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WHY CAN'T I FIND MY WAY OUT OF THIS MAAAAAZE?!?!?!

"'Moo'. Are you happy now?"
Tauren Male, World of Warcraft

Talking bulls or bull-men, especially those who stand on two feet (usually hooves, though not always). They tend to take strength- and toughness-based characteristics, often being either a Mighty Glacier or a Lightning Bruiser, but rarely a Fragile Speedster or Glass Cannon.

They tend to wield axes, as a kind of ancient waraxe called the labrys was strongly associated with the Minotaur's legendary home of Crete, and no self-respecting labyrinth level is complete without one of these as a Boss Battle. They're mostly carnivorous and man-eating, despite having an herbivore's head, as the original Minotaur was explicitly a man-eater.

Minotaurs are often savage, Always Chaotic Evil monsters. If they've given a more sympathetic portrayal, you can expect them to be Proud Warrior Race Guys. In this case their horns emphasize their barbaric nature. They are often included among the Standard Fantasy Races, typically as members of The Horde.

Physically, minotaurs tend to be depicted as much bigger and stronger than humans. Besides having bull heads, many also have bovine hooves at the end of their legs. Notably, the mythical version was depicted as an otherwise normal human with the head of a bull. The concept of depicting minotaurs as having bovine hooves instead of human legs and feet is something that developed (or at least became prevalent) in modern fantasy fiction.

This trope goes all the way back to the Gud-alim of Mesopotamian Mythology, so it's Older Than Dirt. The Greek myth of the man-eating Minotaur, specifically, was the Trope Maker in western culture, and has directly or indirectly inspired most of the examples below. The classical Minotaur of Greek, Etruscan and Roman myth was a unique figure instead of a whole species of beings — "Minotaur" was a title meaning "Bull of Minos", after the king who built the Labyrinth. Other than that, the Minotaur was either not given a name or, more rarely, was called "Asterion" or "Asterios". Some modern works that go for the single-individual interpretation sometimes use these names as well.

Compare Brutish Bulls, as minotaurs are often portrayed as aggressive, violent or generally barbarous creatures. See also Horn Attack and Bullfight Boss.


Examples:

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    Anime & Manga 
  • 3×3 Eyes: During the second arc, a bull-headed, one-horned demon belonging to Zhou Gui's squad attacks Yakumo. Not only he can use a sword, but he also controls the fire Juuma Huo Zhao (Fire Claws), but is eventually slain by Yakumo's Tu Zhao (Earth Claws).
  • Berserk: The Apostle form of Nosferatu Zodd is a giant minotaur with a tiger's face and gigantic bat wings.
  • Bleach: Yylfordt Grantz, when he releases his Zanpakutō, Del Toro. It greatly enlarges his upper body and coats it in bone white armor, with massive shoulders and a horned helmet that's reminiscent of a bull's head. In this form, he starts walking on four legs, and his method of attacking involves skewering his opponents with his horns.
  • Buster Keel!: one of the Four Evils is the Ushi-Oni T-Ros (the T reads out loud as "Tau"), appearing as a towering, humanoid Holstein with red beard and a muscular body. While violent and not adverse at putting a potentially deadly brand on the servants of his organization, the Behemoth, he's A Father to His Men and an overall Noble Demon. His only asset is tremendous brute force, his only peculiar power lets him grow even stronger.
  • Digimon:
    • Minotaurmon is a peculiar creature resembling a standard, if boot-wearing, minotaur with a quake-producing machine on its left arm, but closer inspection shows that its skin is seemingly stitched together, has a prominent zipper on its chest and doesn't cover its chin, making it seem as though Minotaurmon is some other kind of hairless, bull-headed humanoid wearing a minotaur costume.
    • Vajramon, one of the twelve devas and representing the zodiacal Ox, is a centaurine being with a bull's body and a minotaur's torso and head.
    • Gyukimon combines this trope with Spider People, being a more centaurine take on the Gyuki of Japanese folklore. Its lower body is a giant venomous spider complete with a mouth, while the body of a purple humanoid ox sprouts from where the head would be.
  • Fairy Tail gives us Taurus, a Stellar Spirit of the Ecliptic Zodiac. Appears as a tall, muscular bull-man with spotted hair, a giant labrys axe and a perverted disposition.
  • Fullmetal Alchemist: Loa looks human, but is a chimera fused with a bull. He's an insanely strong hammer-wielder, but while pursuing someone, his teammates leave him behind because he can't keep up.
  • Heterogenia Linguistico: In the "Village of Death", Hakaba, Susuki, and the Lizard Folk Kashoo and Kekoo meet a minotaur named Mou (or that's the closest equivalent they can pronounce). He's a bit scary at first, but once they figure out how to communicate he proves to be a Gentle Giant.
  • Humanoid Monster Bem has one show up in the thirteenth episode, abducting humans working on a subway.
  • Inuyasha has the half-demon Gyu-oh. In contrast to the other half-demons, he looks like a pure human being during the day, and like a pure demon at night. In his demonic form he resembles a minotaur. He is also very strong, even for a half-demon.
  • Is It Wrong to Try to Pick Up Girls in a Dungeon?: Some of the monsters the adventurers have to face are Minotaurs. They are so powerful monsters that only experienced and powerful adventurers can reliably face them. The fact that the main protagonist Bell Cranel can later defeat a Minotaur illustrates how strong he has become in a short time. Later, the Minotaur that Bell defeated is reincarnated as a Xenos, gaining the ability to speak and the name Asterius, which is a derivative of the Minotaur of Crete's true name, and desires to face Bell in a rematch.
  • An episode of Lupin III: Part II involves the mysterious Minotaur buried on an island to act as a line of defense to one of Lupin's treasure stash... though despite looking like a massive bull man, it's real purpose was the ability to take the shape of anyone standing in front of them, with only the bovine tail giving away their identity.
  • Minotauros no Omoibito: Minotaurus is a powerful brown minotaur and the ruler of the forest.
  • Monster Girl Doctor: The anime adaptation opens with the main character, Dr. Glenn, giving a female Minotaur (Minobous?) an examination before telling her husband, also a Minotaur, that she's pregnant. The last episode of the series briefly shows the two of them walk-in down the street with their newborn baby in hand.
  • Minotauros' Plate, a Fujiko Fujio one-shot, revolves around a human astronaut who crash-landed on a planet inhabited by cow-people, it's master race. Humans do exist on their planet, as food stock.
  • Monster Musume: Male minotaurs show up after a while as background characters. They follow the classic appearance, but they're peaceful vegetarians and quite friendly. Female minotaurs, however, look much more human-like, having human faces with cow horns rather than full-on cow heads. They're a bit on the pushy side and rather standoffish but generally nice once they get to know you.
  • One Piece:
    • Minotauros, one of four demon guards in Impel Down. Actually some sort of zoan fruit user who awakened his fruit, as with the other Demon Guards..
    • Earlier on in the series, the former Drum Kingdom guard captain Dalton used the Ox-Ox Fruit: Model Bison to become one of these.
  • Ranma ½: Pantyhose Tarou, whose cursed form is a two story-tall winged minotaur. With an eel for a tail. And octopus tentacles. You see, he was baptized and named in the Spring of Drowned Yeti Riding an Ox While Carrying a Crane and an Eel. Later, he splashed himself with water from the Spring of Drowned Octopus (neither the octopus' presence, nor the drowning, nor the method of application is ever explained) to get the tentacles.
  • One of the Specters of Hades in Saint Seiya is Minotaur Gordon, wearing the Minotaur Surplice: as expected has massive horns and comes equipped with the "Minotaurus Axe", a powerful karate-chop infused with Cosmo and compared to the axe carried by the Minotaur in fiction. Said attack is powerful enough to clash with the Excalibur, the sacred sword of Caprico.
  • Sgt. Frog features Giroro getting turned into a minotaur-like monster in one chapter.

    Art 
  • Beast Fables: Minotaurs are one of the most common kinds of chimeras in Urvara. When bovines are under great stress, they can temporarily transform into a great ape hybrids. They can be distinguished from were-cattle by their forward-facing eyes and sharp teeth, and have an important place in most werebeast cultures.

