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Cyrax

Cyrax is a player character from the Mortal Kombat fighting game franchise created
Cyrax
for Midway Games by Ed Boon and John Tobias. Making his debut in Mortal
Kombat 3 in 1995, he is a member of the Lin Kuei clan of assassins who underwent Mortal Kombat character
transformation into cyborgs. Along with counterparts Sektor and Smoke, Cyrax was
assigned to hunt down the rogue former clansman Sub-Zero, but unlike Sektor, he
and Smoke were able to rediscover their human side, with Cyrax in particular
joining Sonya Blade and Jax Briggs as a member of the Outer World Investigation
Agency after having his soul restored. His backstory prior to his transformation is
expanded in the 2011 Mortal Kombat reboot.

Cyrax has also been featured in other Mortal Kombat alternate media such as the
1996 animated series Mortal Kombat: Defenders of the Realm and the 2011 web
series Mortal Kombat: Legacy. The character has received mostly positive reception,
particularly for his Fatality finishing moves and gameplay.

Contents
Appearances
In video games
Design
Gameplay
In other media and merchandise Cyrax in Mortal Kombat (2011)
Reception First game Mortal Kombat 3
See also (1995)
Notes Created John Tobias
References by
Portrayed Sal Divita (MK3,
by UMK3, MKT)[1]
Appearances J.J. Perry (Annihilation)
Shane Warren Jones
(Legacy)
In video games
Voiced by Rhasaan Orange
In Mortal Kombat 3, Cyrax is a member of the Lin Kuei clan of assassins along with
(MK2011)
Sub-Zero, Sektor, and Smoke. When the clan decides to utilize modern technology
Motion Stephan Scalabrino
by converting its members into soulless cyborgs, Sub-Zero refuses and defects from
capture (MK2011)
the clan, and was thus marked for death by the grandmasters. As a result, Cyrax,
Sektor and Smoke were all assigned to hunt down and kill Sub-Zero. They survive Information
the invasion of Earthrealm by Outworld emperor Shao Kahn and his minions, as Weapon Sabre of Light (MKG)
they have no souls to take. However, Sub-Zero captures Cyrax and reprograms him Pulse Blade (MK:DA,
with orders to destroy Shao Kahn, but Kahn was defeated beforehand by the other MK:A)
Earthrealm warriors. As a result of his reprogramming, Cyrax awaited new orders Origin Botswana (Earthrealm)
from Kahn; when these never came, he consequently malfunctioned and wandered
Fighting Ninjutsu (MK:DA,
until becoming mired in the middle of a vast desert. This was continued In Mortal
styles MK:A)
Kombat Gold, when he was recovered and repaired by the Lin Kuei. The short-
handed clan sent Cyrax back into battle, with Sektor assigned to monitor him.[2] His Sambo (MK:DA)
MK Gold storyline was negated by the Konquest Mode in Mortal Kombat: Deadly
Alliance (2002), in which Cyrax was "recovered by Special Forces agents Sonya Blade and Jackson Briggs," a reference to the
character's unused biography in Prima's official strategy guide for MK Gold, according to which Cyrax was recovered by the Special
Forces in the Gobi Desert and reprogrammed to fight on the side of good against Shinnok.[3] After Shinnok's defeat, it became
apparent that Cyrax had begun to experience flashbacks of his former life, and Sonya and Jax bring him to the Outer World
Investigation Agency headquarters, where Cyrax's humanity was restored. As a token of gratitude, Cyrax joined the agency as a scout
in Earthrealm.

During the events of Deadly Alliance, Cyrax was ambushed by the Oni Moloch and Drahmin. After driving the two demons off, he
became stranded in Outworld. His arm console, which allowed him to return to Earthrealm, was damaged in a surprise attack by
Reptile that was orchestrated by the vampire Nitara. When Cyrax encounters Nitara, she offers to help him return home in exchange
for his aid in recovering a lost artifact. They traveled to the underground chamber that housed the egg of the Dragon King. There,
Cyrax submerged himself in the lake of molten lava and discovered the orb that would separate her home realm of Vaeternus from
Outworld. With it now in her possession, she honored her promise to Cyrax and used her mystical necklace to open a portal and send
him back to Earthrealm.[4]

