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1!!Examples:
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3[[foldercontrol]]
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5[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
6* ''Manga/{{Devilman}}'' uses the Goetic designs for all its demons and explains why they look that way. The Goetia also provides the names of two demons, Caim and Amon (the later of which is the demon Akira fuses with to become Devilman).
7* In ''Anime/DevilMayCryTheAnimatedSeries'', Baul and Modeus are a pair of brothers from the Demon World. Their names are respectively derived in reference to Baal and Asmodeus.
8* ''Franchise/{{Digimon}}'' has a 'mon named Murmuxmon, who appears as the villain of the ''Anime/DigimonFrontier'' movie.
9* ''Manga/FairyTail'' has Mirajane Strauss, a mage that uses [[{{Shapeshifting}} Take-Over: Satan Soul]] to transform into demons. Two of her forms are named Halphas (Malthus) and Sitri.
10** In addition, an organization of dark guilds that the members of Fairy Tail and other legal guilds tangle with over the course of the series is called the Balam Alliance.
11* ''Franchise/{{Gundam}}'' franchise:
12** ''Anime/MobileSuitVictoryGundam'' started the trend with a mobile suit known as the Abigor.
13** ''[[Anime/AfterWarGundamX Gundam X]]'' had the evil Frost brothers piloting the demonic-looking Gundams Virsago (Vassago) and Ashtaron (Astaroth).
14** ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamSeed Gundam SEED]]'': The "Druggie trio" of Shanu Andras, Orga Sabnak and Clotho Buer are all likely references to Andras, Sabnock and Buer.
15** ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamIronBloodedOrphans'': All of the Gundams are named after the 72 Demons, and their model numbers line up with the numbering from the ''Goetia''. This list includes the Barbatos, Gusion, and Kimaris (first season), Astaroth, Vual, Dantalion (an odd case since it was shown on Try Age before appearing on the series proper), Gremory (manga side-story ''Steel Moon''), Bael and Flauros (second season). The second season reveals that this was completely deliberate: [[spoiler:since the human-slaughtering mobile armors were named for angels like "Hashmal", the machines designed to defeat them were named for demons.]]
16** ''VideoGame/SDGundamGGeneration'' introduced the Gundam Belphagor, which is said to be machine that the Virsago and Ashtaron from ''X'' were based on. Later games introduced Gundams that used the naming theme before ''Iron-Blooded Orphans'' came along, including Barbatos and Halphas (Malthus).
17* In ''Literature/HighSchoolDXD'' the main protagonist's master is a part of the Gremory household and is also a woman. Later on, the head master of Phenex and Baal also show up.
18** All 72 demons get name-dropped as the 72 pillars, the royal families of pureblood devils that rule the underworld. Although many of them were wiped out in the Great War, at least half are still around in one form or another.
19* Several characters in ''Literature/ShakuganNoShana'' are named after Goetic demons -- Marchosias, Dantalion, Valac, etc., while the third season adds many more: Decarabia, Stolas, Purson, Uvall, Haborym, Orobas, and others.
20* ''{{Literature/Slayers}}'' borrows the symbols in the Ars Goetia [[http://kanzaka.wikia.com/wiki/Ars_Goetia to symbolize the higher level Mazoku]].
21** Duke Eligos (15) is Dynast Grausherra, Prince/Prelate & Count/Earl Ipos (22) is Greater Beastmaster Zellas Metallium, Duke Bune (26) is Chaos Dragon Garv, Duke Astaroth (29) is Hellmaster Filbrizo, and Duke Vepar (42) is Deep Sea Dolphin.
22* ''Literature/SwordArtOnline'' has [=PoH=] (short for "Prince of Hell"), whose real name is Vassago Casals. His mother gave that name to him as she despised giving birth to him.
23* Amon of ''Anime/WitchHunterRobin''. Not actually a demon, though.
24* ''Anime/YuGiOh'' has a couple. "Versago the Destroyer" is a mangling of "Vassago"; more recent is "Gaap the Divine Soldier". Gaap made an appearance in the BigBad's deck in ''Manga/YuGiOhR'', which included Leraje, Caassimolar, and Botis as CannonFodder.
25** The card game also has the "Nouvelles" archetype, where each of the main six ritual monsters are combinations of a demon and a dish or cooking technique.
26* Adelicia from ''Literature/RentalMagica'' specializes in conjuring demons of Solomon. She even is the head of an organization called Ars Goetia.
27* Barring Ugo, all of the Djinn are named after the demons in ''Manga/MagiLabyrinthOfMagic''.
28* In ''Manga/FutureDiary'', the right hand servant of Deus Ex Machina is named Murmur. [[spoiler: She doesn't actually serve Deus, and even takes his crown towards the end of the series.]]