    Card Games 
  • Magic: The Gathering: Minotaurs are usually portrayed as Proud Warrior Race Guys. Hurloon Minotaur was an iconic creature in the early history of the game, but it wasn't actually a very good card. The creature type is sometimes also applied to humanoids with the heads of other bovids besides true bovines.
    • Minotaurs feature prominently in the Classical Mythology-inspired plane of Theros, where they're vicious and barely sapient monsters who worship Mogis, the God of Slaughter (who himself takes the shape of a colossal minotaur), and in the Egyptian Mythology-inspired Amonkhet, where they have ovine upper bodies instead, with the overall effect being reminiscent of the ram-headed Egyptian god Khnum.
    • The legendary creature Zendruu the Greathearted is a minotaur with the head of a kudu-like antelope.
    • The Ixalan and War of the Spark storylines include and give speaking lines to a minotaur named Angrath, who wields a metal chain that he swings like a whip and can make red-hot.
    • Thunder Junction, a plane based off the Wild West, is home to minotaurs that resemble buffalo and longhorn cattle.
  • "Mystical Medleys: A Vintage Cartoon Tarot": Both "The Empress" and "King of Pentacles" are anthropomorphic bovines that, while not going full Informed Species, are still Pie-Eyed Cartoon Creatures with no joints whatsoever.
  • Yu-Gi-Oh! has the Battle Ox, one of Seto Kaiba's iconic cards in the anime, and literally called "Minotaurus" in the original Japanese. It can fuse with the centaur Mystic Horseman to become the Rabid Horseman and has a stronger counterpart, appropriately called the Enraged Battle Ox, which grants every Beast-Warrior piercing damage against Defense Position monsters.

    Comic Books 
  • De Argonautjes: Since the series is set in Ancient Greece, it was inevitable that the heroes would encounter the mythological Minotaur sooner or later, which happens in the story The labyrinth.
  • DC Comics:
    • Kingdom Come: One of the new superheroes is actually called "the Manotaur". He's got a really HUGE set of horns, and is surprisingly durable.
    • Legends of the Dead Earth: In the Supergirl Annual #1 story "Shootout at Ice Flats", the Nerfs, the native population of Bonechill IV, are a race of bovine humanoids.
    • Robin (1993): Brutus is an enforcer for Mr. Baptiste who spends most of his time transformed to look like a huge muscular man, but his true form is an even larger minotaur.
    • Wonder Woman: Diana has occasionally been seen encountering the, or at least a, Minotaur.
      • Wonder Woman (1942): The last of several monsters Circe sends to abduct Diana Prince is a Minotaur. Diana lets it think it had knocked her out in order to see who was giving him orders.
      • In Wonder Woman (1987) and Wonder Woman (Rebirth) she is friends with a large bull-headed chef at her embassy named Ferdinand, who prefers to be called a Kythotaur, as Kythira is where he's from. In Justice League (2018) he starts lending his cooking services to the League's cafeteria.
  • The Further Adventures of Indiana Jones: In #17, Indy and Marion are confronted by a Minotaur wielding a massive club in the labyrinth beneath Knossos on Crete. It turn out to be a man in costume: part of a local Cult taking advantage of the legend.
  • Marvel Comics:
    • Daredevil: Man-Bull is a supervillain who was turned into a humanoid bull by after being used as a Human Guinea Pig for an experimental serum. He's later transformed into a fully fledged Minotaur and terrorises Greece before the Scarlet Witch gets involved and breaks the spell. He then tries to commit suicide, as he'd gone from a god to, in his view, a genetic freak.
    • Doctor Strange: Rintrah, who was Stephen Strange's apprentice for some time in the nineties, resembles a green minotaur.
    • Iron Man: Tony Stark once faced a human/bull hybrid, during the age he also met Midas and Madam Masque, in a trend of Greek foes for the Ironclad one.
    • The Mighty Thor has Bison, a supervillain who wears a minotaur-like bison costume.
      • More recently and more seriously, Thor has Dario Agger, CEO of Roxxon, who can transform into a Minotaur at will. This is noted by Malekith, when Agger explains his Dark and Troubled Past, to be the result of a bargain with a very old, very angry god. It also actually makes him less of a threat to Thor in many ways: as CEO of Roxxon, he has vast resources and is capable of subverting the law to advance his agenda, making him effectively untouchable. As the Minotaur, sure, he's as strong as the Hulk (at baseline). He's also a giant monster who has no idea how to actually fight, and who Thor can therefore beat the crap out of with ease and impunity.
      • He also becomes one of the primary villains of Immortal Hulk, being drawn as much more overtly as beastly. However, while he's in Minotaur form all the time — and a surprisingly sharp suit — seeing it as a reflection of his impunity following the fallout of the War of the Realms, he very sensibly doesn't try to fight the Hulk head on.
    • Ms. Marvel (2016): In Issue #38, when various characters are transparent to videogame-like areas, Bruno is found after having transformed into a shaggy minotaur with hoofed legs.
  • Transformers had two Decepticon characters in G1 that turned into mechanical bulls: Tantrum, one of the Predacons (who is unusual compared to other examples of this trope in that he's noted to be on the physically weak side) and Horri-Bull who really looks more like a Terror Dog than an actual bovine.
  • Anthony Bourdain's Hungry Ghosts: The Kudan from "The Cow Head" looks less like its traditional portrayal — a cow with a human face — and more like a minotaur.

    Fan Works 
  • Captain Proton and the Planet of Lesbians: Used for a Visual Pun when Queen Sapphia sends her bull dykes in pursuit of Captain Proton, which are described has having buffalo-like bears and large horns.
    With a ferocious roar two huge women burst through the trees. They had beards like buffaloes, more muscles than the Governor of California, and two great horns sticking out of their heads.
  • Facing the Future Series: In the opening of Trial by Fire, Danny and Sam fight a ghost bull that's attacking the city. Upon lassoing it, they discover it can transform into a minotaur.
    Sam: (To Danny) You know, I guess we really SHOULD have seen that one coming.
  • The Palaververse: Minotaurs are one of the subraces of cattle alongside shorthorns, longhorns, bison and yaks. They are thought to have first arisen due to the chaotic magic that filled the word after the Fall of Antlertis, which would explain their great degree of physical divergence from other cattle. They don't have any magic active or latent, unlike almost every other sapient species, but their hands and bipedalism (and more specifically the resulting advantages in tool usage) have historically more than made up for this.
  • The Pieces Lie Where They Fell: Vix-Lei the minotaur, and the rest of her family when they appear late in the story and its sequel. As in canon, they appear as anthropomorphic bulls. Starbeasts called Taurus Majors and Taurus Minors (bull-like creatures with stars on their body) are also mentioned.
  • The Rainsverse:
    • The canon character Iron Will the minotaur appears the head of Baroness Dazzle's guard. Adagio notes that there is an astounding amount of misinformation about the minotaurs, painting them as everything from tattooed barbarians that drink the blood of ponies under the dark boughs of forests to some highly advanced magical super nation. In actuality, the Minoan City States are simply a small island chain in the eastern sea and used to be a satrap state of old Equestria.
    • The setting also features the caprataurs, the minotaurs' goat-headed cousins. These actually are barbarians and demon-worshippers, and are some of the main inhabitants of the Everfree Forest.
  • Return to the Labyrinth: Sarah encounters a Minotaur at the heart of the labyrinth who asks her riddles, and reflects that it wouldn't really be a labyrinth without a minotaur in it.
  • Sacrifice (Ravenshell): Leonardo manages to take down a bull-mutant who was trying to use his new mutant strength to rob stores in broad daylight.
  • The Sword of Justice and the Shield of Time: One of the new Witches is a minotaur wielding a giant axe with a crystal embedded inside. It's a strong fighter and has an incredible Healing Factor that lets it shrug off being sliced in half multiple times by Kyoko. It's ultimately defeated when Homura deduces that the axe jewel is the weak point and has Sayaka destroy it, killing the Witch.
  • There Was Once an Avenger From Krypton: As explained by Nico in Thanatos Scowled, in addition to the original Minotaur, some groups used dark rituals to make their own. While Asterius gained peace in death and spends his afterlife proving himself against champions in Elysium, the average minotaur is a dangerous, but dumb, monster.

