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9[[quoteright:350:[[WebVideo/BedtimeStoriesYoutubeChannel https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/img2.jpg]]]]
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11A Skin Walker, also known as a ''yee naaldlooshii'' (Navajo for "by means of it, they walk around on four legs") is ''usually'' a person with the supernatural ability to [[{{Shapeshifting}} change their form]] into either [[{{Animorphism}} an animal]] or [[{{Doppelganger}} another human being]].
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13Being superficially [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent werewolves]] and other paranormal shape changers, the closest approximate Western counterpart of the medieval witch or warlock. Most skin walkers' abilities are largely powered by [[BlackMagic dark ritual]], and the breaking of native taboos (such as [[ImAHumanitarian cannibalism]], [[VillainousIncest incest]], and [[PoweredByAForsakenChild murder]], especially [[KinslayingIsASpecialKindOfEvil of family members]]) or are heralded to create them. Each nation's version differs in detail. Most Skinwalkers are differentiated from their brethren by being able to take multiple shapes but are not free-form shapeshifters. The myths usually describe them as humans who wear only an animal skin, or an abomination of human and animal forms.
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15Primarily detailed in many Native American tales, namely the Myth/NavajoMythology, these entities are sometimes portrayed as either practicing witches, aspects of the TricksterGod Coyote, or something [[EldritchAbomination worse]], from the shared mythology of many indigenous American peoples. Skinwalkers are considered one of the most fearsome monsters from Myth/NativeAmericanMythology. In those myths, they have a few extra powers, including {{Telepathy}}, VoiceChangeling (mimicking animal and human sounds) and the creation of poisonous/disease ridden "Witch Powder" or the MagicalEye. Some cannot fully shift into their animal forms and have a [[RedRightHand deformity]] (awkward gait, over-sized feet, etc.) [[GlamourFailure revealing their true nature]].
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17Killing one is either simplified to accusing the creature in public while in human form (which robs it of power and it dies in 3 days) or an involved, lengthy ritual.
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19Related to VoluntaryShapeshifting, MagicalNativeAmerican. Compare {{Wendigo}}, another monster produced by breaking an extreme taboo from further north. See also OurWerebeastsAreDifferent. Of late, it's been connected to Berserkers and more often than not, used as a shorthand by writers for "American Werewolf".
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21It is worth noting that ''actual'' information about these beings from Native Americans is incredibly sparse; they refuse to speak about it to outsiders for various reasons. Discussions about it even among Native Americans exclusively is rare. In some cultures, such as the Navajo, it's outright seen as taboo [[SpeakOfTheDevil to even refer to these monsters by name]]. The information often applied to the entities in popular interpretation is effectively just extrapolation and exaggeration of the few known traits. In short, take what's known here and portrayed in popular culture with a grain of salt in terms of how "true" it is to the as-of-yet unknown parts of the wider mythology. Much as with wendigos for Algonquian nations, skin-walkers' depictions [[https://www.oregonlive.com/entertainment/2016/03/jk_rowling_embraces_skinwalker.html are typically not met with much gusto on the part of Navajo audiences]], so creative discretion is advised. Many an author have [[SadlyMythtaken mistakenly]] used the term "Skin Walker" for a very modern, Hollywood inspired werewolf with a dash of First Nation exoticism, or a feral HumanoidAbomination. Such examples often come off as eyeroll inducingly badly researched, to downright offensive.
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23----
24!Examples:
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26[[foldercontrol]]
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28[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
29* In the anecdotes of ''Manga/SaintSeiyaTheLostCanvas'', there are the [[OurWerebeastsAreDifferent Beast Warriors]].
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32[[folder:Fan Works]]
33* John Manuelito from the ''FanFic/AlexandraQuick'' series is a fairly well-researched depiction of this.
34* In ''Fanfic/ForLoveOfMagic'' Harry goes to America specifically to hunt down and talk to a Skinwalker so that he can learn his unique magic.