29* The six fists of the Hellas Kataphrakt in ''Anime/AldnoahZero'' are named Botis, Marax, Ronové, Halphas, Räum, & Viné.
30* ''Manga/PurgatoryOfCartagra'' features a battle among seventy-two humans, each contracted to a different Goetic demon (with the protagonist contracted to Belial), for the right to bear the ring of Solomon and become omnipotent.
31* BUER ('''B'''ase of '''U'''nearth '''E'''xtra '''R'''esources) is a a giant boring machine equipped with a powerful laser in ''Manga/PandoraInTheCrimsonShellGhostUrn''. Its Central Nervous Unit takes the form a cute little ChivalrousPervert of a robot who insistently calls himself "the philosopher of Hell". Like the Goetia's description of Buer, he has five goat legs and the head of a lion. (He walks on two legs, uses another two as his arms, and [[SomethingElseAlsoRises acts as if the fifth is his penis]].)
32* In ''Anime/FutureCardBuddyfight'', one of the two main factions of Magic World are the 72 Pillars of Solomon, usually shortened to just the 72 Pillars. Tetsuya Kurodake uses them, along with his buddy Demon Lord, Asmodai.
33* The short-lived manga ''Samon the Summoner'' has Samon summon Glasya-Labolas right in the first chapter. Samon values him for his invisibility powers.
34* Stolas, the perverted penguin obsessed with Seiji's younger sister Aqua in ''Manga/LoveTyrant'', is named after the demon king.
35* In ''Manga/WelcomeToDemonSchoolIrumaKun'', almost every demonic family bloodline in the series has a surname taken from one of the 72 Goetic demons, ie. Alice Asmodeus and Clara Valac. The Ring of Solomon also plays a big part in the in-story mythology about the Demon King, with strong implications that the [[RingOfPower Ring of Gluttony]] stuck to Iruma's finger, which is gold, is actually said ring.
36* ''Literature/MagikaSwordsmanAndSummoner'': Summoners gain powers by forming contracts with supernatural beings, which include the demons of the Ars Goetia. Kazuki Hayashizaki ends up contracted with Lemegeton, the personification of Lesser Key of Solomon and leader of the Ars Goetia, in the form of a little girl.
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39[[folder:Comic Books]]
40* Andras and Marchosias -- two of the demons most associated with battle and manslaughter -- start off the action in ''ComicBook/{{Promethea}}'' by being set up as hitmen by a conjuror who doesn't want the latest version of the title character to go on living. [[spoiler: Later on, he somehow gets the entire retinue to possess someone. How he got some of the ones who definitely don't have possession/mind control/temptation in their repertoire, like Orobas and Haures, to do it is unknown.]]
41* Pre-Flashpoint, the demon Nebiros was responsible for the existence of two heroes. ComicBook/BlueDevil fought him while he was wearing a suit of devil-themed PoweredArmor and got magically fused with it thanks to Nebiros' flames. Sebastian Faust lost his soul to Nebiros when his own father Felix sold it for arcane power. Nebiros messed with Felix by giving Sebastian the power instead.
42* Several demons from the Ars Goetia appear in ''Comicbook/{{Hellboy}}'', with Astaroth in particular being a recurring antagonist.
43* ''ComicBook/{{Vampirella}}'': Seventeen [[note]] sorry, only Warren Vampirella experts get this injoke [[/note]] of the seven servants of Chaos are more or less (don't complain, the names in the original change too) named after their Ars Goetia counterparts.
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46[[folder:Fan Works]]
47* Eligos is references in a short story written by Chloe Cerise in ''Fanfic/InfinityTrainBlossomingTrail''. In The Midnight Car, Lexi, who based off his human form after a character Chloe made that was the son of Eligos, uses his papers to form a lance and even shapeshifts into a skeletal horse. One of the symbols of Eligos was a lance, and he's depicted as a ghastly white knight riding on a skeletal horse. Other chapters have her bring up Vine, Zagan, Ose, and Parker references a Pokémon version of Valac. Chloe even paints the seal of Marchosias for the scabbard of her donut holer, Cheshire and later obtains a cloak that can let her ''transform'' into him. According to Parker, Marchosias is her favorite demon.
48** In a later chapter, Chloe, Lexi and Atticus are tasked to find the Brass Vessel of King Solomon (supposedly the item that sealed the Ars Goetia demons away), and one puzzle in the Hidden Temple is to figure out which book in a crypt activates the door (which is the seal of Astaroth).
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51[[folder:Film]]
52* The villain of ''Film/TheConjuring2'' and ''Film/TheNun'' is the demon Valak.