    Films — Live-Action 
  • Dave Made a Maze: Just like the Greek myth, Dave's (cardboard) labyrinth has its own (cardboard) minotaur.
  • Immortals subverts this despite being an adaptation of Theseus' myth. The Minotaur is not a human/bull hybrid, but in fact a freakishly large man with a bull helmet.
  • Minotaur: The titular monster is not a man-bull hybrid, but a ZOMBIE COW.
  • The Scorpion King: In The Scorpion King II: Rise of a Warrior, Mathayus and his companions encounter the Minotaur in the Labyrinth, which serves as entrance to the Underworld.
  • Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger had the Minaton, a giant bronze minotaur-shaped golem.
  • Time Bandits: Kevin accidentally helps King Agamemnon defeat a bull-headed warrior. It's not clear whether it's meant to be a real minotaur or just a guy wearing a bull's head mask, but the latter seems more likely since the scene doesn't take place in the Time of Legends.
  • Wrath of the Titans: Perseus fights a Minotaur in the Labyrinth. The Minotaur has a more human, yet deformed, face than the more common bull-headed depiction.

    Literature 
  • American Gods: In addition to several briefly-mentioned minotaurs, there's "the buffalo man", a man with the head of a bison who seems to be an Anthropomorphic Personification of America itself.
  • Book of Imaginary Beings discusses the Greek Minotaur, opining that, although a house designed to make visitors lose their way is more fantastical than a man with the head of a bull, the two things go well together and it makes sense that a monstrous building would be home to a monstrous creature. Borges also notes that bull-headed figures feature prominently in Minoan art, and speculates that the Greek myth is likely just a faded retelling of much more horrifying tales.
  • Books Of The Gods, by Fred Saberhagen, has Prince Asterion, son of the bearer of Zeus' Face and Pasiphae. Born an eunuch with dream powers, he primarily serves as an advisor and messenger to the heroes, although he's fearsomely strong.
  • Caeli Amur: A race of long-lived minotaurs saved the city of Caeli-Amur from an invasion and from then on have been held as near-sacred beings there.
  • The Chronicles of Narnia: Bull-centaurs or shedu may exist in Narnia. Regular minotaurs exist as well; they mostly feature in The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe as part of Jadis' army of monsters, although the Prince Caspian movie has a heroic badass one.)
  • Cordwainer Smith: One short story has B'dikkat, a humanoid bull-person, as a caretaker of the inmates on a prison planet.
  • Cretan Chronicles: Being a trilogy of novels based on the myth of Thesus, specifically revolving around Thesus' fictional brother, Altheus, it goes without saying that the Minotaur is a major antagonist in the books.
  • Deepest Blue: Minotaurs are an alien race. They mostly look like the typical minotaur except for an equine shaped head (which however has horns and bovine ears), are atypically, herbivores and while very territorial and stubborn are not evil.
  • In The Divine Comedy, the Minotaur guards the entrance to Hell's Circle for the Violent. He is depicted as wrathful and savage enough to attack himself upon seeing someone trespass on his domain. Curiously, this version is often depicted in art as a bull-headed centaur instead of the tradition bull-man.
  • Fablehaven briefly features a huge shedu-style creature (see below) called a Lammasu. They also have traditional minotaurs.
  • Fengshen Yanyi: Jin Dasheng is a monstrous warrior whose real form is that of a massive water buffalo: in human form he's humanoid but bull-like, with pointy ears, horns on his head and curled lips. In some depictions he's even more bovine-looking and his special technique has him spitting a bezoar from his stomach at great speed. Notably, he's the only other character in the novel wielding the exact same weapon as Yang Jian/Erlang (a straight, double-edged three-pointed glaive).
  • In Helen and Troy's Epic Road Quest, by A. Lee Martinez, Helen was born with minotaurism, an hereditary condition that runs in her mother's otherwise-human family. Five thousand years ago she'd likely have died fighting heroes in an arena; today, she has to muddle through suburban life with horns, hooves, and an embarrassing propensity to shed brown-and-white fur.
  • The House of Asterion by Jorge Luis Borges retells the Minotaur legend from the monster's perspective.
  • House of Leaves has numerous references to Greek mythology, including the Minotaur. The book has mythological references printed in red, and passages which are, to some degree, threatening to the reader are also struck out. Minotaur may or may not be struck out, depending on if it's in one of the aforementioned mythological references.
  • The Immortals: Tauroses are a One-Gender Race that exists only to rape and kill human women. In this series, Immortals are created from human dreams and fears, and tauroses were borne of women's fear of rape. They're not intelligent, though they can communicate with each other to some degree. After she has to kill a tauros that stalks her while she's bathing, Daine notes that it didn't have any choice in what it was and tries to petition the gods to help them. She notes sadly in A Spys Guide To Tortall that because of the nature of Immortals, tauroses will exist as long as women fear rape, but at least by then all tauroses were dead or confined to the Divine Realms.
  • Journey to the West features two important bull demons: one is the "Special Guest", a large and fat man who's actually a zebu demon, while the other is the famous Bull Demon King, former buddy of Sun Wukong and one of his strongest opponents, usually represented as a gigantic minotaur or a bull-like humanoid.
  • The Laundry Files:
    • Minotaurism is the result of a certain type of extradimensional entity residing in the subject, causing increased testosterone production and horn-like bone outgrowths. The victims tend to seek seclusion in order to deal with the pain and physical and mental changes.
    • There is also "Man-Bull", a man who, when the barriers of physical reality begin to deteriorate, finds himself waking up with super-strength and a bull's head. He's a pretty affable type, but he is also dumber than a bag of wet mice.
  • The Minotaur Trilogy by Thomas Burnett Swann: Silver Bells and his son Eunostos subvert the usual Dumb Muscle stereotypes of this trope, as they have at least as much brains as brawn. However, their heads are also more human-looking than the classical minotaur (basically they're more like bovine versions of Satyrs).
  • Percy Jackson and the Olympians:
    • The Minotaur appears, of course. Amusingly, this isn't in book four (wherein the characters end up in the actual Labyrinth), although he is mentioned by name a few times, but the very first book, possibly because he's one of the creatures in Classical Mythology most people know about/remember. Also amusingly, he is both easily dodged (because once he gets up a head of steam he can't stop or turn aside) and easily fooled (because of his lack of intelligence and Hot-Blooded nature). He reappears in book five, as monsters come back to life eventually due to their immortal nature.
    • Percy Jackson's Greek Heroes retells the original Minotaur legend, and gives the Minotaur, named Asterion, a surprisingly sympathetic portrayal — as the story notes, the Minotaur began life as an innocent infant who was imprisoned at birth for something he had no control over and left alone in a mazelike building to become, essentially, a perpetually starving feral child.
  • Princesses of the Pizza Parlor: Cookies and Campers mentions minotaurs in the prologue, and such a character, Renon of Bezon-Bron appears as the illustration before "Day 1 (Saturday)".
  • Rose Madder: Both a minotaur-type creature (oddly named Erinyes, and blind) and a rubber Ferdinand the Bull mask figure in the plot.
  • Sirena: When Philoctetes tells Sirena the story of Theseus and the minotaur, the heroine constantly interrupts him with Fridge Logic questions, such as why would a creature that was half-human and half-bull (an herbivore) eat human flesh, and how could he survive by being fed only once a year?
  • Thursday Next: In The Well of Lost Plots, a murderous Minotaur escapes and wreaks havoc throughout the books of the Book World. He goes by the alias Norman Johnson, and in the following book Something Rotten he is hit with a Slapstick marker so that they can track him through Fiction. No one in the books he enters seems to notice he's a Minotaur.
  • The Wandering Inn: Calruz, the adventurer, is a minotaur with the typical axe in hand, who prefers to use brawn over brain. Later, Venaz, a minotaur [Strategist], is introduced who prefers to use both brawns and brains.
  • Warriors Circle: A genetically engineered minotaur appears in the third book. He's a nice guy normally, but he's been built to go into a murderous sexual frenzy periodically, inflamed by the smell of a virgin. Murderous because, well, he's hung like a bull.

    Live-Action TV 

    Music 
  • David Bowie: The "Artist/Minotaur" is part of the dramatis personae on the Concept Album Outside. He may or may not have killed Baby Grace and is represented by dark songs "The Voyeur of Utter Destruction (as Beauty)" and "Wishful Beginnings".
  • Lordi: OX, the bassist, is a skeletal "bulltaur".
  • Radiohead: The creature in the logo for Amnesiac is referred to as the "Minotaur", even though it doesn't really resemble a bull.

