kuchisake onna


The Kuchisake Onna, also known as the Kuchisake Onna, is a Japanese urban legend dating back to the 1970s. According to legend, Kuchisake Onna is a woman who wears a surgical mask to cover her face

how does she attack?

 She should approach people on the street and ask them if they think she is beautiful. If the other party answers "yes," Kuchisake Onna removes her mask, revealing a grotesque severed mouth that extends from her ear to ear. Then she asks the person again if they think she is beautiful. If the opponent answers "no" or screams in fear, Kuchisake Onna attacks with scissors or a large punch. if the other party answers "yes" she will cut their faces like her own face.


Story :

 Kuchisake onna was a beautiful japanese lady. She was always praised by everyone for how beautiful she was. She was so beautiful that everyone around her wanted her. Her husband was a solider. One day her husband went in a war. While her husband was in a war she cheated on him. When her Husband returned from the war he heard about it and got so angry. He then took his sword and cut her face from one ear to the another and told that "Let me see who calls you beautiful now." After she recoverd she saw her face in the mirror and got really sad after seeing it. She couldn't accept it and killed herself. That's why she ask her victims if they think she is beautiful.

The legend of Kuchisake Onna spread in Japan in the 1970s and 1980s. Many people reported seeing her on the street and rumors spread that she was her real person. Some schools warned students not to go home alone at night for fear of encountering Kuchisake Onna. 


Despite the widespread fear of Kuchisake Onna, there are no confirmed reports of her actually being attacked by Kuchisake Onna. Some think this legend may have been a way for parents to warn their children of the dangers of talking to strangers or walking alone at night. Some have suggested that this legend may have been an expression of concern over changing gender roles and women's increasing independence in Japanese society

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