35* In ''Fanfic/CodexEquus'', Skin Walkers are noted as distinct from Werewolves and Werebeasts and more accurate to the actual legends. They're ''extremely'' powerful monsters who won the SuperpowerLottery, with shapeshifting being only one of their abilities, and are among the [[TheDreaded most feared supernatural horrors]] known to Equus. They can only be killed by being stabbed through the head or neck by something dipped in white ash. They're most feared, however, for being AlwaysChaoticEvil, as the ritual to become one requires doing such horrific, monstrous things, even many evil aligned beings [[EvenEvilHasStandards are utterly disgusted.]] The first one to be featured, Severed Strings, is so dangerous and powerful he's capable of easily wiping entire towns off the map if he so desires (and does so once every hundred years) and even a powerful Equestrian Vampire [[spoiler:like Vinyl Scratch]] is terrified of him.
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38[[folder:Film -- Live Action]]
39* Beorn, in ''Film/TheHobbit'', is a "skin-changer" who dislikes (most) dwarfs, but ''hates'' orcs/goblins. As a man, he can be reasoned with, but not as a bear. He's not a MagicalNativeAmerican, and seems more derived from Scandinavian ''berserker'' folklore, though there is a good deal of overlap. He's also the only character in any of the ''Middle Earth'' movies not to speak with [[TheQueensLatin a British or Irish accent]], keeping his actor's native Swedish accent.
40* ''Film/SkinwalkerRanch'' is a FoundFootage film about a ParanormalInvestigation team that investigates a ranch not unlike the real-life Sherman Ranch, where much of the modern Skinwalker myth originates from. While the film ultimately veers more towards the AlienInvasion angle, it still retains some elements more reminiscent of the skinwalker, including a giant wolf and a beast-like humanoid that are implied to be such creatures.
41* ''Film/{{Skinwalkers}}'' (2006) is about two warring werewolf packs.
42* ''Film/Werewolf1996'' (1996) purports to be a skinwalker, instead of "the white man's [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent werewolf]]." No, it's the white man's werewolf, complete with {{silver bullet}}s. What's weird is that, aside from really badly mispronouncing "yee naaldlooshii", they actually get quite a few things ''right'' about skinwalkers in the {{Infodump}}, only to throw it all away.
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45[[folder:Literature]]
46* ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles'':
47** A skinwalker appears in the novel ''Literature/TurnCoat''. While it was mentioned that the term can refer to the classic version, the human witch, the synonymous term "Naagloshii" formally refers to the entities which teach them the trade: quasi-divine beings that effortlessly shapeshift, grow more powerful the more they are feared, and have an innate ability to know how to cause the maximum suffering in their victims. "Shagnasty", the Naagloshii who shows up in that book gets into a ShapeshifterShowdown with [[MagicalNativeAmerican Listens-to-Wind]] at the end of the book.
48*** Morgan, a veteran Warden, mentions that he also fought one in his time, though he had to use an alternative method to bring it down. He had to resort to luring it into a nuclear testing ground, and give the Skinwalker the slip by opening a portal [[NukeEm right before a bomb test.]]
49** The [[Series/TheDresdenFiles TV Show]] also had a Skinwalker -- which literally [[{{Squick}} stole skins]] to assume its new forms.
50** ''Literature/ColdDays'' revealed that [[spoiler:there are at least six more skinwalkers currently imprisoned in the minimum security level of the supernatural prison under the Demonreach island -- and that whatever else is imprisoned below them is ''even worse'']].
51** ''Literature/SkinGame'' has [[spoiler: Goodman Grey, who is part-skinwalker (apparently on his father's side). Unlike the one seen in ''Turn Coat', Grey is at least trying to be a decent person, as is shown by his helping Dresden make it out of the underworld for the [[ComicallySmallDemand massive sum]] of one dollar.]]