    Mythology and Religion 
  • Chinese Mythology: Ox Head is a minotaur-like monster who, alongside Horse Face, serves as a lackey in the Hells. They're not malevolent though - they escort the newly dead to the Underworld, and also act as messengers for Yanluo Wang. They're commonly known in Japan as Gozu and Mezu.
  • Classical Mythology: The Minotaur, the Trope Maker. Its origins in some versions are about as squicky as you'd imagine (in others, it's just Minos' pet monster): Pasiphaë, the wife of Cretan king Minos, had been cursed to fall in love with a white bull, given to the king by the Gods (specifically because Minos had promised to sacrifice it to Poseidon, then backed out when he decided he liked it). To cut a long and darkly comical story short, Minos locked the resulting abomination up in an underground labyrinth. Minos demanded an annual tribute of seven youths and seven maidens from Athens (which owed a debt to Crete at the time) to feed to the monster. The Minotaur was eventually killed by Theseus, with help from Minos' daughter Ariadne. Just to add to the Squick: a 1967 excavation showed there were, at the real palace at Knossos, bones of children. The knife marks on the bones indicate the children were butchered and eaten, presumably by the people there. A monster in the palace, indeed. "Minotaur" wasn't a proper name, but rather a title meaning "Minos' Bull" — "Mī́nōos Taûros" in Greek, "Mīnōis Taurus" in Latin. Some versions of the myth give its name as being Asterion; according to the historian Pausanias, use of this name was particularly commonly in Crete.
  • Mesopotamian Mythology:
    • The bull man — part-man, part-bull — was a demon from Mesopotamian mythology.
    • The Sumerian Shedu were depicted as bulls with human heads.
  • The Ushi Oni (Ox Ogre/Demon) Yōkai from the Japanese legends may sometimes rarely be described as an an ox-headed kimono-clad human; more commonly seen, however, is the version from the coasts of Western Japan, which is a Giant Spider with an ox's head.

    Pinball 

    Professional Wrestling 
  • WWE: The WWF had Mantaur. Somehow, mankind survived anyway. Torito, his successor in the WWE, has simliar impact.

    Tabletop Games 
  • 13th Age: Minotaurs are unholy monstrosities driven by bestial bloodlust. At their best, they prowl the underworld, seeking fresh blood. At their worst, they enter the service of unholy cults devoted to human sacrifice.
  • Banestorm: Minotaurs look like outsize humans with bull heads, but eat other sapient species and are extremely violent Blood Knights who often go berserk in combat. Some, however, manage to overcome their brutal nature towards other lifeforms enough to instead turn Psycho for Hire. They're among the numerous species that originated on another world and were carried to Yrth by the Banestorm; they specifically come from Loren'dil, which they shared with the centaurs, giants and halflings.
  • Dungeons & Dragons has had minotaurs and a number of minotaur variants across multiple editions and histories.
    • When first introduced, minotaurs were an Always Male One-Gender Race created by magical curses, in much the vein of the mythical minotaur. They were savage, brutish flesh-eating monsters. This was slowly modified; they started becoming a true-breeding race by 2nd edition, and were a fully functioning race (just evil and savage) in 3rd edition. Like orcs and goblinoids, despite being evil, they also slowly came more into the limelight as a playable race.
    • D&D is also home to Baphomet, the Demon Prince of Beasts. Typically taking the appearance of a giant, demonic minotaur, Baphomet is worshiped by them (as well as by ogres and giants in D&D settings other than Dragonlance) as their racial patron god, in a manner similar to gnolls and Yeenoghu. The similarity is even subtly called upon by the two Demon Princes, and their respective races, loathing each other and wanting to war with each other.
    • Goristros are massive demons that resemble fiendish minotaurs.note  They're Baphomet's preferred demonic servants and sometimes seem in the armies of other demon lords as living siege engines.
    • The connection between minotaurs and Baphomet is taken to its logical conclusion with Baphitaurs, a race introduced in 3rd edition material for the Forgotten Realms; these are a race of minotaurs with fiendish blood, usually connected to the minotaur-like bovine demons called goristros and ghours. They're essentially the minotaur equivalent of tieflings.
    • Al-Qadim: The Yakmen, or Yikaria as they call themselves, are a race of malevolent humanoid yaks who possess powerful innate magic, and can even enslave genies.
    • Dragonlance includes minotaurs as a fairly civilized, if not always nice, Proud Warrior Race, which may have inspired 4e to make them a playable race in general. It definitely is the reason they are playable in 5e. One trait that remains unique to Dragonlance minotaurs however is that their society is Born Under the Sail, being some of the most renowned mariners in the setting—an unusual trait for a hoofed species one might assume would have difficulty keeping their footing on a swaying ship.
    • Mystara has Enduks — winged minotaurs with a Mesopotamian civilization. Unlike other minotaurs, especially during the time period when they appeared, they are a highly civilized and benevolent race, even after being driven from their former cities by the treachery of the Scorpion People. The wingless, savage sort of minotaur are implied to be an Immortal-cursed offshoot of the Enduks.
    • Nentir Vale has minotaurs as a race created by Baphomet when he was a Primordial. After Baphomet was driven into the Abyss, they were adopted by the gods Moradinnote  and Erathis,note  who made them into one of the world's first great civilizations. Unfortunately, Baphomet Came Back Strong as a Demon Prince and used his spiritual connection to the minotaurs as a whole to corrupt a significant portion of the race so thoroughly that the gods Meloranote  and Kordnote  destroyed their empire by sinking their homeland beneath the sea, Atlantis style. The minotaurs have been a fractured race ever since; some embrace Baphomet's savagery and seek to bring the world under his thrall, others preserve their civilization and use strict philosophical paths to shield themselves from Baphomet's influence.
    • In the 3rd party setting Odyssey of the Dragonlords, for D&D 5th edition, minotaurs descend from humans cursed by the cruel god Sydon, who transformed their whole city-state into cattle and yoked them to plows that they were cursed to pull until the yokes finally broke. The result is that minotaurs bear a true for that mingles human and bull to various degrees, and they can also transform into bulls at will.
    • Another 3rd party setting, Arkadia, has two kinds of minotaurs in it. Those of the mainland are savage, bestial Fey creatures. Those of the island of Kinos are a civilized people who still inhabit the ruins of the empire they once shared with the native dwarves.
    • In Seas of Vodari, another 3rd party setting, minotaurs have a background that combines elements of the Nentir Vale and Dragonlance versions; they were created as slave-soldiers by a powerful demon, which abandoned them during the mighty divine conflict that sank most of the world beneath the waves. They have since become a race of seafaring traders, mercenaries and pirates.
    • In the 3rd party setting Wagadu Chronicles we have the Swala, which are essentially Anthelope minotaurs.
    • One oddity about "standard" D&D minotaurs is that they have an innate sense of direction that makes it impossible for them to get lost even in the most complicated mazes. While obviously intended to maintain the link between the classical minotaur and the Labyrinth, it's kind of the exact opposite of why the Labyrinth existed.
  • Exalted:
    • One of the signature Lunar Exalted is Strength of Many. Since his Spirit Totem is a bull, his war form greatly resembles a minotaur. His Tell is having the hooves of a bull for feet.
