Jade | |
---|---|
Mortal Kombat character | |
![]() Jade inMortal Kombat 11 (2019) | |
First game | Mortal Kombat II (1993) |
Created by | John Tobias[1] |
Designed by | Various
|
Voiced by | Various
|
Motion capture | |
Portrayed by | Irina Pantaeva (Annihilation) Tati Gabrielle (MK2) |
In-universe information | |
Species | Edenian |
Weapon | Bō staff |
Jade is afictionalcharacter in theMortal Kombatfighting game franchise byMidway Games andNetherRealm Studios. She debuted inMortal Kombat II (1993) as a hidden opponent and first became playable inUltimate Mortal Kombat 3 (1995). Her primary weapon is asteel bō staff.
In the story of the games, Jade is the childhood friend of Edenian princessKitana. She first appears as an assassin for Outworld emperorShao Kahn, but due to her friendship with Kitana, she supports the princess' rebellion against Shao Kahn to liberate the realms he conquered. While Jade also appears in various media outside of the games, the character has received mixed critical reception.
Jade was initially conceived by the series developers as "an evil version of Kitana" for her introduction inMortal Kombat II,[8] in which she is a non-playable secret character whom players could fight after following a specific set of requirements.[9] She was of threepalette-swapped female ninjas into the game along with Kitana and Mileena, with a green color scheme.MK co-creator and character designerJohn Tobias felt that including hidden characters inMKII would add to its mystique after the inclusion ofReptile in the previous game, so he conceived Jade and another secret character,Smoke, by creating their color palettes while background artist Tony Goskie added images of them peeking out from behind a tree in the game's "Living Forest" stage.[1] Tobias then created backstories for Jade and the game's other hidden characters once they were made playable in later installments.
InMortal Kombat II (1993), Jade was a hidden character who played no part in the game's storyline other than appearing at the start of random fights to drop cryptic clues on how to access her, with players having to then meet specific requirements during gameplay in order to fight Jade in a secret battle. She is a greenpalette swap ofKitana with darker skin, and fights with increased speed and a pair of gold fans.
Jade makes her official debut as a playable character inUltimate Mortal Kombat 3 (1995); an upgrade ofMortal Kombat 3 in which she was written as being one of Outworld emperorShao Kahn's elite assassins along with his adopted stepdaughter Kitana, with whom she shared a close friendship.[10] After Kitana flees to Earthrealm after killing Mileena, Shao Kahn orders Jade to bring Kitana back to him alive; forcing her to choose between disobeying her superior or betraying her close friend.[11]
Jade is not playable again untilMortal Kombat: Deception (2004). She witnesses the deaths of Kitana and the thunder godRaiden's chosen fighters at the hands of the Deadly Alliance (Shang Tsung andQuan Chi) and their subsequent resurrection by the Dragon KingOnaga. Jade is forced to imprison a brainwashed Kitana in the Edenian palace dungeon before freeingSindel and escaping with her to Outworld, while seeking revenge against traitorous fellow EdenianTanya, who had allied herself with Onaga. In Sindel's non-canonical ending, she and Jade locate Onaga's tomb when he sends Kitana after them. Jade battles her friend before Sindel kills Onaga, breaking Kitana from his spell and returning peace to Edenia.[12]
InMortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks, the 2005beat 'em upaction-adventure spinoff that retold the events ofMKII, she engages Shaolin warriorsLiu Kang andKung Lao in a fight alongside Mileena and a brainwashed Kitana, and is defeated.
