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It's All about S(p)am~

Depends on the kid really XD
A kid in my school kicked a soccer ball in front of a moving car, the car squashed it.
 
hmm?...now that you mention it.....*looks in mirror*

ah there it is.

then why is it so hard to breathe...? *faints from gas leak*
 
lol thats true~ but for some reason my horse doesnt wanna come back to me...all i did was chase lolis around for a few hundred years and then he snorted at me as if in contempt and walked away...havnt seen him since...
 
Look at this "popular culture" thing

"
- Several Castlevania games feature the Dullahan figure, although as undead rather than faeries. They first featured in Castlevania III: Dracula's Curse for the Nintendo Entertainment System as "Headless Hunters", and again under the same name in Super Castlevania IV for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. They appear in Castlevania: Symphony of the Night, this time adopting the name "Dhuron", which was most likely a phonetic mistranslation. The Dullahan was featured as a "boss" enemy in the Japanese-only PC Engine game Castlevania: Rondo of Blood, as well as the more widely distributed Super Nintendo game it inspired, Castlevania: Dracula X (Castlevania: Vampire's Kiss in Europe), and the Nintendo DS game Castlevania: Portrait of Ruin. More recently, the character was featured in Castlevania: Lament of Innocence, Castlevania: Curse of Darkness, Castlevania: The Arcade (only in Japan and Europe), and Pachislot Akumajō Dracula II (only in Japan).

- The Disney film Darby O'Gill and the Little People does not name the Dullahan directly, but portrays it as the headless driver of the Cóiste Bodhar.

- In the Golden Sun franchise, Dullahan appears as a powerful boss monster and ally that can be called by the Necromage class.

- The Dullahan makes several appearances as an enemy in the Final Fantasy series of games.

- In the Vagrant Story video game, the Dullahan is a boss that the protagonist, Ashley Riot, encounters early on.

- In the Blue Dragon video game, the Dullahan is a robotic headless centaur who is the mini-boss on the Road to Jibral.

- In the Durarara!! anime and manga, a Dullahan named Celty Sturluson is featured as a main character.

- In the Hataraku Maou-sama!/The Devil is a Part-Timer anime and manga, Devil King Sadao's mundane bicycle is referred to as 'The Dullahan'.

- In the Lost Girl episode "Where There's a Will, There's a Fae," a Dullahan mercenary is present.

- In the Strider 2, for the original PlayStation, a Dullahan appears as a Stage Boss.

1 One of the recurring creature types in the Monster Rancher franchise is the Durahan, named using a Romanization of the Japanese pronunciation of the word "dullahan." Although typically appearing as a spectral suit of armor, the flavor text of the creature references the dullahan myths.

- In the game Shining Force (Sega Genesis), he is an enemy known as "Durahan". Players may be fooled at first by a large face but that is only a decoration on his armor for upon closer inspection, you will see that he has no head.

- In the book Skulduggery Pleasant: Mortal Coil by Derek Landy, A Dullahan appears to take Stephanie to Dr. Nye so she can have him seal her true name.

- In the Hallmark movie "The Magical Legend of the Leprechauns" (1999), a troupe of leprechauns has a brief encounter with a very depressed Dunlang the Dullahan."


nothing about a legend...