    • One of the setting's most commonly featured secondary gods is Ahlat, the southern god of war and cattle and patron of the kingdom of Harborhead. His favored form is that of a towering, dark-skinned human with the head and legs of an aurochs.
    • Arctic demitaurs are creatures with taurine heads, humanoid bodies and horses' hooves. They're highly territorial, and any intrusion into a herd's territory will send it on a maddened rampage until it finds a new suitable home.
  • Godforsaken: Minotaurs are aggressive bull-headed and -hooved humanoids who enjoy eating human flesh. Some legends say that the first minotaur was the result of a curse from a god, and others suggest that it was created by a demon, but the truth is lost to antiquity; the minotaurs themselves do not especially care, and mostly lead primitive lives alone or in small tribal groups. Minotaurs are interested in mazes and mazelike spaces and like to wander within them, memorising the paths and finding good places to stage ambushes.
  • The Laundry: The Mythos Dossiers brings its own take on the minotaur in the form of Asterion Snarl. It's not an actual intermingling of man and bull so much as possession by a low-grade demon that results in increased bulk, monstrous rage, bone-like growths from the head, and a penchant to wander around labyrinthine structures. It's possible for the minotaurs to reproduce, however, resulting in a child that doesn't lack in size and easily makes up for its parent in mental stability.
  • The Madness Dossier: The horrific Anunnakku created a number of species as servitors (including humanity, but we got away and they want us back); the kusarikku, or bull-men, are the heavy assault troops in Anunnakku forces. This is an explicit reference to Mesopotamian Mythology — see the entry above.
  • Mutants & Masterminds: Freedom City has Taurus, who in addition to being the original Minotaur, has prospered quite well since his days of being locked up in the Labyrinth on Crete. Now, he runs another sort of Labyrinth, a criminal organization operating behind so many shell companies that few individuals get a glimpse of the whole thing.
  • Noumenon: The Minotaur is a horned beast who walks on powerful legs and hooves and slouches its way through the labyrinth that is the Silhouette Rouge.
  • Palladium Fantasy adds minotaurs as a playable R.C.C. in the Old Ones sourcebook.
  • Pathfinder:
    • Minotaurs are savage bull-headed and -hooved humanoids who inhabit labyrinths and mazelike caves. Many live in the mountains of the Isle of Kortos, where they came as part of a monstrous army alongside centaurs and harpies. They worship Baphomet, who was originally bull-headed as well before adopting his current goat-headed form, and who lives in an inescapable country-sized maze in the Abyss.
    • Labyrinth minotaurs are outsiders from the Abyss created by Baphomet from the souls of the first minotaurs, and resemble hulking specimens of the regular breed clad in bronze masks. They inhabit and guard Baphomet's Abyssal realm, the Ivory Labyrinth, and on those occasions where they meet without violence typically greet each other by offering and answering riddles and logic puzzles.
    • The third-party supplement In the Company of Minotaurs offers them as a playable race. They can (and culturally have to) breed true from human, dwarf, orc or giant women. They are not a One-Gender Race, but not for lack of trying: due to a curse mentioned in their origin story, minotaurs try to drown females as soon as they are born. However, many mothers (and just as many fathers) have arranged to spirit their daughters away and/or fake their deaths, meaning female minotaurs exist outside of minotaur lands. This has also led to the sort-of half-breeds known as meretaurs, sort of a Cute Monster Girl version of the minotaur, who have less-bovine faces (some can even pass for their mother's race) and only two of the three "sacred" taurian features (horns, hooves, and tail). Most (90%) of females are born meretaurs, but full-blooded female minotaurs and male meretaurs do exist.
  • Scion introduces Minotaurs as a Demigod-level threat (and potential followers)... and makes their origin even more squicktastic, by virtue of making Poseidon even more of a Jerkass than Classical Mythology normally makes its gods! In the most common version of the myth, Poseidon cursed Pasiphaë to fall in lust with the White Bull after King Minos tried to cheat his way out of giving it back to Poseidon. In Scion, the White Bull's first act upon emerging from the sea was to rape Pasiphaë, then rampage across Crete raping any woman it could catch! King Minos couldn't do anything to stop the creature as, while Poseidon took no interest in what it was doing, he knew that harming it would draw the Sea God's wrath — the only relief came to Crete when Heracles came and carried the White Bull off as one of his labors. In its wake, it left a considerable brood of Minotaurs, which are still a One-Gender Race that procreates by raping human women.
  • Shadowrun: There are actually two forms of minotaur.
    • The standard kind are a troll variant (trolls in this game are technically a Human Subspecies with a heavy build and horns) that are more symmetrical (and thus less ugly) than normal trolls, with only two horns.
    • The second kind, the "wild minotaur", is a wild bull awakened by natural occurring magic into an incredibly powerful form that can rise up on its hind legs and grab things with its tripartite front hooves. Despite its herbivorous ancestry, the wild minotaur is an aggressive carnivore with a taste for human flesh.
  • Starfinder gives us the Nuar, bull-headed humanoids who claim to be of a distinct species from common minotaurs and trace their lineage back to Lost Golarion. Outside of Absalom Station, they're seen on exploration vessels and far-flung colonies given their technical and research expertise alongside their physical prowess.
  • The Strange: The singular half-man, half-bull Minotaur (there's no other) is the most famous inhabitant of the Labyrinth, a recursion seeded by the original Greek myth.
  • Trail of Cthulhu: In the Dreamhounds of Paris campaign frame, savage bull-men roam the Dreamlands, albeit in low numbers.
  • Warhammer:
    • The beastmen include minotaurs in their ranks, as well as their heavily mutated variants, the gigantic Ghorgons with an extra pair of arms ending in bone blades and the one-eyed Cygors whose mere presence disrupts and prevents magic casting. Regular minotaurs are powerful, dangerous monsters given to berserker rages at the mere smell of blood, and are often used by the powers of Chaos and their servants as guards for shrines, tombs and other such sites.
    • Regular beastmen can also have the heads of cattle instead of the more iconic caprine or ovine variants; these beastmen, known as bovigors, are distinguished from true minotaurs by their smaller size, as minotaurs are much larger than regular beastmen, and by lacking the minotaurs' insane aggressiveness — bovigors are still as violent and aggressive as any other beastman, but minotaurs are berserk killing machines even by beastman standards.
  • The World of Darkness:
    • Werewolf: The Apocalypse:
      • The Apis are an extinct Changing Breed, who before their extinction were a race of were-aurochs whose task was matchmaking to ensure successful bloodlines of shifters. Sadly, they were wiped out in the massive wave of werewolf jackassery known as the War of Rage. The Minotaur was the last of their kind.
      • A spirit of Minotaur also shows up in the line. The connections between the spirit and the Apis are unclear, but if there are any ties, they've obviously been warped, as Minotaur serves as the patron to the Skin Dancers (a small movement of werewolf-blooded humans who become true shifters by killing their Garou cousins and performing blasphemous rituals using their skins).
    • Werewolf: The Forsaken: The Apis' heirs, the Baal-Hadad (alternatively, "Gudthabak"), are much less nice. They are a race of Helios (sun-spirit) worshippers who are convinced it is their purpose to rule over humans as "lords of the herd" and who only reproduce by magically transforming wolf-blooded humans into their own kind.