53* Paimon, Vepar, Procel, and Astaroth are invoked by Jonathan in ''Film/{{Ghoulies}}''.
54* The demon Paimon is the being that Ellen Leigh's cult worships in ''Film/{{Hereditary}}''.
55* The demon Naberius is the primary villain of ''Film/IFrankenstein''.
56* The demon from ''Film/TheLastExorcism'' is allegedly Abalam, who is identified as an assistant to Paimon in the ''Ars Goetia''.
57* The cult from ''Film/LastShift'' worships Paimon.
58* In ''Film/TheRite'' the demon Baal possesses [[spoiler:Father Lucas]].
59[[/folder]]
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61[[folder:Literature]]
62* The [[EnergyWeapon Devilblades]] of the ''Literature/BlackSun'' series are all named (and somewhat based) after Ars Goetia demons. So far, the only ones that have fully appeared are Astaroth, Forneus, Berith and Zagan, but it is confirmed that there are seventy-two of these weapons in existence and at least five of them are in the possession of the main protagonists.
63* ''Literature/TheBartimaeusTrilogy'' namedropped a few - all of them famous djinn in Solomon's ranks.
64* In ''[[Literature/KushielsLegacy Naamah's Kiss]]'', the main character gets involved with a group of academics attempting to summon members of the Goetia, though they aren't explicitly called that, and ask them for various magical powers.
65* ''Literature/TheOtherworld'': Hell is ruled by various demon lords whose names are taken from the Goetia, including Balaam, Baal and Ashmondai. In turn, their day to day tasks are carried out by various dukes serving under them, some of whom are also from the Goetia, like Dantalion.
66* ''Literature/TheShadowhunterChronicles'' series has the titular characters fighting against some demons named after those found in the Goetia, usually in passing, such as Raum, Shax, Malphas, Abaddon (who is a more major antagonist in ''City of Bones''), and Marbas, to name a few.
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69[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
70* ''Series/{{Charmed|1998}}'' had Shax and Andras as villains.
71* ''series/{{Chilling Adventures of Sabrina}}'' Named as one of the five book of Solomon, during the Head Boy challanges.
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74[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
75* In ''TabletopGame/ArsMagica'' 5th Edition, the Goetic Arts (Summoning, Ablating, Binding, and Commanding) are infernal powers that allow their possessor to conjure and coerce demons and other spirits. Actually, Summoning can be associated with any realm (Magic, Faerie, even Divine!), the other three powers, however, are always Infernally aligned (although not everyone who has these powers necessarily knows that...)
76* Early editions of ''TabletopGame/{{Dragonquest}}'' had lists of these demons and their game stats.
77* ''TabletopGame/DeltaGreen'' has ''Impossible Landscapes'', a campaign in which Agents can learn to summon the Ars Goetia demons, each of whom can grant a unique supernatural gift. [[spoiler:They are perfectly ordinary people (including ''several children'') being forced to play the role of a demon for the duration of the summoning and are all in thrall to the King In Yellow. Barbas and Bael play a particularly important during the campaign, the former being a compromised Delta Green who leads the player characters into a trap and gets them potentially burned and hunted down by the rest of DG due to being exposed to the King in Yellow and the latter is a director/stage manager of sorts in charge of the "play" the player characters are now an unwitting part of. And both Barbas and Bael have left running commentary [[LemonyNarrator scribbled on the ''Impossible Landscapes'' sourcebook.]] [[SurrealHorror It's that kind of campaign]].]]
78* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'':
79** From 1st Edition on, the Nine Hells of Baator have been ruled by Archdevils, many of whom take their names from the Ars Goetia. Most notable is {{Asmodeus}} as [[SatanicArchetype supreme ruler of the Nine]], but books have also introduced Alocer, Bitru, Bael, Belial, Glasya (here presented as [[RelatedInTheAdaptation Asmodeus's]] [[GenderFlip daughter]]), Focalor, Caarcrinolaas (as a [[DecompositeCharacter separate figure from Glasya]]), Chamo, Balan, Bathym, Agares, Barbatos, Abigor, Zepar, Bileth, Bifrons, Adrammelech, Buer, Buné, Morax, and Zagan (spelled as Zagum), among others. Many of these figures would also show up as vestiges in ''Tome of Magic'', while Asmodeus himself was elevated to full deity status from 4th Edition on.
