* Ryoko from [[Tenchi Muyo]], is often seen wearing a cat tail belt in the OVA series.
* Ryoko from [[Tenchi Muyo]], is often seen wearing a cat tail belt in the OVA series. She can move the tail at will, as if it was really a part of her body. Ryoko often has the mannerisms of a catgirl.
* Sailor Tin Nyanko, one of the [[Sailor Animamates]] from ''[[Sailor Moon]]''
* Sailor Tin Nyanko, one of the [[Sailor Animamates]] from ''[[Sailor Moon]]''
Kisa Sohma from Fruits Basket transforms into a tiger from the zodiac when hugged by a guy or whenever her body is under a lot of stress.
Rose from +Anima, a Cat +Anima; her fingernails turn into claws and she gains catlike speed. She also has two tiger like stripes on her cheeks and a stripe on her forehead.
Shampoo from Ranma 1/2 transforms into a cat when splashed with cold water.
Starfire from Teen Titans transforms into a cat in the comics when hit with a ray that causes evolutionary regression, suggesting that her race evolved from cats, or cat-like extraterrestrial creatures; additionally, she becomes a cat in the anime in the episode Bunny Raven.
Uriko from Bloody Roar 2 and subsequent games (not a catgirl in the first game)
Yoruichi Shihouin from Bleach has the ability to transform herself into a black/dark blue cat as a matter of will (ironically, she is often mistaken for a male in this form as a result of her cat form's deep voice).
Momomiya Ichigo from Tokyo Mew Mew transforms in her mew mew form, which gives her black cat ears and a black cat tail, and transforms entirely into a cat when under immense stress .
Girls who are seen wearing catgirl costumes regularly
Ryoko from Tenchi Muyo, is often seen wearing a cat tail belt in the OVA series. She can move the tail at will, as if it was really a part of her body. Ryoko often has the mannerisms of a catgirl.
In The Destroyer book 32, 'Killer Chromosomes' and then again in book 117, 'Deadly Genes', Remo Williams, the destroyer, faces off against a female mastermind who has genetically modified herself with tiger DNA with plans on similarly transmuting the entire human race.
Chibi-neko from The Star of Cottonland is a physically a cat but is always drawn as a catgirl; this 1979 work is credited with popularizing the catgirl character type[3]
Holly from the Dreamworld webnovel (Her saga is not yet written on the site)[citation needed]
Kagaya-hime from the novel Fudoki (book) by Kij Johnson (a tortoiseshell cat that transforms into a woman and assumes the role of a warrior)
Kami Osbank, a Turkish woman who is secretly a member of a hidden feline humanoid race known as the Pride, who possess tails, retractable claws, heightened senses, strength and agility, and leopard-like tracks of spots running along their limbs and torsos. Their prehensile tails possess cartilage and muscle rather than bone, and thus with practice can retract to the base of the spine and allow the Pride to live hidden among humans (The Pride, by Edie Bingham)
Miss Nyako and her niece, Konyako, from Eden's Bowy
Odd Della-Robbia from Code Lyoko (while not technically a cat/human hybird, Odd's form on the virtual reality Lyoko includes over-sized 4-fingered paw-like hands and a prehensile tail - he also displays cat-like-reflexes and mannerisms, has called himself 'a giant purple cat' and has been seen to meow)
Para-dice from Oban Star Racers (a biomechanical-looking catlike alien)
Rena, or Reena, from Genesis of Aquarion Even though she is not a catgirl in the usual sense, she has cat-like teeth, and the ribbon she wears in her hair resembles cat ears.
Sekhmet (also spelt Sachmet, Sakhet, and Sakhmet; Greek name: Sacmis), The Egyptian goddess of war and protector of the Pharaoh. She was envisioned as a fierce lioness, and in art, was depicted as such, or as a woman with the head of a lioness, dressed in red, the colour of blood.
Teekl from the Batman mythos (a cat who can transform into a hybrid humanoid form, familiar of Klarion the Witch Boy)
A race of sapient genetically engineered catpeople has appeared in several episodes of the newest Doctor Who series in the episodes dealing with the setting of New New York
^Jaqueline Berndt (1995). Phänomen Manga (in German). Berlin. p. page 111. ISBN3-86124-289-3. {{cite book}}: |page= has extra text (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)