    Toys 

    Theatre 
  • The Women of Trachis, one of Sophocles' tragedies, has Hercules' wife Deianira speak of the spirit of the Acheloüs River who appeared to her as a bull, a great water serpent, and finally as "a man's body but a bull's face, and from his clump of beard whole torrents of water splashed like a fountain."

    Video Games 
  • Academagia: Minotaurs are one of the non-human intelligent species of Elumia. While civilized and not innately hostile, they apparently tend to keep to themselves and don't normally mix with humans or other species. One notable exception to this seclusion is Gorithnak, Academagia's Master Smith and head of The Grand Forge. Although he isn't portrayed as particularly gregarious either...
  • ActRaiser: The final boss of the first land is named Minotaurus, no guesses as to what he is.
  • Age of Mythology has minotaurs as trainable units if you chose to worship Athena in the classical age: they carry large axes and their special attack can gore a single unit and send it fly. The campaign also features Kamos, a minotaur pirate leader with a sword for a hand, as one of your enemies.
  • In Altered Beast (2005), the penultimate Genome Cyborg form you can obtain is the Minotaur, which you must get from the Balrog boss (a fire-breathing giant bat). The Minotaur form can only attack by horns or by spitting fire, but he also possess a nigh-unstoppable charge attack and can briefly turn into iron to block even enemies or obstacles larger than itself.
  • Akuji the Heartless has half-Minotaur demons, Minotaurs with only the upper halves of their bodies, who can float around while pursuing the titular hero with heavy axes. They serve the role of Giant Mooks late into the game.
  • Battleborn: Thralls are a Slave Race of minotaur demon-like altered beasts.
  • Barry Steakfries series features one named Minertaur, most notably appearing as one of the villains in Jetpack Joyride 2. He's in charge of the Subterranean Labyrinth, which, despite what the name indicates, is a straight line.
  • Blue Dragon: Jiro's shadow is a Minotaur, although he's also the brains of the team (that is, at least before Zola joins the party), has a smooth voice and tends to fight better as a back-row mage.
  • Brawlhalla: Teros is an interesting case in that, despite having the strength and viciousness expected from a minotaur, he's not really evil and, at most, works as a henchman-for-hire since that's an easy work to find. He does have some disdain for adventurers and their tendency of seeing everything only as "Heroes vs Monsters", which is one of the reasons he's willing to do that work.
  • Castlevania: First appeared as a boss in Castlevania: Rondo of Blood, the Minotaur has been hanging around the franchise as a boss for a while now.
  • City of Heroes: Minotaurs appear as boss enemies. You'll find them in Cimerora, which is loosely based on Rome and it's mythology. Thanks to the Animal Pack, players can make one of their own, complete with Beast Run.
  • The Crystal of Kings have two fearsome, carnivorous Minotaur monsters serving as a Dual Boss. The first of the two is encountered in the middle of his meal, where he's gnawing a leg of roast (to reiterate, the Minotaur is based on a cow. Cannibalism?) until you interrupt him, at which point he flings his meal aside and calls his partner.
  • Dark Adventure: Oddly enough, this fantasy-themed game turns Minotaurs into extremely weak, pathethic enemies, with green Minotaurs as The Goomba who dies in a couple of hits. The game later throws stronger blue or purple minotaurs around in later stages.
  • Dark Souls gives us the Taurus Demon, along with the non-bovine but very much minotaur-inspired Capra Demon. They appear as early game bosses and come back much later as DegradedBosses.
  • Dark Souls II invoked but subverted by the Iron Warriors of the Old Iron King (whose domain has a strong bull iconography): these gigantic, lumbering warriors were supposed to wear a custom helmet (which you can find) shaped like a bull's head and thus giving them the form of a giant ironclad minotaur, but they lack such an helm as enemies. In the proper game, the giant idol of Eygil found in the Iron Keep is shaped like a minotaur.
  • Dead by Daylight's Oni Killer can have his model replaced with a minotaur by equipping an Ultra Rare skin.
  • Defense of the Ancients: Barathrum the Spirit Breaker is a minotaur-like Lightning Bruiser whose playstyle is largely based around charging across the map at high speeds and stunning other heroes, and actually does more damage the faster he is. He actually is a tauren in the original DotA, but in Dota 2 he's an extradimensional being who deliberately chose to be a Load of Bull because he thinks it fits his strength and speed. The game also includes a character who is known as "Tauren Chieftain" in the original game, but "Elder Titan" in the sequel, who is also a strength-based hero but is based mostly around long-ranged spell casting (but at least retain some horn-ish design to look a little more similar to the original). Also, another strength-based hero Earthshaker was a Tauren in the original Dota, but changed to a gorilla-like creature for Dota 2.
  • Diablo:
    • Diablo II:
      • In Lord of Destruction, there are some enormous minotaur-like demons in Act V, called [Descriptor] Lords. For some reason, bull-demons are all named for the Clans of goatfolk from Act I and Act II — Moon Clan/Lord, Blood Clan/Lord, etc.
      • The Hell Bovines from the Secret Cow Level are bipedal cattle who wield polearms.
    • In Diablo III Infernal Bovines appear in a rare Rift and during a special event.
  • Doom: Anything in the Baron family (namely Barons of Hell, Hell Knights, Cyberdemons, Skulltag's mod-exclusive Belphegors, possibly even the Baphomet itself unless you clip through his face and find John Romero's head; then he's just a wall sprite with attitude) all base themselves off minotaurs. The 3D versions? Eh... Our Cyberdemons Are Sissier. While far more bloated and chubby, Pain Elementals share the Baron's bull horns, even bearing stubby, useless little arms as well. An evolution / degradation to the Baron genus?
  • Dinosaurs For Hire have a boss, Mega Minotaur, which is a kaiju-sized robot Minotaur which you fought atop the Empire State Building, "King Kong" Climb-style.
  • Dragon's Crown: The Bilbaron Subterranean Fortress has a Minotaur whom has made its lair in the sewers, acting as the stage boss of the A Route.
  • Dwarf Fortress: Minotaurs will sometimes attack your Fortress and can be found in Labyrinths in Adventure Mode, where they will taunt you with the ways they plan on devouring you. They are less than a tenth the size of any other semi-megabeast, but more than make up for it by naturally being experts with all melee weapons.
  • The Elder Scrolls:
    • The series' backstory includes Morihaus, an Aedric demi-god who aided the Alessian Revolt against their Ayleid masters. Morihaus took the form of a massive "winged man-bull" with a favored fighting style of goring enemies with his horns. Morihaus fell in love with Alessia, the human "slave queen", and remained with her for the rest of her life. What happened to Morihaus after her death is unknown.
    • Minotaurs, a massive race of half-man/half-bulls, are are believed to descend from the union between Alessia and Morihaus. They are believed to be a sapient beast race, but are treated as little better than monsters by most other denizens of Tamriel. Alessia's son, Belharza, was said to be the first Minotaur, and became the second Emperor of the Alessian Empire following her death.
  • Eternal Card Game has banker minotaurs.
  • Fantasy Quest pits you against one, hand to hand, in a volcano.
  • Fate/Grand Order:
    • The Minotaur himself is a summonable Servant as a Berserker-class Servant, with his Noble Phantasm being the labyrinth he was trapped in most of his life. He's mostly referred to by the protagonist and his closest friends by his real name Asterios (lightning) and he's actually a pretty nice and loyal guy by Berserker standards. Also, while he does have the horns, his face is actually humanoid though usually covered by a metal mask in the shape of a bull. He deeply regretted killing the children that his foster father Minos sacrificed to him and welcomed his death at Theseus' hands. Before they fought, Theseus talked to him and was appalled to learn that Asterios was essentially an innocent child forced to kill to avoid starving to death. Theseus regretfully slew him as a Mercy Kill, and they considered each other friends as he died. As a Servant, he becomes happy to finally be free of the labyrinth and develops a romance with Euryale.
    • In the first Lostbelt story, "Permafrost Empire, Anastasia", the heroes run into an Alternate Self of Asterios who embraced his feral nature and enjoys killing and eating people. He is referred to as Minotauros and is nothing but a mindless killing machine.
  • Final Fantasy:
    • Final Fantasy VIII has Sacred and Minotaur, a pair of brothers who start out as bosses, and then become the Brothers Guardian Force, working on your side. They are fought inside a tomb that has practically identical corridors, and a map that costs a bit of money early on in the game, making it easy to get lost.
    • Final Fantasy Mystic Quest: A minotaur disguises itself as a tree and infects Kaeli (one of the hero's traveling partners) with poison.
  • Gauntlet Legends has a bonus version of the Warrior modeled after a minotaur and with higher stats.
  • Gems of War: The Wild Plains region is home to minotaurs (specifically the Tauros and Soothsayer troops). They live next door to the land of the centaurs, and across a strait from the land of the cat-people, so that part of the world seems to belong to animal-inspired creatures.
  • Goblin Sword: A minotaur serves as the first boss. He attacks by charging back and forth across the arena, then punching the ground, causing three stalagmites to shoot up.
  • God of War features several Minotaurs as Giant Mooks and pits Kratos against a gigantic armored minotaur demon zombie who is on fire as a level boss. Early games Minotaurs tended to be more monstrous and less bull-like, though as the graphics improved they become closer to the myth depiction.
  • In Grandia, the Lainians are a race who inhabit the cold, mountainous region of the unnamed continent beyond the Sea of Mermaids. They have a very pronounced Sexy Dimorphism; the menfolk are tall, broad, humanoid bulls, whilst the women are tall and strong but beautiful women who appear perfectly human apart from their Pointy Ears — essentially like amazonian elves. Lainian men are the "thinker" sex, being presented as the smarter sex due to their horns essentially acting as extensions of their brains — to the point that losing a horn makes a male Lainian dumber. In contrast, the women are the workers and fighters of the community, being much more aggressive than their gentle menfolk.