80** The 3.5 SourceBook ''Tome of Magic'' has the "Binder" class that gains powers by binding vestiges with seals. In addition to being the base of the concept of the class, most of the vestiges (Ammon, Leraje, Naberius, Ronove, Malphas, Sabnock, Andromalius, Focalor, Paimon, Agares, Andras, Buer, Astaroth, Balam, Dantalion, Haures, Ipos, Shax, Zagan, Haagenti, Halphax, Eligor, Otiax, and Marchosias are used), along with their seals, are taken directly from Ars Goetia (another good portion are [[ContinuityNod Continuity Nods]] like [[TabletopGame/TombOfHorrors Acererak]]). The descriptions of the vestiges' manifestations don't always match perfectly with their descriptions in the Lesser Key of Solomon, though. For example, Zagan is described in the Lesser Key as an eagle-winged bull (well, gryphon-winged, but [[FridgeLogic how]] ''[[FridgeLogic does]]'' [[FridgeLogic one tell the difference?]]), just like Haagenti, here an eagle-winged minotaur. In the Tome, he's a great yuan-ti priest who tried (and utterly failed) to achieve godhood, and manifests as a gigantic yuan-ti (i.e. a snake-man). Oddly in this instance, there is an unused Goetic demon, Botis, who manifests as a hideous viper...
81** 4th Edition has the Vestige Pact Warlock, who can bind Shax and Leraje as a ContinuityNod.
82* In ''TabletopGame/FabulaUltima'', the Ars Goetia is one of the sample rare "arcane" weapons from the core rulebook. It's a two-handed book which deals [[LightEmUp light damage]] when used to [[ThrowTheBookAtThem whack enemies in melee]], and it gives its wielder bonuses to various checks made against demons.
83* ''TabletopGame/InNomine'' uses some of the Ars Goetia's names for its Princes, although these do not usually retain the appearences and associations that they have in the original. For example, Andrealphus is the Prince of Lust instead of being associated with geometry and measuration, Furfur is the Prince of Hardcore instead of being a deer-like figure who creates and controls weather phenomena, and Haagenti is the Prince of Gluttony instead of being associated with the transmutation of substances. Two Goetic originals do appear with roles fitting their original writeups, however. Vapula, who teaches philosophy, mechanics, and sciences, is the Prince of Technology, while Valefor, who tempts people into thieving, is the Prince of Theft.
84* ''TabletopGame/MageTheAwakening'' features goetic demons, embodiments of a character's own Vice that can be given form in order to divest them of unsavory impulses... but that means there's a primal incarnation of Vice walking about. One [[PrestigeClass Legacy]], the Clavicularius, draws heavily upon the Ars Goetia and works to draw power from their Goetic demons while keeping them tightly bound. Another Legacy, the Bene Ashmedai, [[MrViceGuy let their base instincts have a measure of free rein]] and gain power through [[SevenDeadlySins excess]]. The latter legacy is a splinter faction of the former, and they tend not to get on well.
85* ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'', like ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' before it, features Asmodeus as an out-and-out god and ruler of the Nine Hells. Besides him, Barbatos and Belial appear as archdevils; Forcas/Furcas, Alocer, Bifrons, Crocell, Gaap, Haborym, Malthus, Ose, Sabnacke/Sabnach, Vapula, Zaebos, and Zepar appear as dukes of Hell; and Haagenti, Flauros, and Shax appear as demon lords.
86* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'' has at least two daemons named after Ars Goetia: Mamon, a daemon prince of Nurgle, and the Nurgle daemon lord Scaibeithrax (aka Papa Ga'ap).
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89[[folder:Theatre]]
90* ''Theatre/CrossRoad'': Niccolo Paganini gains his musical talent in a contract with the Devil of Music, Amduscias, number 67 on the list. He introduces himself with a full description of his rank (leader of 29 legions, duke of hell), and wears his unicorn horn in his top hat.
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93[[folder:Video Games]]
94* In the original Japanese version of ''VideoGame/AdvanceWars: Days of Ruin'', Caulder is called Stolos--a variation of Stolas, an ''owl''-demon (all right, or possibly a raven-demon, but other than Andras, the other birds aren't usually alternately owls).
95* ''Videogame/{{Aquanox}}'''s ultimate enemies, the Old Ones, were variously named for Goetics, the two strongest being Crocell and Forneus (the latter being the first game's final boss).
96* ''VideoGame/{{Bayonetta}}'' has Malphas being one of the titular witch's [[SummonMagic summons]] in the form of a giant crow. The [[VideoGame/Bayonetta2 sequel]] adds Labolas (a demonic dog) and Baal (an oversized toad) to her arsenal.
97* The portable chapters of ''Franchise/{{Castlevania}}'' such as ''[[VideoGame/CastlevaniaPortraitOfRuin Portrait of Ruin]]'' name many enemies after the Goetic demons, such as Vapula (a winged lion), Glasya-Labolas (a winged bulldog), Stolas (an owl monster), Buer (a fiery rotating wheel-thingy) and so on.