For Mortal Kombat (2011), the three cybernetic ninjas have been ethnically diversified and are seen in their respective human forms
in the game's story mode before their familiar robotic versions (save for Smoke). In the reboot, Cyrax is a Motswana member of the
Lin Kuei who relies on hischi to carry out clan missions. He and Sektor, both introduced during the first tournament, have confli
cting
views over the Lin Kuei's impending plan to transform its members into cyborgs (the "Cyber Initiative"); while Sektor wholly
supports the proposition, Cyrax is reluctant to surrender his humanity, as he believes his instincts and judgement are far more
effective than any mechanical augmentation. He naively believes that Shang Tsung had invited him and Sektor to the tournament
until Raiden sets him straight by informing him that he had been paid handsomely to kill the Earthrealm fighters, adding that enabling
Shang Tsung to win the tournament would spell the end of Earthrealm, including the Lin Kuei. As a result of Cyrax's meeting with
Raiden, Shang Tsung unsuccessfully attempts to have him killed by Sheeva and Baraka. Cyrax then confronts Sektor, who is willing
to co-opt him even if by force. Much to Sektor's chagrin, Cyrax refuses to kill Johnny Cage after their match; this results in the
clansmen battling each other after an argument. Cyrax defeats Sektor and promptly severs his relationship with the Lin Kuei, then
knocks Sektor unconscious. However, in events that were not seen nor explained, Cyrax ends up getting caught and automated
anyway, joining Sektor in giving chase to Smoke and Tundra (the younger Sub-Zero) into Outworld.[5] In a reversal of Smoke and
Sub-Zero's storylines fromMK3, the Lin Kuei abduct Sub-Zero inside Shao Kahn's arena during the second tournament and transport
him away, with Cyrax and Sektor pledging their services to Kahn in exchange. Near the conclusion of the story mode, Cyrax and the
rest of the robotized Lin Kuei launch an attack on the Earthrealm defenders who have assembled to protect the realm from Kahn's
takeover, but they are thwarted while he and Sektor are individually defeated by Nightwolf. Sindel arrives moments later and carries
out the clan's objective of slaughtering the Earth warriors.

His fate is expanded on in the Mortal Kombat X prequel comics. It is revealed that Sektor became grandmaster, and intended to fully
cyberize the Lin Kuei in his image. Cyrax remained a servant of Sektor. When Sub-Zero infected the Lin Kuei with a computer virus,
Cyrax is freed from the slaving protocols that dictated his programming after cyberization. In a climactic battle between Sub-Zero
and the Cyber Lin Kuei, Cyrax turned on Sektor, firing his energy net at him. Sektor dodged the move, and entered a stalemate with
Sub-Zero. Cyrax noted that the other Lin Kuei functioned off a central master, who was Sektor. After this realization, Sub-Zero killed
Sektor. The other Lin Kuei confusingly searched for a new master, who was Cyrax, as he was the last remaining original cyberized
Lin Kuei. Cyrax informs Sub-Zero that he cannot fulfill the clan's honor, and begins his self-destruct sequence. Cyrax's resulting
explosion claimed the lives of the remaining cyberized Lin Kuei, and leaves Sub-Zero to reform the clan in his image. In Mortal
Kombat X, Cyrax becomes a DLC as one of the variations for the shapeshifting Cyborg named "Triborg" who has the ability to
shapeshift into Sektor, Cyrax, Cyber Smoke and Cyber Sub-Zero.

Design
Cyrax, played by Sal Divita, was the second of the three cybernetic ninja characters to be conceived, and he and Sektor were
unofficially named "Mustard" and "Ketchup" while Mortal Kombat 3 was in production. He was a yellow palette swap of Sektor, as
the original costume used for game filming was red. Divita explained that the outfit, which consisted of a large amount of plastic
armor plating and a custom-made helmet, was "really heavy," while the helmet itself was "hot and uncomfortable" and he "couldn't
breathe" or "hear anything" while wearing it.[6]John Tobias said that Cyrax and Sektor's design was in part inspired by Boba Fett and
the Predator.[7]

With the series' transition into three-dimensional games, each of the cybernetics' visual appearances has evolved independently;
Cyrax in particular had several enhancements to his costume that included a utility belt and LED lighting placed throughout his
mechanism. His human face was officially seen for the first time in his MK Gold ending, which showed him in full armor minus his
faceplate.[8] His alternate costume forDeadly Alliance showed him in a more revealing costume with fewer openly visible cybernetic
[9]
enhancements while more of his actual body was displayed, as he wore a type of open-faced, helmet-like apparatus.

Since appearing in MK3 and its updates (Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3 and the 1996 compilation title Mortal Kombat Trilogy), Cyrax,
Sektor and Smoke would not feature in the same titles as playables again until Mortal Kombat: Armageddon in 2006: Cyrax and
Sektor were selectable in MK Gold but Smoke was omitted, while only Cyrax was initially playable in Deadly Alliance until Sektor
was added to the roster in the "Tournament Edition" update of Deadly Alliance for the Game Boy Advance. Meanwhile, Smoke was
included in Mortal Kombat: Deception (as part of a unit with Noob Saibot), in which neither Cyrax nor Sektor appeared. All three
would reunite once again as playable characters in MK2011, while Cyrax and Sektor's MK3 costumes were released together in June
2011 as downloadable content for the reboot game.[10] Cyrax's code unit of his cyborg form, LK-4D4 is used as a password reference
by Catwoman to release the Brother Eye from Brainiac's control in Injustice 2.

