Editing Heihachi Mishima
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|firstgame = ''{{iw|wikipedia|Tekken|video game}}'' (1994) | |firstgame = ''{{iw|wikipedia|Tekken|video game}}'' (1994) | ||
|games = ''[[SSB4]]''<br>''[[Ultimate]]'' | |games = ''[[SSB4]]''<br>''[[Ultimate]]'' | ||
|lastappearance = ''{{iw|wikipedia|Tekken 8}}'' (2024, | |lastappearance = ''{{iw|wikipedia|Tekken 8}}'' (2024, cameo) | ||
|console = Arcade | |console = Arcade | ||
|species = Human | |species = Human | ||
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|interwikipage = Heihachi Mishima | |interwikipage = Heihachi Mishima | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''Heihachi Mishima''' ({{ja|三島 平八|Mishima Heihachi}}, ''Mishima Heihachi'') is a | '''Heihachi Mishima''' ({{ja|三島 平八|Mishima Heihachi}}, ''Mishima Heihachi'') is a recurring playable fighter from the {{uv|Tekken}} universe. | ||
==Origin== | ==Origin== | ||
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While Jin came out victorious, Heihachi immediately ordered Tekken Force, the Mishima Zaibatsu's private paramilitary squad, to betray and murder him, with Heihachi delivering what would be the killing shot, were it not for the Devil Gene within Jin awakening in the nick of time and saving him from certain death. Two years later, as Heihachi attempted to have a new lifeform created based on Ogre's DNA samples taken from the site of his battle with Jin, he discovered that a sample of the Devil Gene was necessary to do so; around this time, he learned that Zaibatsu rivals G Corporation had exhumed Kazuya's corpse and successfully brought him back to life, and so he decided to organize a fourth King of Iron Fist tournament, with the Zaibatsu as grand prize, in order to lure both Kazuya and Jin in, in which he succeeds, leading to a battle at the shrine of Hon-Maru, in which Jin, powered by the Devil Gene, defeats both his father and his grandfather, but spares them both in Jun's name. Soon after Jin vanishes into the night, a squad of JACK robots, deployed by G Corporation, break into the Hon-Maru in order to capture both Mishimas. Heihachi seemingly perished in the explosion that re-awakened Jinpachi, after being left to die by Kazuya, but he survived and went into hiding, reappearing one month later when the fifth King of Iron Fist tournament is announced, until Jin put Jinpachi out of misery and freed him to afterlife. | While Jin came out victorious, Heihachi immediately ordered Tekken Force, the Mishima Zaibatsu's private paramilitary squad, to betray and murder him, with Heihachi delivering what would be the killing shot, were it not for the Devil Gene within Jin awakening in the nick of time and saving him from certain death. Two years later, as Heihachi attempted to have a new lifeform created based on Ogre's DNA samples taken from the site of his battle with Jin, he discovered that a sample of the Devil Gene was necessary to do so; around this time, he learned that Zaibatsu rivals G Corporation had exhumed Kazuya's corpse and successfully brought him back to life, and so he decided to organize a fourth King of Iron Fist tournament, with the Zaibatsu as grand prize, in order to lure both Kazuya and Jin in, in which he succeeds, leading to a battle at the shrine of Hon-Maru, in which Jin, powered by the Devil Gene, defeats both his father and his grandfather, but spares them both in Jun's name. Soon after Jin vanishes into the night, a squad of JACK robots, deployed by G Corporation, break into the Hon-Maru in order to capture both Mishimas. Heihachi seemingly perished in the explosion that re-awakened Jinpachi, after being left to die by Kazuya, but he survived and went into hiding, reappearing one month later when the fifth King of Iron Fist tournament is announced, until Jin put Jinpachi out of misery and freed him to afterlife. | ||
He also enters the sixth tournament in order to take the Zaibatsu, which had been taken over by Jin at the end of the previous tournament back for himself. Until his encounter with a now grown up illegitimate son and rebel leader, Lars, Heihachi forfeits from the tournament while changes plans to retake Zaibatsu. Following Jin's disappearance until he is found and rescued by Lars and Lee, Heihachi used this opportunity to finally retake the Zaibatsu, and announced the seventh tournament. However, following his and Kazuya's respective encounters with [https://streetfighter.fandom.com/wiki/Akuma Akuma] (from | He also enters the sixth tournament in order to take the Zaibatsu, which had been taken over by Jin at the end of the previous tournament back for himself. Until his encounter with a now grown up illegitimate son and rebel leader, Lars, Heihachi forfeits from the tournament while changes plans to retake Zaibatsu. Following Jin's disappearance until he is found and rescued by Lars and Lee, Heihachi used this opportunity to finally retake the Zaibatsu, and announced the seventh tournament. However, following his and Kazuya's respective encounters with [https://streetfighter.fandom.com/wiki/Akuma Akuma] (from {{uv|Street Fighter}} series), who was entrusted by Kazumi to dispose them in her stead, in case of her failed mission and death, Heihachi cancelled the tournament and abandoned his hunt for Jin, in order to focus on important matters against Kazuya and Akuma. Ultimately, after deciding to recount the tragic events the begun with Kazumi, and confirming the existence of the Devil Gene to a mysterious journalist, Heihachi goes off to confront Kazuya one final time at the mouth of a volcano. The duel ends with Heihachi's apparent death, and his body being dropped into the boiling lava by Kazuya, repaying Heihachi a second time. | ||
Despite his | Despite his demise, Heihachi's daughter Reina, who now attended a same high school as Jin resurfaces and begin her move during the eight tournament, by earning Jin and his allies' trusts, so she can use them to get near of Kazuya, and let herself be killed by him to awaken her dormant devil, before carrying her true mission to avenge her father. | ||
Barring Banjō Ginga in the first and Wataru Takagi in the second ''Tekken'' games, Daisuke Gōri was famous for providing his voice in subsequent titles, until ''Tekken 6'' as he passed away on January 17, 2010 with Unshō Ishizuka voicing him from ''Tekken: Blood Vengeance'' until ''Tekken 7'' until his passing on August 13, 2018 | Barring Banjō Ginga in the first and Wataru Takagi in the second ''Tekken'' games, as well as Taiten Kusunoki in the Netflix animated series ''Tekken Bloodline'', Daisuke Gōri was famous for providing his voice in subsequent titles, until ''Tekken 6'' as he passed away on January 17, 2010 with Unshō Ishizuka voicing him from ''Tekken: Blood Vengeance'' until ''Tekken 7'' until his passing on August 13, 2018. | ||
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===As a background character=== | ===As a background character=== | ||
Heihachi appears on [[Mishima Dojo]] as a background character, using his aforementioned older appearance. If parts of walls and ceiling are broken, he will get up and react to it with his arms crossed | Heihachi appears on [[Mishima Dojo]] as a background character, using his aforementioned older appearance. Heihachi uses a voice archive from ''Tekken 3D Prime Edition'' through ''Tekken 7'', provided by the late Unshō Ishizuka. If parts of walls and ceiling are broken, he will get up and react to it with his arms crossed. | ||
===As a costume=== | ===As a costume=== |