98** Malphas gets the best publicity, serving as a boss or DegradedBoss as early as ''VideoGame/CastlevaniaSymphonyOfTheNight'' (though originally translated as Karasuman) and serving as Soma's recurring DoubleJump soul in ''VideoGame/CastlevaniaAriaOfSorrow'' and ''VideoGame/CastlevaniaDawnOfSorrow''.
99** The only other Goetian (aside from noted Greek Cerberus) to receive full-fledged boss status is Eligor from ''VideoGame/CastlevaniaOrderOfEcclesia'', though he somehow changed from a mounted knight to a colossal plated centaur in the process.
100* Castlevania's SpiritualSuccessor, the ''Bloodstained'' games, liberally include a lot of Goetian demons as part of the games' setting of demonic invasion.
101** ''VideoGame/BloodstainedCurseOfTheMoon'' has Focalor, Valefor, Valac, Andrealphus, Bathin and Gremory being the names of some of the bosses. The sequel adds Vepar who's previously already a boss in the below-mentioned ''Ritual of the Night''.
102** ''VideoGame/BloodstainedRitualOfTheNight'' goes to town by having no fewer than ''twenty'' enemies named after Goetian demons, with appearances alluding to their original Goetian forms and then some. Not only we have lesser Goetian enemies, we also have a few Goetian bosses, and Gremory [[spoiler:as well as Baal]] are key characters.
103* Two of the chest emblems available for your ''VideoGame/CityOfHeroes'' character's costume, specifically "[=Mystic1=]" and "[=Mystic2=]", are in fact the seals of, respectively, Gusion and Astaroth.
104* ''VideoGame/DevilMayCry'':
105** A giant toad demon in ''VideoGame/DevilMayCry4'' is named Bael.
106** Barbas is the name of a demon from the Book of Goetia who is said to truthfully answer questions if summoned. In ''VideoGame/DMCDevilMayCry'', Bob Barbas deals with information, [[IronicName although]] the "truthful" part is [[PropagandaMachine all-but-forgotten]].
107* The Random Name Generator in the ''Franchise/{{Disgaea}}'' games seems to have at least ''some'' of the 72 demons listed in it.
108* Two of the FinalBoss' EliteFour in ''VideoGame/DragonQuestIV'' are named Aamon and Barbatos. [[spoiler:In the remakes, Aamon becomes DragonWithAnAgenda and becomes {{Superboss}} named Ashtaroth.]]
109* ''VideoGame/{{Drakengard}}'' has Seere (described as being neither good nor evil, [[TrueNeutral but indifferent]] in the Ars Goetia, and also manifesting as a beautiful man...although riding a pegasus rather than a golem) and, arguably, Caim (another name for Camio, who somehow [[StarfishLanguage communicates with burning embers]] and allows one to converse with animals. Remember who Caim's synchronized with?).
110** In fact, this extends to nearly all of the characters. Leonard, Arioch, Verdelet[[note]]a demon that carries witches to Sabbath[[/note]], are all named after Demons, and Inuart is named after the leader of the infernal Angels, Iuvart. The prequel manga reveals Caim and Furiae's father's name: Gaap. [[WhatDoYouMeanItsNotSymbolic Yeah]].
111* Fittingly for a game inspired by the SatanicPanic, ''VideoGame/FaithTheUnholyTrinity'' features a few names borrowed from the Ars Goetia. More specifically, the possessed girl that serves as the crux of the plot is named Amy, Malphas appears as a major antagonist, and [[spoiler:Gary, the BigBad, is all but stated to be Astaroth incarnated as a human]].
112* ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'':
113** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIII'' introduced a NonElemental [[OurGiantsAreBigger giant]] named Glasya Labolas with high attack power. Other enemies of the same name throughout the series fit into the same mold of a giant with very strong physical attacks and no particular weaknesses.
114** In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVIII'', the [[SummonMagic Guardian Force]] Doomtrain was originally named Glasya Labolas, and the monster Buel appears to be based on Buer.
115** Most of the Demon enemies in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXI'' who are given proper titles are named after demons in the Goetia.
116** As a direct example, in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX'', the first summon that Yuna receives is named Valefor, though it only borrows the name and has little else to do with the original demon. Also, Buer is the name of a species of winged eyeballs.
117** In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXII'', Buer is the name of a type of blue imp that appears in the Zertinan Caverns. Ose also appears as a [[CatsAreMagic Coeurl]] variant inside the Great Crystal.
118** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIV'' has several. The Crystal Tower series of of raids, include Vassago, Amon, and Glasya Labolas. Bune, Ose, Forneus, Dantalion, Stolas, and Haagenti are also used as names for other bosses and mobs. In addition, a location of the Weeping City of Mhach is called "The Shrine of the Goetic" and Black Mages have Goetic Gear as their i200/210 armor.
