Antylamon
Template:Infobox Digimon Antylamon is an Ultimate Level Animal Digimon, the Ultimate form of Lopmon and one of the twelve Devas that serve the Sovereign Zhuqiaomon. Resembling a rabbit, he protects those weaker than him due to his gentle personality. He also has excellent hearing due his ears.
Abilities
Manipulating the "ki" that flows within his body, Antylamon can nimbly move to avoid an enemy's attack or to inflict a heavy blow that smashes rocks.
Attacks
- Bunny Blade (Treasure Axe): Revolves like a tornado and cutts the beings in his circumference.
- Mantra Chant (Arm Bomber): Releases a hard wave of Chrome Digizoid from his body.
- Meditation Cure
Appearances
Hurricane Touchdown/Supreme Evolution! The Golden Digi-Eggs
- The Antylamon that appeared was a corrupt version.
In reaction to Willis refusing to go with him, Wendigomon Digivolved to Antylamon. It took the combined powers of Flamedramon, Halsemon, Digmon and Gargomon to hold him off and blast him into the lake, from which he emerged as Cherubimon.
Digimon Tamers
- Voiced by Michelle Ruff.
Antylamon was originally one of the Devas, whose job was as guardian of the south gate leading to Zhuqiaomon's palace. When she met Suzie Wong, Antylamon grew to care about the girl & drove fellow Deva Makuramon away. As punishment, Zhuqiaomon reverted her to Lopmon for becoming a partner to a human. But during the D-Reaper's attack in the Real World, Lopmon regained her ability to Digivolve to Antylamon to help out the Tamers.
Gender uncertainties
In the Japanese version of Digimon Tamers, Antylamon (and his Rookie form, Lopmon) speaks with an antiquated dialect which uses gender-neutral pronouns, leaving viewers unable to discern if he was male or female (with a leaning towards the latter as a result of his female voice actress) until a much later episode, when his partner, Suzie, referred to him as male. However, in the dubbed incarnation of this series, Antylamon was made into a female, due to the lack of precise pronouns and the assumption by the writers that since the seiyuu in the Japanese version was female, so was the character.