Gameplay
Cyrax utilizes modern weaponry such as bombs, a net and buzzsaws, in addition to a futuristic net composed of green energy that
snares his opponents and sets them up for a free hit. He is notable for his "Self-Destruct" Fatality in MK3, when he arms a bomb in
his chest with a wrist-mounted control panel, taking out himself as well as his opponent. In MK 2011, many of his combos utilize his
buzzsaw. Cyrax also tends to have a lot of throw moves at his disposal, as seen in games like Deadly Alliance and MK 2011. Cyrax
has separate combos in the sambo style in Deadly Alliance named Ketchup and Mustard, a reference to this. As a reference to his
MK3 ending, Cyrax is seen trapped waist-deep in sand in the desert background in Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3 and Mortal Kombat
Trilogy.

GameSpot criticized Cyrax's bombs in MK Gold, mentioning that they are nearly useless in the game, since one can just sidestep
them.[11] IGN wrote both of Cyrax's detonator special moves make him interesting in Armageddon.[12] Kotaku said that Cyrax "was
familiar and fun to play" in MK 2011 and that "he's like a cybernetic Swiss army knife, stuffed with nasty surprises."[13] On the other
[14]
hand, GamesRadar criticized Cyrax for feeling unbalanced inMK 2011, citing his projectiles that one can barely get around.

In other media and merchandise


Cyrax is seen in two episodes of the 1996 animated series Mortal Kombat: Defenders of the Realm. In the series premiere ("Kombat
Begins Again"), he and Sektor lead an attack on Earthrealm that is thwarted by the Earthrealm defenders, during which he speaks his
only line of dialogue in the series. During a brief flashback scene at the Lin Kuei compound in the fifth episode ("Old Friends Never
Die"), Cyrax was unmasked and depicted as a light-skinned man with short black hair. This is believed to be an illustration error, not
an error in continuity.Cyrax and Sektor were mistakenly color swapped in this scene.[8] He and Sektor are also shown in their present
forms as working with the Lin Kuei grandmaster in attempting to apprehend Sub-Zero while fighting the Earth warriors, before they
eventually retreat from battle by exiting through a portal.

Cyrax appeared in the 1997 film Mortal Kombat: Annihilation, and was played by J.J. Perry. He served as one of Shao Kahn's
assassins, and leads an extermination squad into battle during Kahn's invasion of Earth to kill Sonya and Jax. He was never
mentioned by name, save for the closing credits. While he has only one line of dialogue in the film, Cyrax had a slightly more
expanded role in the first draft of the script and the movie novelization, in which he is depicted as wearing a red gi and killing an
Army general with his energy net inside the medical facility where Jax had been outfitted with his metal arms prior to the invasion.
He additionally identifies himself by his LK-4D4 unit code during this scene (in contrast, the Lin Kuei is never mentioned in the
film). In the script, Cyrax's net is described as being made up of "millions of microbe-sized 'flesh-eating' robots—the latest in
nanotechnology."[15] The net proves ineffective against Jax in combat, and he is defeated by Sonya, who then finishes Cyrax off by
performing her "Kiss of Death" Fatality. He activates his self-destruct mechanism afterward, which destroys the entire base as Jax
and Sonya barely escape. In a 2011 interview with Killer Film, Perry, who also played Scorpion in Annihilation and had doubled
Johnny Cage (Linden Ashby) in the first movie, revealed that he had filmed his fight as Scorpion with Keith Cooke (Sub-Zero) on an
injured ankle that he had sustained after stepping on a power cable during the shooting of his fight scene with Lynn Williams (Jax),
due to the helmet he wore as part of his Cyrax costume having robbed him of his peripheral vision. During Cyrax's fight with Jax,
Perry added that he and Williams "really beat the piss out of each other."[16]

The character makes one appearance in the 2011 first season of director Kevin Tancharoen's Mortal Kombat: Legacy web series, and
is played by Shane Warren Jones. In the ninth episode ("Cyrax and Sektor"), Cyrax—whose face is shown beaten and bloodied
without explanation—and Sektor are first shown in their human forms, and are being taken to a nondescript warehouse that serves as
the Lin Kuei headquarters. After a successful test battle pitting them against cyborgs disguised as human fighters, Cyrax and Sektor
themselves are seen undergoing automation, the process of which is shown in detail for the first time in any type of MK media while
featuring moderately graphic imagery. They then fight two against one in hand-to-hand combat against another cybernetic named
Hydro,[note 1] who decisively pounds on Sektor until Cyrax gains the upper hand that enables them to team up and finish Hydro off
with a kick to the head by Cyrax that decapitates him, all while the Grandmaster and a pre-injury Kano watch from inside a
laboratory.[18]