119* The VideoGame/FallFromHeaven mod for ''[[VideoGame/{{Civilization}} Civilization IV]]'' includes a couple ''Ars Goetia'' references. Agares, as the Angel of Despair, is the GreaterScopeVillain behind all the ills in the world, and Flauros is one of the potential rulers of the Calabim. There's also a hero unit named Gibbon Goetia.
120* ''VideoGame/GenshinImpact'' has quite a few characters you meet named after the demons, with the main fairy being Paimon. The Archon of Mondstadt is known as Barbatos who values freedom, while one of the many names that the Archon of Liyue goes by is Morax. The first Archon of Inazuma was known as Baal while the current one is known only to a few as Beelzebul ({{Beelzebub}}). The Archons in Sumeru and Fontaine are also named Buer and Focalors respectively.
121** The other non-Archon gods also have this naming convention. There's Decarabian, Osial (for Ose and Belial), Andrius (for Andrias), Havria (for Havres, the feminine name of Flauros), Asmoday (for Asmodeus), and so on.
122* A later BigBad in the ''VideoGame/GhostsNGoblins'' series is named Nebiros, an alternate name of Naberius; the name Nebiros is also used for the final boss in Psikyo's Dragon Blaze. It's worth considering that the Pseudomonarchia Daemonum identified Naberius with none other than [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Kerberos]].
123** Astaroth (with various alternate spellings) shows up as the penultimate boss of Super Ghouls n' Ghosts.
124* In ''VideoGame/GoldenSun'', two of the Summon Spirits accessible in Lost Age are Zagan (early on) and Haures (much later on). They show up again in ''Dark Dawn'', and rather appropriately, the Ancient Devil can summon Haures himself.
125* Andras, Marchosias, and Amon (and ''maybe'' Phenex; the question is whether the original bird Phoenix or the demon knock-off is meant) appear as {{Mook}}s in ''VideoGame/LaMulana'', with Buer appearing as a MiniBoss.
126* In ''VideoGame/GuildWars2'', Ars Goetia can be crafted, and is a component for the legendary weapon "The Binding of Ipos", itself a reference to the demon Ipos.
127* Some of ''VideoGame/{{Infernax}}'s'' demonic bosses are named after the Ars Goetia demons, such as Paimon, Halphas, and Crocell.
128* In ''VideoGame/LeagueOfLegends'' and ''VideoGame/LegendsOfRuneterra'', the demon that Swain uses is named Raum. Raum [[ArtificialLimbs replaces his arm]], conjures ravens, and tells Swain secrets gleaned from others.
129* The ''VideoGame/OgreBattle'' series of video games uses this trope frequently, especially in [[VideoGame/TacticsOgre Episode VII]], where a large portion of the characters are named after Goetic demons (Barbatos, Andras, Haborym, etc.).
130* ''[[VideoGame/RType R-Type Final]]'' has a couple of ships named for Goetic demons, Andromalius and Dantalion. Dantalion is particularly appropriately named, since the thing was the beginning of ships that included Bydo tissue for more than the Force itself...
131* ''VideoGame/RealmOfTheMadGod'' includes Malphas as one of the higher-grade bosses.
132* ''VideoGame/ShadowHeartsCovenant'' allows the player to equip demons' crests on party members to bestow them with magic. Asmodeus, Astaroth and Amon are all major figures, and a logic mini-game allows players to earn extra rewards by placing the demons of the Lesser Key into their proper places based on clues.
133* ''VideoGame/{{Lemegeton}}'', once all four episodes are published, will feature appearances by all 72 demons.
134* ''VideoGame/SDGundamGGeneration World'' features Halphas (based on the spelling of Malthus) Gundam, [[spoiler: and later "his" boss Barbatos]].
135* VideoGame/{{RomancingSaGa3}} has Sinistrals named after the Demons Alloces, Bune, and Forneus, it is hard to tell what Aunas is named after as his name does not appear in the Goetia.
136* [[http://megamitensei.wikia.com/wiki/Category:Goetia_Demons Various]] members of the 72 Demons of Goetia appear as demons most of the ''Franchise/ShinMegamiTensei'' games, almost always as part of the "Fallen" demon family. Some of the demons also appear as Franchise/{{Persona}}s.
137** While the franchise generally [[ShownTheirWork recreate the demons faithfully according to their source materials]], it sometimes tampers with the mythos, such as portraying a couple of Goetic demons being friends when the original texts made no mention about the relationships among them.
