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The inversion of Anthropomorphic Transformation. A Funny Animal or Beast Man character is transformed into a non-anthropomorphic version of the same animal. This could be through a Forced Transformation or Voluntary Transformation, because they've travelled to a Fisher Kingdom where anthropomorphic animals aren't a thing, an innate Shapeshifting ability, or in the case of an Uplifted Animal, the effect of a Devolution Device. The key point, though is that they're recognizably the same character, just a regular animal version.

If it happens without an alternate universe explanation, it leads to Furry Confusion. If characters switch back and forth without it being flagged up as a change, it's an Anthropomorphic Zig-Zag. An anthropomorphic animal who is turned into a different non-anthropomorphic animal (for instance Poe de Spell being changed from a Funny Animal duck to a normal raven) is just a regular Forced Transformation. If this happens to a whole species instead of an individual, the result may be a Formerly Sapient Species.


Examples:

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    Anime & Manga 
  • Bleach:
    • This ends up happening to the werewolf captain, Komamura, as a punishment for his misguided attempt at justice against the Sternritter for killing Yamamoto. He ends up becoming a full-fledged wolf.
    • Similarly, the same can be said for Yorouichi, who can transform into a cat (with a male voice), though she can freely change of her own choice. She also has a third form that she adamantly objects to using.
  • Outlaw Star: Aisha Clan-Clan, and in fact all of her species the Ctarl-Ctarl, are nigh-invincible humanoid alien Cat Folk. If an opponent proves able to fight them in this form, and there happens to be a moon present, they're capable of transforming into an even more fearsome giant cat form equipped with fangs and claws to rend said opponent to pieces, as Jukai and Iraga of the Anten Seven find out firsthand.

    Comic Books 
  • Happens twice to Captain Carrot and His Amazing Zoo Crew!:
    • At the end of Captain Carrot and the Final Ark, the Zoo Crew emerge on Earth-0, where they've become normal animals. This gets reversed by Nix Uotan in Final Crisis.
    • In the Superman (Rebirth) storyline "Multiplicity", Captain Carrot gets transformed into a regular bunny by the Gatherers. He still has his mask and cape though, unlike the previous event.
  • In Lori Lovecraft: The Dark Lady, the future version of Lori transforms a demon from a Rat Folk into an actual, normal sized rat.
  • Sonic the Hedgehog (Archie Comics): The sad fate of Mobius's Tasmanian Devil species, courtesy of Echidna criminals. To add insult to the injuries, the newly christened "devil dogs" were then employed by the Echidnas as guard dogs, work beasts, and experimental animals. Thrash, possibly the last unaltered Tasmanian Devil, is obviously extremely vengeful over this and enacts a scheme to even the score by eliminating all but one of the Echidnas (as well as Charmy's fiance Saffron for some reason).

    Film — Animation 
  • G.I. Joe: The Movie: Cobra Commander is revealed to be, not a human, but a snake person indigenous to Cobra-La. As punishment for his repeated failure to conquer the human world, he's forcibly exposed to a fungus that slowly transforms him from humanoid snake into a normal, albeit large, normal snake. He gets better during the next movie.
  • Chapter 2 of The House (2022) features a setting populated with anthropomorphic rats acting like humans with a 21st-century level of technology. In the climax, however, the Developer is driven mad by the events of the episode, the final straw being the realization that he is sharing his now unsellable home with a family of giant beetles. In his final scene, the Developer has chewed off his clothing and is now crawling around on all fours, eating garbage, scratching himself with his hind legs and chittering like a real rat, ending the episode by crawling into a burrow dug behind the oven.
  • In the movie We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story, the dinosaurs started out as reasonably realistic when they were their original mindless savage selves. Once they took Brain Gain and became sentient, they transformed into more cuddly, animated versions of themselves. Upon taking Brain Drain they became mindless and "realistic" again.
  • Zootopia: The titular city is home to numerous anthropomorphic mammals who live and act much like humans. However, the main conflict stems from the fact that carnivores suddenly start "going feral" — a state in which they revert to their primitive ways, walking on all fours, and relying solely on their basic instincts. This causes panic among the animals as they fear all predators will go crazy. It turns out assistant mayor Bellwether was actually injecting the citizens with a drug made from a flower known to make any mammal go berserk, but only targeted the carnivores.

    Film — Live-Action 
  • Enchanted: Pip the chipmunk goes through this, albeit downplayed in that he retains his intelligence. In the animated world of Andalasia, Pip can speak fluently, but when he goes through the portal to the real world not only does he get a more realistic appearance but he loses his ability to speak fluently and has to communicate mostly through charades.
  • In Super Mario Bros. (1993), since all people in the Dinosaur World evolved from, well, dinosaurs instead of primates, anyone who opposes this version of Bowser is turned into a hideous, ogre-like humanoid reptile called a Goomba via a Devolution Device that robs them of their sapience. This is also what leads to Bowser's downfall, where the Mario Bros. ultimately give him a taste of his own medicine and is first turned back into a regular T. rex and finally into a puddle of ooze.