Cyrax was included in a "Mortal Kombat Klassic" three-pack of action figures along with Sektor and Smoke that was released in
2011 by Jazwares,[19] and was one of twenty MK characters featured on 2.5" x 3.5" collectible magnets from Ata-Boy Wholesale.[20]
An 18" polystone statue of Cyrax was released by Syco Collectibles in 2013, which was packaged with additional sets of arms, a
removable chestplate, and a bomb.[21]

In video game's prequel comic of Mortal Kombat X, after the Netherrealm War where Sub-Zero is one of the three former Revenants
who are fully recovered back to human again. Cyrax still remains under Sektor's control, until Sub-Zero obtains a USB virus from
Kung Jin to freed him and other slaved human Lin Kuei warriors turned cyborgs. After Sektor is killed, the clone cyborgs kneel to
Cyrax for being the last original human turned cyborg, yet he feels that the real Lin Kuei needs a human leader. Preferring to commit
suicide by initiating a self-destruct to destroy Sektor's base, rather than finding a way to live a peaceful life as a cyborg, Cyrax
entrusts Sub-Zero to carry on the Lin Kuei's honor, then bids him farewell. Sektor's base and the remaining Lin Kuei are destroyed in
the resulting explosion, allowing Sub-Zero to reform the Lin Kuei as humans as seen in Mortal Kombat X's video game adaptation.

In Injustice 2, Cyrax's code, LK-4D4, is used by Catwoman as the weapons deactivation code inside the Batcave. This is because the
Injustice series and the Mortal Kombat series share the same creator: Netherrealm Studios.

Reception
Cyrax was included in a three-way tie with Sektor and Smoke atop GamesRadar's 2011 list of "gaming's most malicious
machines."[22] Game Informer included Cyrax in a list of characters wanted for the 2011 MK reboot, while also praising his special
moves.[23] ScrewAttack ranked Cyrax as their sixth-best Mortal Kombat character, but also considered him one of the "cheapest"
characters in MK3.[24] Cheat Code Central listed Cyrax as the ninth best Mortal Kombat character: "[N]obody in the MK universe
can match up to [his] list of awesome abilities."[25] 1UP.com included Cyrax among a selection of characters wanted as
downloadable content in Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe: "Cyrax probably clashes a little with Lex Luthor's battlesuit, or even
elements of the cyber-armed Jax, but is another bright yellow hero who many remember fondly from the digitized era."[26] Cyrax
placed at 25th on UGO Networks' 2012 list of the top 50 Mortal Kombat characters.[27] Complex ranked him the fourth-coolest robot
in video games.[28] Prima Games called the MK2011 version of Cyrax "easily the cheapest character in the game" due to his
[29]
unblockable bombs and anti-air attacks, and "nothing the development team adjusts [in the game] seems to change that."
Critical reaction to his Fatalities has been more mixed. Game Rant listed Cyrax's "Self-Destruct" Fatality from MK3 as one of the
series' worst finishers. "[T]his is a classic fatality of Cyrax. Doesn’t stop it from being a flat-out stupid one."[30] Game Informer
named it one of the game's most confusing finishers.[31] ScrewAttack named his "Trash Compactor" from Deadly Alliance as their
seventh-best Fatality from the series,[32] and Complex named it eleventh out of twenty in a similar list, as they felt it "demonstrated
the [development] team's rejuvenated dedication to blood and guts, while keeping the dark sense of humor that made the violence
palatable."[33] However, none of his finishers were included inPrima Games' 2014 list of the MK series' top fifty Fatalities.

Reception to the "Cyrax & Sektor"MK: Legacy episode has been positive. Ben Kendrick ofScreen Rant said, "Cyrax and Sektor may
not have the same fan-fueled clout as the traditional MK ninjas—but, despite being a bit light on character development, the pair has
some of the coolest action-shots featured in the entire run of the series."[34] IGN gave the show itself a score of nine out of ten,
describing it as "pretty damn terrific" while praising the special effects, and "[their] big fight sequence at the end of the episode is
probably the coolest battle of the entire [first] season."[18] C.J. Miozzi of GameFront described Cyrax as "a whiny baby about [the
.[35] Fearnet praised the "complete accuracy" of the episode's depiction of the
automation]" while professing himself as a fan of Sektor
characters.[36] Lawrence Van Gelder of The New York Times wrongly described Cyrax as "the one with a rocket launcher where his
sternum ought to be" in his 1997 review ofMortal Kombat: Annihilation.[37]

See also
List of fictional cyborgs

Notes
1. The inclusion of Hydro inLegacy was inspired by the character of the same name who was created byMalibu
Comics for the Mortal Kombat comic book series.[17] He was a Lin Kuei compatriot of Sub-Zero's who had the power
to control water, and featured in the 1994Blood & Thunder miniseries, in which he appeared in the first four issues
before being killed by Scorpion. The character was transformed into a cybernetic exclusively for the web series.

References
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