138*** The most famous pair is arguably Belial and Nebiros, caretakers of the recurring CreepyChild DarkMagicalGirl [[AliceAllusion Alice]]. In ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiI'', they sacrifice an entire freakin' ''town'' to resurrect her, and then keep them as zombies so that [[IJustWantToHaveFriends she isn't lonely]]. In some other games, they also become bosses just like her, often {{superboss}}es.
139*** In ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiIIINocturne'', Forneus and Decarabia are depicted as friends. Perhaps because in SMT [[http://images.wikia.com/megamitensei/images/2/2f/ForneusSMT.jpg Forneus]] is a demonic ray and [[http://images3.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20080704185831/megamitensei/images/7/7d/Decarabia.png Decarabia]] is a starfish with an eye... In ''VideoGame/Persona3'' you even get a Fusion spell named Best Friends when the protagonist has both of them.
140*** Another pair of Goetic demons occasionally seen together are Ose and Flauros, if perhaps they are the only clearly leopard-like demons among the bunch. Tellingly, these two are the only Goetian demons so far who have angelic, GoldAndWhiteAreDivine alternate forms as a nod to at least some Goetian demons being FallenAngel.
141** The main villains of the spin-off ''VideoGame/GitenMegamiTensei'' are members of the Ars Goetia. They are separated in two groups, Datenshi and Futenshi. The former meaning "Fallen Angel" while the latter means "Non-Angel".
142* Barbatos Goetia from ''VideoGame/TalesOfDestiny2'' is named not only after one of the demons, but the ''Literature/ArsGoetia'' itself. The game also features bosses named Buer, Vassago, Forneus, Sabnock, Ose, Vepar, Glasya-Labolas, Dantalion, Halphas, and Gaap.
143* A pretty fair number of Zafina's moves in ''{{VideoGame/Tekken}}'' are named for Goetic demons (and quite a few other mythical characters and weapons).
144* Being a CrossoverCosmology not unlike the aforementioned Shin Megami Tensei, ''VideoGame/TokyoAfterschoolSummoners'' has a few Goetian demons as playable characters: Bathym, Marchosias, Ose, Sitri, Astarot, Bael and Amducias.
145* Ronove and Gaap show up in ''VisualNovel/UminekoWhenTheyCry'', where their status as part of the 72 is regularly mentioned. [[spoiler: As well as Zepar and Furfur.]], and a few of the Seven Stakes of Purgatory.
146* ''VideoGame/WildArms'' also has quite a few enemies named for the Goetics. Although, for at least the first game, the [[BlindIdiotTranslation less-than-admirable romanization]] can make things thorny (e.g. Ayperos is rendered as "Aipeloss").
147* A few bad guys in ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' take names from Goetics, including Naberius (a lich in the Outland), Murmur (a sound elemental), and Sabnok (a Scourge MadScientist).
148* The superpowered undead that Nessiah summons in ''VideoGame/YggdraUnion'' and ''VideoGame/BlazeUnion'' have names taken from the 72.
149* ''Franchise/FireEmblem'':
150** The most powerful [[BlackMagic Dark Magic]] tome in ''VideoGame/FireEmblemAwakening'' is called Goetia.
151** ''[[VideoGame/FireEmblemGaiden Fire Emblem Echoes: Shadow of Valentia]]'' [[spoiler:has Forneus, an alchemist who created Grima, the main antagonist of the above entry, and the Risen.]] The DLC-exclusive Guru class (named Solomon in the Japanese version) has access to the white magic spell Lemegeton, which summons monsters to serve as temporary allies.
152** The protagonist of ''VideoGame/FireEmblemThreeHouses'' is named Byleth by default. Hilariously, they can respond to one of the earliest dialogue prompts by saying "I'm a demon." ''[[DownloadableContent Cindered Shadows]]'' reveals that [[spoiler:their mother's name was Sitri]]. The ultimate mage class of the same game, exclusive to women, is the Gremory.
153* All of the Sovani weaponry in ''VideoGame/TheLastRemnant'' are based off of the demons. They can also be upgraded to include Latin suffixes: Princeps, Rex, and Dominus- or High, King, and Lord.
154* In VideoGame/TalesOfVesperia Karol's fell arm is Glasya-Labolas. The DiscOneFinalBoss is named Barbatos.
155* In the the Metroidvania roguelike ''VideoGame/RogueLegacy'', all minibosses are named after the 72.
156* The GreaterScopeVillain that the ''VideoGame/StarcraftII'' trilogy is building up to is named Amon.
157* All HumongousMecha of the [[BloodKnight Shura]] in ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsCompact3'' are named after Goetic demons, such as the Valefor, Agares, Glasyalabolas and Andras.
158* ''VideoGame/{{Xenogears}}'' features the Gaetia Key, a mistranslation of "Goetia Key" - a DoomsdayWeapon wielded by one set of antagonists that converts humans into [[OurZombiesAreDifferent wels]].