    Literature 
  • The Chronicles of Narnia: At the creation of Narnia, shown in The Magician's Nephew, Aslan grants the gift of speech and intelligence to some of the animals, but he warns them they may lose this gift and become ordinary animals again if they indulge their baser instincts too much. This threat actually happens in The Last Battle. Ginger the cat joins a group of tyrants as The Quisling, which ultimately results in him seeing the God of Evil Tash face-to-face. The sight is so terrifying, Ginger reverts to a dumb animal and never speaks again. The Horse and His Boy also mentions a "Lapsed Bear" who goes feral and has to be beaten back to his senses.
  • In The Constant Rabbit by Jasper Fforde, this happens at the very end, when all the rabbits turn from anthropomorphic back into normal rabbits. Thankfully, they take the foxes with them.
  • Metamor Keep: One of the curses Nasoj placed on Metamor was to forcibly transform people into random animals, a partial countercurse restored their sapience and turned them into anthropomorphic animals, but they can assume "feral" forms at will.

     Tabletop Games 
  • In The Delver's Guide to Beast World, there's a wizard who is rumoured to know the secret of turning Beasts back into "quiet-minded" animals. Some Beasts seek him out, usually due to some kind of trauma they hope their quiet-minded self won't understand.

    Theatre 
  • Wicked: A major threat in the show is the Fantastic Racism against Animals and the efforts to remove their anthropomorphic traits, particularly their ability to talk. Most heartbreaking to Elphaba, this happens to her goat mentor Dr. Dillamond, who she finds hidden in the Wizard's room terrified and walking on all fours, unable to say anything except "Baaaaa."

    Video Games 
  • Persona 5: Morgana, the Non-Human Sidekick of your party, looks like an ordinary cat when out of the Metaverse, and an anthropomorphic cartoony version while in it. His Character Portrait uses the anthropomorphic cartoony form regardless of circumstance. However, in the original game, once you beat the Final Boss and destroy the Metaverse, Morgana's portrait switches to that of an ordinary cat.

    Webcomics 
  • Weaponized in Crimson Flag by the primary antagonist. The reason this proved so easy to do is a major part of The Reveal. In the distant past Reyn — the anthropomorphic foxes — were created out of ordinary animals to serve dragons. In effect, they spend all their lives transformed to bipedal talking magic-wielding foxes, but that can be easily switched off. In the end of the comic they teach at schools how to transform to bipedal form out of animal form.
  • Epiphany: Oscar's attempt to heal Eli's comatose dad winds up transforming him into a non-anthropomorphic deer.
    Oscar: He is a deer. You're a deer.
    Eli: Yeah, but not, like, a people deer! A deer deer!
  • The Housepets! storyline "The Gallifrax Protocol" has Tarot take Peanut, Grape, and Maxwell to the Gallifrax Dimension, which is exactly like their own, except pets are quadrupedal and can't talk to humans. Grape freaks out, feeling like she's "on the point of dislocating [her] everything", whereas Peanut says that if you just don't think about it, it comes naturally. Maxwell makes an attempt to balance on his hind legs, saying he's maintaining his dignity.