  • In Guild Wars 2, minotaurs are (non-sapient) animals with a gorilla-like posture. The shamanistic Norn race considers their totemic spirit a manifestation of nature's savage strength and feral cunning. They also appeared in the first Guild Wars where they inhabited most regions of Tyria and were also found in the northern reaches of Elona. Some of their herds were domesticated by the Sand Giants of Vabbi.
  • Gryphon Knight Epic: Asterion Hornedson, one of the bosses in the game, is a minotaur riding a rhino.
  • In Hades The Minotaur of Crete, referred to as Asterius, is one half of a Dual Boss together with Theseus. With Theseus' aid he was able to re-invent himself after death into a better, nobler being, and as such now dwells within the fields of Elysium together with his former slayer.
  • Heretic. The Maulotaurs were the second episode boss, and were about as tough as the Cyberdemon. In the final battle of Shadow of the Serpent Riders, you had to fight eight of them. They also showed up in Hexen as well, where they could be summoned to help you in battles.
  • Hero of Sparta, befitting a game set in ancient Greece, has Minotaurs as recurring mooks in both games, in various colours for good measure. The largest ones are of the Fake Ultimate Mook-variety though, only slightly harder to kill than the regular ones despite their size.
  • The Bovinarian Moomen from In Pursuit of Greed are Minotaur-like, bull-headed aliens. One of their members, Aldus Kaden, is among the selectable player characters.
  • King's Quest VI, in direct reference to the Greek myth, includes a minotaur which has driven the residents of an isle out of a labyrinth and claimed it as his own. The residents even wear Greek-styled togas.
  • Knight Bewitched: In the Depths's Labyrinth zone, the Minotaur boss prowls the hallways in order to hunt down the party. While the player can see it in the westernmost map of the area, where it is blocked by a gap, it will show up in the easternmost map too, and killing it in one map keeps it from appearing in any map in the dungeon. This implies that the Minotaur knows the layout of the labyrinth and decided to take the initiative by going through the basement to reach the eastern map rather than wait in the western map.
  • Last Armageddon: A minotaur is one your party members. While he can wield different weapons, he gains extra attack when using axes.
  • League of Legends: Alistar the Minotaur is a playable champion. He's a dual tank and support-type champion, being both incredibly durable and having several crowd control attacks and an AoE heal.
  • Legendary: The Box: Minotaurs are encountered later on as very powerful monsters whose front are invulnerable to conventional firearms and must be shot in the back.
  • Majesty features minotaurs as an enemy. Here, they are bipedal bull creatures who wander the widerness weilding huge axes.
  • Majyuo has three-horned, red-skinned Minotaur demons as Giant Mook enemies in the first half of the game.
  • MechQuest: You need to defeat a Minotaur boss to get into a certain house.
  • Mega Man Zero 4: Mino Magnus is an enormous robotic minotaur who wields an equally enormous axe.
  • Might and Magic:
    • Minotaurs are almost always associated with the Warlock/Dungeon/Asylum faction (Might and Magic VI leaves it at implication and history, the warlock faction having collapsed in the region years earlier) but in Might and Magic VIII they're both a Proud Warrior Race faction of their own you ally with in the mid part of the main quest and a playable race. Interestingly, they are not only indicated to be a created species, but implied to be a fairly recently created species — their human creator was still alivenote  as recently as the end of Heroes II — less than two decades prior to Might and Might VIII.
    • Warriors of Might and Magic: Minotaurs appear as Demonic Spiders, having lots of HP and being very strong in battle. The best way to kill them is using Air magics like Thunderbolt and Ghosts.
  • Miitopia has Minotaur enemies.
  • Moshi Monsters has Lummox, a Moshling who resembles a minotuar, having a muscular humanoid body, a face with mixed human and bovine features, and large bull horns.
  • NetHack, being a mythology kitchen sink, has them. They're fast-moving, hard-hitting, carnivorous monsters that show up almost exclusively in mazes.
  • Nioh 2 features the Gozuki (a giant, fiery, half-rotten bull demon with a giant club) as the enemy you can meet at the start of the game, though you're supposed to sneak past him.
  • Nosferatu Lilinor: A Minotaur serves as a boss in the game. It attacks by charging at Lilinor.
  • Oriental Legend, a video game based on Journey to the West, has the Bull Demon King as it's Final Boss. He's depicted as a horned, bull-headed humanoid wearing Chinese armour, have lesser minotaurs serving as mooks, and a Sequential Boss that needs to be defeated three times in a row. In his last fight, he gains a One-Winged Angel form as a rampaging Ox God whose horns are even larger than the players!
  • Putt-Putt Goes to the Moon: One of the aliens you can encounter while trying to find Robbie Radar looks like a top-heavy blue minotaur. He uses his horns to point where you need to go next.
  • Puzzle Quest: Minotaurs are mostly Proud Warrior Race Guys and the protagonist has to earn their respect, after which a minotaur priest joins the party. The minotaurs' god — Lord Sartek — is also a huge minotaur. Among the bad guys there are minotaur slavers, undead Skelotaurs (skeletal minotaurs), undead minotaur Doomknights, and even mechanical Mechataurs.
  • Quest for Glory:
    • The first game has a minotaur named Toro as the guard of the gate of the Brigands' Lair. He's actually there only to protect the Baron's daughter, Elsa, who due to an enchantment has forgotten who she is and become the Brigands' leader. He shows up again in the fifth game as the Guildmaster of the Adventurers' Guild in Silmaria... even if you killed him in the first game. If you defeat him in the first game, he shows up in the ending with one arm in a sling.
    • In addition to Toro making a return in Quest for Glory V, there is a minotaur in the Very Definitely Final Dungeon. The Minotaur's owner? Called Minos.
  • Raging Blades have a powerful red minotaur as a boss, who Dual Wield gigantic axes as his weapons.
  • Shin Megami Tensei series has used Minotaur has a recurring demon, and is one of few mythological creatures to appear as a Shadow in Persona series. In Shin Megami Tensei IV, the first major boss is Minotaur, who guards the gate that leads into the Unclean One's Country a.k.a. Tokyo. Asterius himself has appeared as a downloadable demon for Shin Megami Tensei IV and as a Persona for Shadow Labrys in Persona 4: Arena.
  • Starcraft II: A tauren marine makes a cameo appearance as a very strong but joke unit that makes cow puns with every single line.
  • Tanuki Justice have purple-skinned Minotaurs showing up as Giant Mook enemies, who can pull a Shockwave Stomp by punching the ground sending a wave of explosions at you.
  • Tauronos: The minotaur pursues your character throughout the game.
  • Total War:
    • Total War: Warhammer: Minotaurs are powerful Lightning Bruisers in the Beastman roster, appearing both as regular units and through the Gorebull melee hero, all of whom are savage terrors in combat. Their Regiment of Renown variant, the Butchers of Kalkengard, in addition to possessing regeneration, are colored black-and-white like Holstein cows and wear belt plates shaped like udders. The Silence and the Fury DLC brings Doombulls, Lord-tier Minotaurs who fight with their fists, and the Ghorgon, a giant, four-armed, ox-headed monster. In Total War: Warhammer III, Khorne also has access to red-skinned, four-horned Minotaurs of Khorne.
    • A Total War Saga: TROY:
      • In Truth Behind the Myth mode, the Minotaur is a bandit lord who uses a bull mask made of a bull skull, wears what appears to be a bull hide and some sort of material to hide his face and wields a double-headed axe, using the symbols of the bygone Minoan civilization to solidify his own power. The implication here is that he ended up inspiring later legends through centuries of retellings.
      • In Mythos mode, the Minotaur is a golden-furred bull-headed man with human feet (like the mythical being, but unlike the hooved versions more common in modern fantasy) and with a labyrinth design tattooed over his chest and right arm.
  • ULTRAKILL: The Minotaur is not a half-man and half-bull creature as described in the poem. Instead, The Minotaur is a Demon that resembles a bull-shaped mish-mash of meat and stone.
  • Warcraft: The tauren race, in something of a subversion of the classic minotaur concept, are Gentle Giants with a culture inspired by western Native American tribes (piss them off, and they have tough melee units that like dealing area-of-effect damage). They are the largest Player Character race in World of Warcraft and, appropriately enough, are the only ones whose "/moo" emote sounds like an actual bovine's.
    • While evil Tauren are relatively rare, there are Mr. Smite, a now-defunct villain stationed in the Deadmines, and the Grimtotem, a tribe that views tauren as the Master Race and is willing to kill anyone who sides with another race. With those exceptions, most tauren tend to be friendly (and cuddly).
    • Three offshoots of the tauren have been introduced in expansions:
      • The bison-styled taunka of Northrend have a bleaker outlook than the Tauren, their harsh homeland forcing them to fight for survival.
      • The yak-styled yaungol of Pandaria are even worse, having developed a Proud Warrior Race mentality to help them survive on the steppes. The Taunka joined the Horde, while the Yaungol are enemies of all races.
      • The Highmountain tribe of the Broken Isles, while still strictly tauren and not an offshoot, is visually distinct from the rest of the species for the moose-like antlers bestowed upon them by the demigod Cenarius. They are a playable race like the main tauren are.
    • "A tauren, a yaungol, and a taunka walk into a bar. This isn't a joke: it's my family reunion!"
  • Wario Land: Super Mario Land 3: The Minotaur is a stout, nose-ringed and red-skinned member of Captain Syrup's pirate crew.
  • Warlords Battlecry has them as an entire faction, serving under the horseman of war. They vary from simple grunts with a ball on a chain, through ax tossers and ending up with a gigantic minotaur king that could well cut a tower down in two or three blows of its gigantic axe. Getting a minotaur hero also opens up some interesting possibilities for a One-Man Army that can solo entire maps without so much as building a base.
  • Will Rock: Minotaurs appear as mooks. They throw axes at you and can split up into two smaller Blood Minotaurs if killed with anything but the Sniper Crossbow, the Acid Gun, Medusa Gun or Atomic Gun.
  • Yo! Joe! Beat the Ghosts has a boss named Meanotaurus who, oddly enough, lives in an Egyptian pyramid.
  • Zeus: Master of Olympus: The Minotaur appears as a random monster or if Hermes is hostile to the city: appears as a hairy man with an oversized ox head dragging a huge labrys behind and tossing lightning bolts with his free hand at you and anyone closer. As per myth, you'll need Theseus' help to slay the beast.