159* Many of the [[BossInMookClothing Unique Monsters]] in ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles1'' are named after Goetic demons, such as Wicked Sallos, Banquet Vassago, and Mischievous Naberius.
160* One of the antagonists of ''VideoGame/XenobladeChroniclesX'' is named Goetia. There's also a model of [[HumongousMecha Skell]] called the Amdusias.
161* Throughout ''VideoGame/FateGrandOrder'', the player fights several demons that seem to be named for ones from the Ars Goetia - particularly Flauros, Forneus, and Barbatos. [[spoiler:Eventually, it turns out that they ''are'' amongst the ranks of the actual 72 demons, and answer to King Solomon, the true BigBad of the game...or rather, Demon King Goetia, the AnthropomorphicPersonification of the ritual that summons the demons itself that [[GrandTheftMe possessed the corpse of King Solomon]].]]
162* ''VideoGame/PuzzleAndDragons'' has Belial, Amon, Astaroth and Baal along with Lucifer as part of the Archdemon series of the Rare Egg Machine.
163* ''VideoGame/{{Freespace}}'' names many Shivan capital ships after Goetic demons, in keeping with the ThemeNaming of Shivan ships after demons and other supernatural entities from various religions.
164* ''VideoGame/PhantasyStarOnline2'' has a number of planets named after Goetic demons, including the starting area Naverius (from Naberius; it's where [[EldritchAbomination Dark Falz Elder]] is sealed, fittingly enough) and the volcanic planet of Amduskia (from Amdusias), Dark Falz Luther heavily reflects the demon Stolas (Owl headed demon with a crown, teaches those who make a pact with him astronomy (Can stop time in his Dark Falz form), Minerology (Gems on his cape in Dark Falz Form that can be broken), and Herbology.
165* Following in the footsteps of its predecessor, the main setting of ''VideoGame/PhantasyStarOnline2NewGenesis'' is the planet Halpha, derived from Halphas.
166* ''VideoGame/PonyIsland'' has [[spoiler:Buer]] as a well-hidden Daemon Process.
167* ''VideoGame/PanzerPaladin'' has Furfur as one of the bosses, who attacks you with spells cast from InstantRunes. In a nod to the book, he becomes vulnerable for a period if he casts a triangle rune, as a triangle rune was needed to bind him into speaking the truth.
168* ''VideoGame/CultOfTheLamb'' has severeal midbosses named after the demons (e.g. Barbatos, Gusion). Played with in that after defeating them you can indoctrinate them into your cult, even stripping them of their infernal names should you desire.
169* ''VideoGame/AmandaTheAdventurer:'' [[spoiler:The last secret tape contains audio of Rebecca Colton (Amanda's in-universe VA) being asked to recite some cutesy "test phrases" during a recording session that are actually phonetic incantations of Bael, Paimon and Balam. Rebecca then complains that "the man in [her] headphones" is telling her to do something that she doesn't want to do...]]
170-->'''Rebecca:''' [[spoiler:Bye yell, bye yell, bye yell... Pie man, pie man, pie man... Baa lamb, baa lamb, ba-]]
171[[/folder]]
172
173[[folder:Web Comics]]
174* Several characters in ''Webcomic/{{Floraverse}}'' are named after demons listed here, including Furfur, Beleth, Orobas, and Amdusias.
175* Some of the demons in ''Webcomic/OzzieTheVampire'' are Goetic demons. There's Glasya-Labolas, Malphas, and Dantalion.
176[[/folder]]
177
178[[folder:Web Original]]
179* In ''Literature/{{Pact}}'', the named demons borrow heavily from the Ars Goetia, with Furfur, Agares, and Andras being directly mentioned. A fourth, Ornias, is ascribed powers that harken to those of Orias.
180* In ''Literature/{{Worm}}'' there's a pair of villains from an ApocalypseCult going by the names Valefor and Eligos. In the sequel work ''Literature/{{Ward}}'' we see more villains from the same cult, including one called Seir.
181* The first story of ''Literature/GhostsOfAlbion'' deals with the demon Baal-Berith rising in London.
182* In ''Literature/VoidDomain'', [[spoiler: Zagan]] shows up. He is explicitly named as one of the seventy-two royalty of Hell.
183* Stolas is a recurring character in ''WebAnimation/HelluvaBoss'', being the one who provided I.M.P. with their means of traveling to the mortal realm (in exchange for sexual favors from a greatly annoyed Blitzo). Several other Goetia demons make appearances throughout the series as well.
184[[/folder]]
185
186[[folder:Western Animation]]
187* Amon is the masked leader of the Equalist revolt in ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra''.
188[[/folder]]

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