    Western Animation 
  • The Amazing World of Gumball: When the universe starts tearing apart in "The Job" because Richard got a job, Nicole, Gumball (who are cats), Anais (a bunny), and Larry (a rock man) briefly turn into non-anthropomorphic animals (and a rock in Larry's case).
    • There's also a scene in "The Rerun" where Darwin slowly reverts back into a normal fish then suffocates due to losing his lungs. This scene is not played for laughs and Gumball is devastated by the loss of his friend. He does come back later though.
  • Bravestarr: Thirty-Thirty is normally a bipedal horse-man who totes around a flashy BFG named Sarah Jane. He can also transform into a more normal-looking quadrupedal horse complete with hooves where his hands were, functioning as Marshall Bravestarr's primary mode of transportation. While his being a Cyborg may explain this, the ruins he was living in when Bravestarr found him seem to indicate this was a common power amongst his people.
  • Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers: Steggy, introduced in the episode "Prehisterical Pet," is actually an alien stegosaurus who's come to Earth to learn the fate of a previous expedition. He's horrified to learn that exposure to Earth's atmosphere and plant life causes the normally tiny aliens to grow to humongous size as well as degrade to primitive animal intelligence, ultimately becoming some of the dinosaurs we know. Worse, as the episode progresses, Steggy himself suffers a similar fate, necessitating the rangers to get him back to his ship and feed him his planet's food to reverse the effects.
  • Conan the Adventurer: What happens to Wrath-Amon at the end of the series. Raised up from a common Stygian Gila Monster by his former master Ram-Amon and granted a human appearance by Set, prolonged exposure to Conan's talisman and the destruction of Set's black ring break the spells, reverting him back to his original self. Apparently he also had to do this periodically on a voluntary basis so he could shed his skin, a fact that left him vulnerable to a betrayal attempt by Thrax.
  • Dinosaucers:
    • The good guys had the power to do this via Dino-volving, which allowed them to transform their humanoid bodies into the much larger forms of their dinosaur ancestors. They gained proportional strength and stamina, as well as retained their normal intelligence and ability to speak, but lost their opposable thumbs and outfits.
    • The villains, on the other hand, had weapons called devolvers that forcibly did this to its targets, turning them into normal dinosaurs with animal intelligence. When used on humans, it turned them into unintelligent ape-men.
  • Dogs in Space: Kira ends up making a mini-enhancer which takes away the sapience of any intelligent dogs it hits, reverting them back to regular dogs. They are revealed to have retained their intelligence and strategy from when they were anthropomorphic dogs, however, with the affected Stella and Ed helping Happy navigate to where Kira's device is located.
  • At the end of the DuckTales (1987) episode "Home Sweet Homer", Circe, an anthropomorphic pig who turns people into non-anthropomorphic pigs, gets a taste of her own medicine.
  • At the end of the Grand Finale of DuckTales (2017), Bradford Buzzard is turned into a regular buzzard by Magica de Spell. This is a Call-Back to her own brother being permanently transformed into a non-anthropomorphic raven, which genuinely devastated her.
  • Happens for a short gag in Family Guy: as Brian and Stewie are transported through a number of universes, they briefly arrive to a live-action universe where Brian is portrayed by a regular, non-anthropomorphic dog.
  • Guardians of the Galaxy (2015) In the episode "We Are Family", Rocket meets his family who are anthropomorphic raccoons, but the process that altered them is more unstable than Rocket's so they are forced back into being regular raccoons.
  • Kipo and the Age of Wonderbeasts: The main antagonist, Dr. Emilia and her resistance, wants to reclaim the Earth for all of humanity by reverting the "mutes," anthropomorphic versions of various animals, back into their old, primitive selves. They're successfully able to "cure" several mutes including Yumyan Hammerpaw, Margot, Rupert, Bad Billions, Brad, Camille, Wheels, Easy, and a Walrus Mega-Mute.
  • The Legend of Tarzan: A positive example where this is a good thing, relatively speaking. When Tarzan and Jane are able to break the spell of Queen La over her minions the Leopard Men, they turn not into normal humans, but back into actual leopards. That this probably led to a large increase in the local leopard population (predators of the gorillas) was never addressed.
  • Spider-Man: The Animated Series: Played for tragedy in the episode "The Lizard King." Spider-Man discovers a primitive society of lizard/human mutants living under New York, a by-product of the experiments of Dr. Curt Conners, aka The Lizard. Viewing him as a father, they kidnap Conners to try to understand their origins and gain a purpose in life. Unfortunately a combination of learning they were nothing but an accident and Conners' Lizard persona encouraging their more brutal aspects for his own benefit causes one of their number to become disgusted with her people. Thus does she detonate a gene bomb and return all the lizard people back to normal lizards.
  • SpongeBob SquarePants: In "Feral Friends", most of the cast are transformed into regular sea creatures by a mysterious green rock known as Neptune's Moon. Only Sandy is unaffected due to her being a land animal. At the end of the episode, an orange ball of light known as Neptune's Sun appears and turns Sandy into a regular squirrel — a live-action one, no less.
  • Tiny Toon Adventures: In the first short of the episode "Buster's Directorial Debut", a witch wants to make rabbit stew out of Buster and Babs Bunny, but the recipe explicitly states Toon Rabbits can't be used as a substitute for regular rabbits. Said witch manages to turn Babs into a normal rabbit. Buster manages to defeat the witch but doesn't return Babs to her original anthropomorphic self till the end of the cartoon, as she is less of a troublemaker as a normal rabbit.
  • Yin Yang Yo! featured this in the episode "Yin Yang You". The cast was transferred from their stylized world of anthropomorphic animals into the "real" world, where they started slowly transforming into mostly-normal animals, though they retained their intelligence and ability to speak (to each other, at least; the world's humans heard them as animal noises). A running gag is that this was the only way they could figure out what one character's species even was.

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