52* {{Averted}} in ''Literature/HarryPotter'''s [[AllThereInTheManual extra materials]], which specifically state that skinwalkers aren't real; Native American {{Muggle}}s just made them up to defame their magical colleagues, particularly those who were also [[{{Animorphism}} Animagi]]. This led to some backlash, since some felt that writing off a real Native American belief so casually was insulting... though the bit where it's suggested Muggle medicine workers spread the myth because they were jealous of the Animagi who could do magic probably didn't help.
53* ''Literature/TheInvisibleLibrary'' features one of those, but doesn't use the name. [[spoiler: However, since he actually skins his victims, and uses their skin as disguise, there's little else one could call that ...]]
54* Two skinwalkers are the primary antagonists for the fourth book in the ''Literature/IronDruidChronicles''. The protagonist is tricked into dealing with them by [[PhysicalGod Coyote]], who doesn't want to risk dealing with them himself in case he fails and they get hold of his skin.
55* The protagonist of the ''Literature/JaneYellowrock'' series is a skinwalker of Cherokee descent. The first book is, appropriately enough, called ''Skinwalker''.
56* Mentioned, but never seen, in the ''Literature/MercyThompson'' novels. They are evil shamans who wear the skin of an animal to assume its form, and spread disease and death. They can also KillAndReplace anyone, [[LifeDrinker extending their lives]] and [[CannibalismSuperpower gaining the knowledge and magic of their victims]]. They can only be permanently killed by a shaman's magic or [[KillItWithFire burning the corpse]]. [[spoiler: One shows up as the villain in ''Burn Bright'', initially looking for a werewolf it had tried to control a century ago for his power, but then gets the idea of replacing Bran]].
57* ''Literature/TheOutsider2018'': What the Outsider is is never fully explained, but it comes very close to the historical description of the infamous Native American skinwalker. He's a manipulative demonic shapechanger with the capacity for telepathy.
58* Part of the Navajo cultural background of some of Creator/TonyHillerman's ''Literature/LeaphornAndChee'' mysteries, particularly the novel ''Literature/{{Skinwalkers}}''.
59* Featured as the main antagonists in Preston and Child's ''Literature/{{Thunderhead}}''. However, [[spoiler: it ends up being a case of DoingInTheWizard as the skinwalkers gain their powers from creative use of poison and [[PsychoSerum drugs]]]].
60* ''Franchise/TolkiensLegendarium'':
61** ''Literature/TheHobbit'': Beorn is a rare heroic example, drawing on Slavic myth rather than Navajo folklore like most of the more recent forms of shape-shifter myth. Beorn's "skin-swapping" ability to changing into bear and back into human is under his conscious control, and he retains at least enough human mentality to rescue Thorin after he falls in battle. The power seems to run in his bloodline, since some of the Beornings after his time share the ability.
62** ''Literature/BerenAndLuthien'': Sauron's vampiric courier Thuringwethil can change shapes between humanoid and [[BatOutOfHell iron-clawed giant bat]]. When she dies and her hide is found by the heroes, LĂșthien can use it to transform herself into a vampire and sneak into the BigBad's stronghold.
63* ''Literature/UniversalMonsters'': In book 2, when the trio meet Wilma Winokea, she claims that her son John became one of these in an effort to bring honor and glory back to his people.
64* ''Literature/WhateleyUniverse'': A mutant at the Academy has this power, only he can move his consciousness into an animal and take it over. He can do the same to any person he sees. He even uses the codename 'Skinwalker'. His dormmates had to devise a protocol to keep him from doing this to any of them.
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67[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
68* ''Series/{{Haven}}'' has a SerialKiller known as the Bolt Gun Killer, who has the ability to wear other people's skins after killing them and then transform into that person. The main characters suspect that the Native American legends of the Skinwalker may have been based on the Bolt Gun Killer's ancestors, as Trouble abilities are hereditary. This is despite Haven and its hub of Troubles being in, well, [[SadlyMythtaken Maine, not known from its native Navajo]].
69* ''Series/MountainMonsters'' has the creatures as antagonists in the Spearfinger arc.
70* ''Series/LostTapes'' devotes an episode to it, and it is both chilling and surprisingly accurate to the legend.
