    • Monster Hunter: World: Iceborne: Beotodus is a shark-like Piscine Wyvern that lives in the tundra, where it swims through deep snow banks in search of prey.
  • Pokémon: Debuting in Generation IV, the Dragon/Ground-type Gible line fits the archetype down to the letter, blending elements of sharks with dinosaurs, dragons, and jets to create a truly intimidating creature. Special mention goes to the final evolution of the line, Garchomp, who is capable of running at sonic speeds, swimming through the earth, and flight, doing as such to maximize its efforts towards hunting prey.
  • Ratchet & Clank: Sandsharks appear in some games (Ratchet & Clank (2002), its 2016 remake and Ratchet & Clank: Rift Apart) as small, orange, bipedal creatures with no eyes and lots of sharp teeth that can swim through the terrain. There's also a cosmetic skin in Ratchet: Deadlocked called the LandShark.
  • Skylanders: A lifeguard of the dirt seas turned boxer, Terrafin (alongside his summons, the Terrabites) is a dirt shark, a species of bipedal shark solely adapted to swimming through dirt. Other dirt sharks also serve as allies, such as Sharpfin and his workers, aiding in mechanical work.
  • Sonic Frontiers: SHARK is a shark-like guardian that can swim/burrow in the sands of Ares Island, and comes up when there are any passersby.
  • Subnautica: Played With regarding the Sandshark. While it is an underwater creature, it ambushes prey by burrowing into the ocean floor and jumping out when prospective prey passes by.
  • Super Epic The Entertainment War features humanoid land sharks as one of the game's enemies, burrowing out of the ground in an attempt to bite Tan Tan.
  • Temtem: Magmis and Mastione look like anthropomorphic hammerhead sharks, but they're Fire-types that live in a volcano. However, Mastione was given the Water type as well in an update.
  • Terraria:
    • Found in the Desert biome in the game's Hardmode, Sand Sharks is a hostile monster that appear during sandstorms, lunging towards the player from within the sand. Variants of the monster appear in the three corrupting biomes as well, warping the beings into becoming shark-like abominations.
    • The game mod Terraria Calamity takes things up a notch with the Great Sand Shark, which appears as one of the game's many bosses.
  • Tiny Tina's Wonderlands: A common enemy in the beach sections of the game are land sharks called seawargs, which come in different sizes, shapes, and even elements (fire, lightning, poison, etc.).
  • Xenoblade Chronicles: Appearing from Xenoblade Chronicles 2 onward, the Aligo are semi-aquatic and often aggressive shark-like creatures who have two massive arms instead of side fins.

    Web Animation 
  • Dingo Doodles: Beasts called sharkhounds that are sharks with dogs' legs exist in the Fools Gold series of videos. The Druid Gothi owns one named Jawbone, who acts as her Familiar.
  • The Nightly News at Nine: One of the people in New Block City that reporter Steve Deepsea interviews is a Legshark, a shark that walks on land with two legs. After the Legshark eats Steve, Phil gives it his job.

    Web Videos 
  • Pop Cross Studios: In The Beast Chronicler (the first Multiverse Tale set in the world of Tayrun Jaanavar), the first creature Christian draws is a Finwalker, a 16-foot tall humanoid shark with fully-developed arms and legs (and yes, despite its name, it uses those legs to walk on land). The Finwalker is amphibious and can spend up to a day on land before it needs to return to the water, but since the individual Finwalker we meet in this story has bonded with a BioMech (a symbiotic Mechanical Lifeform that enhances whatever it bonds with), it can spend even longer out of water. The Finwalker in question is not native to the region Tayrun finds it in, just like the Dire Tiger-Rhinoceros it happens to be fighting.

    Western Animation 
  • Aladdin: The Series: Season 1's episode "Raiders of the Lost Shark" has the protagonists meet Captain Merc, a captain of a flying ship who has been hunting a shark that lives in the sands of the desert. They decide to help him hunt down the animal as it is threatening Agrabah. They eventually succeed, but Captain Merc releases the creature again so he can continue hunting it. The shark is later Killed Off for Real by a tribe of Rat People in Season 2's "Beast or Famine".
  • Be Cool, Scooby-Doo!: "Some Fred Time" features Dorsal Foot, a striped shark with legs and scythe-like claws, as its main antagonist.
  • In the Danger Mouse episode "Heavy Duty," Dr. Crumhorn creates a shark food that allows sharks to traverse solid land. He sends them on a mission to devour DM's pillar box headquarters and its contents. DM discovers the sharks' Achilles heel: they shatter into pieces when colliding with another hard surface.
  • Eek! The Cat: Sharky is a shark-dog hybrid that lives next door to Eek and usually torments him by trying to bite him.
  • The Legend of Korra: In "Long Live the Queen", Korra, Asami, and the crew of an airship are stranded in the Si Wong Desert. Their predicament is made much worse by the fact they are beset by a gargantuan sand shark. Typical of animals in the Avatar universe, it's a Mix-and-Match Critter resembling a cross between a great white shark and a sarcastic fringehead.
  • Lilo & Stitch: The Series: Gantu is frequently mistaken by locals as a Land Shark.
  • Onyx Equinox: The guardian of the fifth gate is a huge four-legged shark.
  • Sharkdog: The titular Sharkdog, as well as Hammerhead, Megamouth, and Sausage, are all shark-dog hybrids who can walk on land. Sharkdog himself is shown to be able to burrow underground in the first episode alone.
  • Street Sharks: If the name didn't already give it away, the cartoon is about four brothers turned into criminal-fighting, shark-human hybrids.
  • Total Drama: Revenge of the Island: The campers, especially Scott, are often menaced by a mutant shark named Fang who has gained arms, legs, and the ability to breathe air as a result of the dumping of nuclear waste on the island.

    Real Life 
  • This video, which shows a shark swimming in someone's backyard after a hurricane-induced flood.
  • Downplayed by the epaulette shark. While still very much a water-dwelling animal, it is capable of surviving on land for up to two hours, and can crawl about on shore. Luckily, it's only about three feet long.

 
Feedback

Video Example(s):

Top

Street Sharks

Street Sharks (1994-1997) was an animated series about four teenage boys whose father is kidnapped by a rival scientist named Dr. Paradigm and transformed into a monster. When they attempt to rescue him, Dr. Paradigm transforms them into anthropomorphic sharks. In their first battle, Dr. Paradigm is injected with the same chemical mixture intended for the sharks' kooky-but-genius sidekick, giving him the ability to transform into a piranha monster when angry. It causes severe drama, because the sharks are then painted as the villains and the villain made the city hero, whose dream it is to mutate everyone into fish people.

How well does it match the trope?

5 (5 votes)

Example of:

Main / SharkMan

Media sources:

Report