InMortal Kombat, the 2011reboot of the series, Jade was born into Edenian royalty that served Shao Kahn after he conquered the realm. Jade served as bodyguard to Princess Kitana and the two became close friends, but was under orders to kill Kitana should she become disloyal to Kahn. They initially fight against the Earthrealm warriors, but Jade soon becomes suspicious of Kitana when she attempts to discover her true heritage, which in turn leads to her capture when she confronts Shao Kahn after coming across a grotesque clone of herself named Mileena. Jade changes allegiances and helps the Earthrealm warriors free Kitana from captivity. She later joins them as they prepare to fend off Shao Kahn's invasion of Earthrealm. As Raiden and Liu Kang commune with the Elder Gods, the Lin Kuei ninja clan and Sindel attack; killing Jade and several of her allies before they are resurrected as undead revenants and enslaved in the Netherealm by Quan Chi.[13]
Jade was not included inMortal Kombat X (2015), with Kitana shown using Jade's weapons in one of her three gameplay variations.[14]
Jade, as a revenant, returns inMortal Kombat 11 (2019), serving under Kitana and Liu Kang's revenant forms in the Netherrealm after they became its new rulers inMKX as well as servant to the keeper of timeKronika.[15][16] Due to her plans to erase Raiden from history however, a time anomaly she created inadvertently brought past versions of Jade and Kitana to the present. The two lend their support to its new rulerKotal Kahn, with whom Jade shared a romantic history with before she died.[17] While helping him track down a time-displaced Shao Kahn, during which they encountered Jade's revenant and D'vorah and Jade Defeated Them Both, Kotal's hatred for all Tarkatans led Jade to beat him down before he Would Kill The innocent Tarkatans and left them both vulnerable to being captured by their quarry.[18] She is later rescued From Skarlet by Kitana and joins her united Outworld army in confronting Shao Kahn. After Kitana becomes the new Kahn of Outworld,[19] she and Jade take part in the final battle against Kronika and their revenant counterparts alongside the combined Earthrealm and Outworld armies.[20][21]
Jade was played by martial artist Katalin Zamiar, who also portrayed Kitana and Mileena. Zamiar did not return forUltimate Mortal Kombat 3 due to legal issues with Midway,[22] and was replaced by Becky Gable forUltimate Mortal Kombat 3.[23] Jade was given her own weapon, a bõ staff, to further differentiate her from Kitana and Mileena.[24]
Like their male ninja counterparts in theMortal Kombat games, Kitana, Mileena and Jade evolved considerably from their original palette swap designs in the three-dimensional titles, receiving distinct new designs and other features. John Vogel, who worked on story and animations forMortal Kombat: Deception, described Jade therein as "more of stealthy ninja type of character. She's the one who sneaks around and gets information, and carries out covert activities."[24] Much like most of the female characters, Jade was given a more revealing costume inMortal Kombat 9, only to receive a more conservative costume again upon her return inMortal Kombat 11.[25]
Jade copied Kitana's attacks for her secret battle inMortal Kombat II,[26] in particular her "Fan Throw",[27] but was extremely fast and immune to projectile attacks.[27] Upon her playable debut inUltimate Mortal Kombat 3, her primary weapon became a magical steelbō staff, which was also used in herFatalities, mostly for impaling her opponents. Her projectile attack in the game was a three-prongedboomerang that players could shoot in three different forward directions through varyingjoystick and button combinations.[28] Jade's body-propel attack, a kick that sees her encased in a smoking green glow, is a variant ofJohnny Cage's Shadow Kick.[29][30]Sega Saturn Magazine's guide toUltimate Mortal Kombat 3 described her specials as leading into "some devastatingcombo attacks," adding that she was especially hard to win against as theCPU-controlled opponent.[29]
Jade's moves, along with these of Mileena and Kitana, were used inMortal Kombat Trilogy to create the hidden composite characterKhameleon.[31] In their 1997 review of the game,GameSpot described both Jade and Noob Saibot inTrilogy as being "incredibly overpowered, with moves that run from rendering projectiles ineffective to making characters momentarily powerless."[32] She was a non-playableboss character inShaolin Monks, fighting alongside both Kitana and Mileena.[33]Prima Games rated Jade an overall score of seven out of ten, higher than Kitana and Mileena, for the 2006 compilation titleMortal Kombat: Armageddon, in which she was playable along with the entireMortal Kombat roster.[34] For the 2011 reboot, Prima opined that her "speed, safe attacks, and savvy combo abilities put her near the top of the cast."[35]
ForMortal Kombat X, Jade's special attacks were given to Kitana for her "Mournful" gameplay variation, described in the game as her paying tribute to "her fallen best friend" by "employing the weapons of the deceased master assassin."[36]
Jade has a minor role in the novelization of the 1995 live-action filmMortal Kombat,[37] but did not appear in the film.