71* An episode of ''Series/{{Smallville}}'' has another Wolf-shifter named after these creatures, but...yeah. Not really.
72* Skinwalkers also show up on ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'' as people who can turn into various dogs and can be killed by silver.
73* Skinwalkers are brought up in ''Series/TrueBlood'' among the "Shifters" who can change into animals they have touched. True Blood skinwalkers are shifters who have killed an immediate family member. From then on, they can take on the appearance of other people, but using this ability more than a few times is invariably fatal.
74* An early episode of ''Series/TheXFiles'' titled "[[Recap/TheXFilesS01E19Shapes Shapes]]" features a Native American werewolf which, during its transformation, sheds its skin in a snake-like manner. Had the episode been made today, it seems likely that the monster would be called a skinwalker, but the writer instead called the beast a Manitou. This is a case of SadlyMythtaken, as a Manitou is a class of Algonquin nature spirit, while the episode treats the term as referring specifically to a lycanthrope.
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77[[folder:Myths & Religion]]
78* In a bizarre case of things looping back around, as many pop cultural depictions of skinwalkers rather sloppily make them like the modern Hollywood depiction of werewolves, the most common central and eastern [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent medieval European idea of a werewolf]] vaguely aligns closer to the Navajo skinwalker than it does its typical modern media incarnation. Medieval European tales of werewolves often described vile, evil persons committing horrid taboos to gain dark magical powers; making them effectively one in the same with a witch or warlock. These included using a wolf skin to take on the form of a wolf as they went about their grim deeds of cursing, inflicting plagues, attacking, and cannibalizing people. In the European witch hunts, werewolves were considered witches/warlocks who'd used their magic to turn into wolves, usually to attack and devour livestock or humans (while of course to become a witch required a DealWithTheDevil by their conception). Werewolf trials were a subset of witch trials. It's only much later that the idea of a werewolf being instead an [[InvoluntaryShapeshifting involuntary]], [[TheVirus infectious]] {{curse}} took hold (long after witch hunts ended).
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81[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
82* In ''TabletopGame/BattleTech'' fiction, there's the 17th Recon Regiment, formed from planets settled by people from Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas. One [[SociopathicSoldier thoroughly sociopathic]] pilot of Navajo heritage, Bobby Begay, named his HumongousMecha "Skinwalker" and took on the NomDeGuerre "Navajo Wolf" himself, both as a reference to this myth. However, doing so has earned him the considerable disgust of the rest of the regiment--it's so overtly and intentionally offensive that they consider it the equal of a pilot from a Christian denomination naming their 'Mech "Baby-Eating Satan Worshipper."
83* ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'' has an undead creature called an "Ecorché'', named after a drawing of a skinless person. They're able to steal a persons skin and wear it to look like them. There's also a playable race of skinwalkers, who are a LittleBitBeastly people with some lycanthrope blood (there are different subraces linked to specific lycanthrope types, like werewolves, werebears, werecrocodiles, and the like). Most of the art shows the default skinwalker as looking somewhat Native American, and they're said to be most common on the continent of Arcadia, which is the setting's equivalent to North America.
84* ''TabletopGame/SavageWorlds'' has a horror campaign, ''Skinwalker'' based on this mythology
85* ''TabletopGame/ChangelingTheDreaming'' includes a Skinwalker Kith among the [[AlwaysChaoticEvil Thallain]], where it serves as a dark counterpart to the Nunnehi, American indigenous fae. Keeping close to details of Navajo folklore, their Chrysalis usually involves acts of utter, murderous depravity, and they can transform into an animal form by harvesting a token from a creature they slaughtered.
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88[[folder:Video Games]]
89* ''VideoGame/OtterIsland'': It's implied the creature might be this, given its ability to change into other people. It's not confirmed though and Mizzen (the game's creator) is also vague on the creature's exact identity.
90* There is a videogame created using RPG Maker called ''VideoGame/{{Skinwalker}}'' about the eponymous creature. A let's play of it (and link to its download location) can be found [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yokky1yLIJ4 here]].