    Visual Novels 
  • In Minotaur Hotel, there is Asterion (the Minotaur himself) and Storm (later Oscar). The former retains his mythological origins while the latter's are a mystery. They are roughly human and bovine in equal measures (even mooing when stressed) though the NSFW itteration of the game reveals that they have rather different genitalia from each other.

    Web Animation 

    Webcomics 
  • At Arm's Length: Dagg the Fierce, a would-be pillager minotaur, runs afoul of dragon mercenaries Kaige and Kiley. His cousin supposedly once attacked the main characters Ally, Reece and Sheila, with a .44 Magnum at that.
  • Atland features Bruce the minotaur as a main character. Physically, Bruce has the body of a tall muscular human male with the head of a bull. While he has a pair of human hands, his feet are stout cloven hooves. His entire body is covered with short sleek brown fur and he has a very human-like tuft of black hair on top of his head. Bruce has sired a half-human son named Tad who seems to be entirely human with the exception of a pair of horns and green eyes lacking in pupils, just like his old man.
  • Darwin Carmichael Is Going to Hell has Pat, an affable but crude minotaur. He is implied in one strip to literally be the Minotaur from the original myth.
  • The Dreadful gives us Boozloaf, who doubles as a somewhat Badass Preacher and Pungeon Master.
  • Dungeons & Denizens stars Min, a beefy yet mild-mannered Minotaur working as a janitor in a dungeon. His younger brother is much taller and beefier, being half-hill giant. A recently-introduced new Minotaur, called Titanic, is even larger.
  • In El Goonish Shive, when Mr. Tensaided is offered the chance to be transformed into a form from a magical board game he chooses cowgirl since he's a D&D nerd and it's the closest to being a minotaur. Later, Grace also transforms herself into this form for the same reason.
  • Gunnerkrigg Court: The dreaded Minotaur of Crete is one of the denizens of the Court. He's called Basil, and he's a nice guy who's easily startled.
  • The KA Mics: One story features a minotaur named Bob.
  • Looking for Group: Krunch Bloodrage (and the whole Bloodrage clan) are hulking, muscular minotaurs. Believe it or not, he's not the warrior.
  • Oglaf: The legend of the Minotaur is referenced in this comment, and the Minotaur himself appears here. (Caution: the linked comics are sfw, but the comic as a whole is very much not.)
  • The Pride of Life: Gaur is a minotaur, a term which here refers to any sapient bovid.
  • Slightly Damned: Talus is a brutish Earth Demon (which resemble large land animals) who looks like a 12ft minotaur with a nose ring and also wields a large battle axe like minotaurs are frequently depicted with.
  • Yet Another Fantasy Gamer Comic has Turg. Sort of cool big chap, but as the only member of his species around, very lonely — until he met a Sphinx and chose to stay with her. Yeah.

    Web Original 
  • Codex Inversus: Minotaurs are taurine Beast Folk famous for their impeccable sense of direction, and are often employed as navigators, guides and cartographers. This is in large part a self-enforcing cultural thing — the stereotype developed in the past for somewhat unclear reasons, and modern Minotaurs face a strong societal pressure to be good at finding their way.
  • SCP Foundation: SCP-432 ("Cabinet Maze") is an extradimensional maze haunted by an unseen entity that eats people. It's strongly implied that the labyrinth inside SCP-432 and the monster SCP-432-1 that haunts it are the Labyrinth of Knossos and the Minotaur Asterion of Classical Mythology, which the creator has admitted to be the case.

    Western Animation 
  • Adventure Time: Manish Man, the Manly Minotaur, guardian of the Hero's Enchiridion.
  • Castlevania (2017): The horde of monsters that attacks the main characters while they're in the ruins of the Belmont house includes a gigantic minotaur with apelike arms, which serves as the monsters' main muscle both in smashing through the seal and in leading the charge against the heroes.
  • Centaurworld: The members of the evil army are referred to as minotaurs. The reference to this is through their horn-adorned helmets, but they resemble hulking, savage Beast Men with the upper halves of various animals, unlike the centaurs of Centaurworld, who have the lower halves of animals. The minotaur race were created by the Nowhere King by fusing humans and animals together using the power of The Artifact. In the second season, the Artifact is used to merge the minotaurs with even more animals, including a bird centaur who is fused with a boar minotaur and an alligator that has predictably nightmarish results.
  • Dan Vs.: One episode features a minotaur beneath the DMV used to dispose of problem customers. It's revealed that when the DMV was founded, its initials originally stood for "Dungeon of Minotaur Violence."
  • Dante's Inferno: An Animated Epic features the Minotaur as a guardian of the circle of Violence. This is in contrast to the game where it was Adapted Out like many of Violence's other fiends. Here, the Minotaur has the appearance of an incredibly spiky, flat-faced berserker with three horns. Its only bull-like features are its tail and hooves. After a little provocation from Virgil, Dante evades it until it charges into a collapsing wall.
  • DuckTales (1987): In "Raiders of the Lost Harp", Scrooge takes a magic harp from an ancient temple causing the treasure's guardian, a giant stone minotaur, to come to Duckburg looking for it. Interestingly, since this is a Funny Animals world where the human species doesn't exist, when the chief of police is describing the monster to Scrooge, he says, "They say it's as big as an office building, like a living stone statue with the head of a bull and the body of a... a..." before the monster itself appears and cuts him off.
  • Egyxos has Apis, a humanoid bull who trains young warriors.
  • The Fairly OddParents!: In one episode, after Timmy wishes the world was like a superhero comic, the resident bully Francis becomes a minotaur-like villain known as the Bull-E.
  • Freakazoid!: Longhorn, a half-man, half-steer country singer supervillain.
  • Gargoyles has the children of New Olympus. They are hybrids of humans, animals and fairies, and therefore often look like humanoid animals. One of them, Taurus, is stated to be the descendant of the original Minotaur. He's still quite bitter about his ancestor's demise at the hands of a human.
  • Gravity Falls: "Dipper vs. Manliness" features the Manotaurs, who are half MAN and half... er, taur. They help teach Dipper to be more manly.
  • The Hollow: The desert land has a significant population of antagonistic minotaurs.
  • In Jimmy Two-Shoes, all of Lucius' typical henchman and enforcer jobs are done by minotaur-like creatures. There's also Miseryville's soccer star Wreckem who combines this with Cyclops.
  • Monkie Kid: The Demon Bull King, who stands up on two legs, has magenta fur, towers over the rest of the cast and will beat you up if you touch his family.
  • My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic: "Putting Your Hoof Down" introduces minotaurs to the mythology of Equestria, in the form of a motivational speaker named Iron Will. Like most other part-human Mix-and-Match Critters, his design is adjusted to fit in with the fact that there are no humans in the setting — he's entirely bull from the waist down, with two bovine legs instead of a human lower half — but his clearly human torso and arms are still quite jarring.
  • The Smurfs (1981): Petula, the spoiled brat child that adopts Smurfette as her new toy doll in "The Trojan Smurfs", has two minotaurs in her house that serve as guards.
  • The Venture Brothers's "The Mighty Manotaur!", although it turns out that he's not very badass.
  • Wishfart: One episode sees Dez and his friends incur the wrath of a Minotaur ice cream man after Puffin gets into an argument with him over ice cream flavors. This Minotaur notably has the ability to create a magical labyrinth that can only be escaped by passing three tests before the Minotaur stomp-eats you.

 
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Alternative Title(s): Minotaurs And Bovine People

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Minotaurs

Minotaurs are bloodthirsty half-man half-bull creatures found in Beastman armies.

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