Jade is a supporting character in the 1997 filmMortal Kombat Annihilation, and was portrayed by Siberian-born supermodel and actressIrina Pantaeva in her English-language film debut.[38] She has no past relationship nor any interaction with Kitana in the film, and she secretly remains loyal to Shao Kahn while pretending to aid the Earthrealm warriors in her attempt to lead them into an ambush. Pantaeva underwent six months' fight training prior to shooting, and in a 1997 interview withFemme Fatales magazine, Pantaeva stated that "I loved my character so much that I [could] not get away from her."[39]Tati Gabrielle will play the character in the upcoming filmMortal Kombat 2.[40]
Jade appeared in the 2021 animated filmMortal Kombat Legends: Battle of the Realms, and was voiced byEmily O'Brien.[5]
In theMortal Kombat comic book series published byMalibu Comics, Jade was a recurring character in the 1995 six-issue miniseriesBattlewave, in which she is simply an evil assassin paired withSmoke in serving Shao Kahn, and has no connection to Kitana or her homeland.[41]
A Jade figurine was included with a 1995 special issue of Argentinian magazineTop Kids that featured a cover story titled "Jade: mystery warrior".[42] In 1996, a figure of Jade fromMortal Kombat Trilogy's line was released by Toy Island.[43] A 1:6 scale limited-edition character statue was released in the Mortal Kombat "Enchanted Warriors" line by Syco Collectibles in 2012.[44]
In his 2022 bookMortal Kombat: Games of Death, David Church remarked that when Jade and the series' other hidden characters first became playable in the "completist" titlesUltimate Mortal Kombat 3 andMortal Kombat Trilogy, "their gameplay abilities were often poorly balanced and their backstories seem[ed] tacked onto the increasingly sprawling story world."[45] Gavin Jasper ofDen of Geek praised Jade's hidden fight inMortal Kombat II but felt that "she doesn't really bring anything to the table afterwards" untilMortal Kombat 11, calling her romance with Kotal Kahn "a fresh romantic pairing that made sense and added a little bit of hope toMortal Kombat 9's tragedy and thenihilism ofKronika's" plot.[46] Chris Plante ofUGO wrote in 2010 that the character "seems to fetishize Eastern culture" in that she was "equal parts exotic slave girl and Asian princess, her most powerful weapon being her sexuality. She's the mystical, foreign black widow, a relic of post-warpulp novels."[47] Julian Beauvais ofComic Book Resources said in 2017, "For most of her time in the franchise, Jade has pretty much been defined as being the best friend of Kitana. In a series where lasting friendships are rare, that’s a cool little detail, but it also puts Jade in a role that makes her seem secondary to the princess."[48] Reception to herFatalities has been mixed.[49][50][51]
Leon Miller ofScreen Rant wrote in 2017, "Jade compensates for a fairly boring moveset – yes, we know she wields abō staff! – and tired, sexed-up outfit" with her "creative finishers" and "her backstory, which has seen her develop from an uncomplicated assassin in Shao Kahn’s employ into a conflicted figure ultimately redeemed by her friendship with Kitana."[52] However, in her 2021 studyArt Imitates Life: The Representation (Or Lack Thereof) of Black Women in Video Games, author Bug Gadson criticized Jade's role as "a servant" and her staff "which she uses as astripper pole to celebrate her wins," while she "is expected to give her life to protect her masters". While discussing Sindel's killing of multiple characters in the 2011 reboot's story mode, Gadson noted that Jade's death was "the most gruesome in the entire cutscene; her white and male counterparts are only put down with punches and kicks. Her master, Kitana, is merelyshoved away. Jade's stomach is ripped out of her body as she tries to protect her."[53]
Chad Hunter ofComplex chose theMortal Kombat 2011 versions of Jade and Kitana to represent the "women who fight" stereotype in his 2012 list of the fifteen most stereotypical characters in video games, describing them as "half-naked skanks who can fight, hurl lasers and perform aerobatic attacks while wearing thongs, high-heeled boots and keeping their giant breasts under scarves", which he felt had caused "female gamers [to] slide away from this series."[54] In a 2016 thesis discussing female representation in video games, Juho Matias Puro included Jade withStreet Fighter'sChun-Li andTekken'sChristie Monteiro as "hypersexualized" characters "designed to aesthetically pleasure the hypothetical male, but theirsexual identity and expression are non-existent."[55] Following the 2019 release ofMortal Kombat 11, Princess Weekes ofThe Mary Sue described Jade therein as a "boss" in an article discussing video games "toning down their hyper-sexual female character[s]" due to the increase in marketing to female gamers. She dismissed the designs of Jade, Kitana and Mileena in the 2011 reboot as "ridiculous" and "large breasts and cleavage for the sake of it", while her response to the criticism of Jade's more conservative redesign inMK11 was that "part of the sex appeal of the characters is watching them destroy their enemies. Watching Jade in [MK11], she has plenty of sex appeal when she disembowels her enemies."[25] April Prince ofBlack Girl Nerds described the character as "a strong, beautiful dark-skinned woman who has always fought for the freedom and autonomy of her realm and for that we as the gaming world love her",[56] and "quite the representative for dark-skinned women" who appealed to black femaleMortal Kombat players.[57] Alex Dalbey ofThe Daily Dot, in 2019, said of the negative reaction to the redesigns of Jade and other female characters inMK11: "This attitude that women in video games must be attractive is reflective of an entitled expectation that women in games are, in no small measure, there for straight male sexual entertainment."[58]
Media related toJade at Wikimedia Commons