91* ''VideoGame/SkinwalkerHunt'': The game is about hunting the titular monster in various forests around the world. The creature itself is bipedal, with long limbs, and may either have a deer skull for a head, or wears a deer skull on its head.
92* [[spoiler:The Hag]] in ''VideoGame/ThiefDeadlyShadows''.
93* An ''VideoGame/{{Undertale}}'' fangame on ''Platform/{{Roblox}}'' called ''Undertale: Last Corridor'' (an asymmetrical PVP game) has an event where you can fight against what appears to simply be Sans from a different ''Roblox'' game: ''Undertale 3D Boss Battles''. [[SchmuckBait Just a normal crossover, right?]] ''Wrong.'' The moment you beat "[=3DBB=] Sans", he quickly distorts and transforms into his true form: an elongated and even seemingly somewhat ''melted'' skeletal abomination known as the ''Bone''walker. In order to banish it, you have to effectively play a game of ''Slender: The Eight Pages'' against it, before luring it into a magic circle that banishes it back to... '''wherever the hell''' it came from. [[PromotedToPlayable You then get to play as it and horrify your friends after the event's over!]]
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96[[folder:Webcomics]]
97* They appear briefly in ''Webcomic/BadMoonRising'', being exterminated by Hunter Madsion and Born-Werewolf Chloe.
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100[[folder:Web Original]]
101* ''WebVideo/BedtimeStoriesYoutubeChannel''
102** The first mention of the creature is the Skinwalker Ranch two-parter. Despite the name, most of the episode focuses on aliens tormenting the Sherman family as well as a group of scientists intent on studying them. However, the first unusual encounter by the aforementioned family, a giant wolf, is heavily implied to be a Skinwalker, given that it's ImmuneToBullets, and magically disappears without a trace after being chased away. Unlike most other cases, this one appears to be a NonMaliciousMonster, given that it refused to attack the Shermans and was clearly at unease about the area, and was even heavily implied to be warning them to leave.
103** "Scourge of the Skinwalker" delves into the titular cryptids in detail. Unlike the wolf from Skinwalker Ranch, the creatures featured in this episode, including three other wolves, are far more malicious.
104* Several {{Creepypasta}}s have accounts of people being stalked by abnormally big coyotes who can keep pace with their cars going 60-100 MPH. Others have encounters with animals with GlowingEyesOfDoom and a single human feature (often the face). These are purported to be encounters with skinwalkers, and usually require a meeting with the local shaman (when they can't shoot them with ash-caked bullets from an ash-caked gun or [[IKnowYourTrueName say their real name out loud]]) in order to counter the whammy the skinwalker's put on them.
105* ''WebVideo/GeminiHomeEntertainment'''s take on skinwalkers is more akin to a FleshGolem than its original source, but still horrifying. They are giant horrors (Even though we never see one in full, they're clearly around the size of a multi-story building) that [[TheAssimilator absorb humans and animals within itself]]. The end result is a [[BodyOfBodies visceral amalgamation of countless bodies]] surrounding a monstrous core. It is not something that walks ''in'' skins as much as it is a ''walker made of skins''.
106* ''Website/SCPFoundation'': [[http://www.scp-wiki.net/scp-2750 SCP-2750]] is the collective designation for skinwalkers, who still live a pre-Columbian hunter-gatherer lifestyle and shun modern society. [[spoiler:Thanks to the superstitions of Navajo {{Muggles}} and the [[DeliberateValuesDissonance political motivations]] of a Foundation predecessor group, SCP-2750 was nearly wiped out in the 19th century, and now suffers from inbreeding and loss of hunting grounds.]]
107%%* Mentioned by name in a story in ''Website/TheWanderersLibrary''.%%Administrivia/ZeroContentExample
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110[[folder:Western Animation]]
111* When a werewolf-like alien appears on a reservation in ''WesternAnimation/Ben10'', the "Yenaldooshi" is mentioned repeatedly.
112[[/folder]]

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