Table of Contents
Elves
Elves are a mythological/folkloric creature that currently belongs among the most famous and infamous fantasy races.
Description & Notes
Mythological Elf
This refers to the Nordic/Germanic Elf prior to their syncretism with fairies.
Thereâs some possible overlap with Dwarfs. Iâm not 100% sure about the details, but thereâs apparently a debate over whether the Dwarfs and Elfs are the same race or not. One possibility (and this is explicitly my speculah) is that âdwarfâ is a job title or class, rather than a race. So a particularly talented elf blacksmith might just be called a âdwarfâ.A)
Thereâs also a lot of overlap with the Fey.
In fact, letâs see if this doesnât sound familiar:
Elves are supernaturally beautiful, usually taller and donât really care about what humans think about them.
Folkloric Elf
This is to specifically refer to the post-Norse and pre-Tolkien elves.
Itâs this elf that the Christmas Elf probably derives from.
Modern Elf
I believe that the modern elf ultimately derives from Tolkienâs LegendariumâŚbut, well, âultimatelyâ. I actually think that the majority of modern elves derive from D&D and Warhammer.
My reasoning is that Tolkienâs elves actually look very different from modern elves. Theyâre more angelic than arrogant immortal jerks.
But this fits the elves from D&D and Warhammer.
Even generic categorizations of elves derive more from these two, rather than the Legendarium. Tolkien does have High Elves, Wood Elves, Sea Elves and the Dark ElfâŚbut D&D/Warhammer have the Dark Elves for example. Actually, I may need to think about this a bit more.
I realize just now that I forgot to describe the modern elf. Iâll do that later.
Japanese Elf
The Japanese Elf is a more ambiguous case and, in all honesty, Iâm not sure where this one comes from. My best guess is that it started with Record of Lodoss WarâŚwhich derives from D&D, so the connection remains.
I think that the stereotypical elf in Japan is Deedlit. This may explain why you basically never see elves in Japan without blonde hairâŚor blonde-adjacent hair, while this isnât quite as rare in the West.
Overall, Iâd say âthe elfâ in Japan is way more uniform than the elves in any other setting. This may also explain why the elf seems to be treated with a unique contempt by many a Japanese story â the West has pretty assholish and generic elves, but itâs not as bad as in Japan. As in, Japan has more generic elves.
The Japanese also like Dark elves â typically tan skin and white hair. Though they arenât usually evil.
Christmas Elf
The Christmas Elf is probably derived from the Folkloric Elf. Notable because Christmas Elves are radically different from Modern Elves (though there might be some overlap considering sexy elf girls who often show up with Santa).
Also, amusingly, Tolkien once wrote Christmas Elves.
Relations
Angels
I heard that the Eddas syncretize the Nordic Elves (specifically the Light Elves) with Biblical Angels.
Tolkienien Elves are also very angelic, though not actually angels.
Iâm not aware of anything more specific.
Fae
The Fae of the British isles were definitely influenced by the Elves of Nordic MythologyâŚand probably vice-versa.
Read âRelation with Elvesâ on the Fae page.
Fairies
Elves were syncretized into â really more like categorized as â faires at some point. This resulted in the image of the elf changing as well.
I think itâs related to the previous syncretization/conflation with the Fae.
Media Depictions
The Battle for Wesnoth
The elves here are much closer to the Tolkienien Elves, though they take a lot more inspiration from the Fey and fairies.
Iâll elaborate on this later, when I actually bother to play the game again.
Bionicle
It could be argued the Vortixx are âDarkâ Elves or derived (somehow) from the Drow.
D&D
I donât know that much about D&D, but I know enough to be sure that this (together with Warhammer) is where all the modern fantasy elves derive from.
Ender Lilies: Quietus of the Knights
Since the White priestesses are closer to Fae than elves, I suggest reading the section on the Fae article.
GATE
Both âregularâ elves and dark elves exist beyond the Gate. More later.
Jak & Daxter
Itâs pretty clear that theâŚuhâŚI donât know what theyâre called, but Jak & Co. are definitely elves: pointy ears and all.
Though itâs only really the pointy ears.
Konosuba
I donât remember whether elves are a thing here or not. If they are, I remember literally nothing.
Kumo Desu ga, Nani ka
Elves are antagonists here and Iâm not gonna reveal too much since thatâs a big spoiler.
The Legend of Zelda
Zelda and Link are usually Hylians and Hylians have pointy elven-ears. This is a sign of their connection to the divine.
Thatâs mostly it, though. Though I think thereâs some overlap with folkloric elves, so Iâll write about that later if I remember to.
No Game No Life
The elves in NGNL are the third most powerful magic-wise and are basically the dominant species â they own the largest country and are closest to conquering the entire world.
Record of Lodoss War
One of the main characters is an elf named Deedlit who is almost certainly the progenitor of all other elves in Japanese fiction.
Starcraft
The Protoss in Starcraft are probably originally derived from Elves somehow, but theyâre probably based on the Tau. Tau themselves might be elf-based, though I know almost nothing about the Tau.
Sword Art Online
Elves appear several times in SAO, though theyâre not really that noteworthy since they are technically fictional within the context of their universe.
In the Aincrad Arc(s), they mostly appear as background props.
In the ALfheim Arc(s), they have a more prominent role, technically, though these are more fairies rather than elves specifically. So see that on the Fairy page.
Past the second season of SAO, I know little, so letâs pivot to Progressive.
SAO Progressive is notable for a bunch of reasons, though one of the big ones is that Kirito and Asuna have an NPC elf companion. Sheâs a Dark Elf and has booba, which is all you really need to know.
Also, there are some hints that sheâs become or becoming self-aware.
Tolkien's Legendarium
Tolkienâs elves are a vision of humanity without original sin, though besides that I think they actually take more inspiration from the Fey rather than the Norse Elves. Sure, the term âelfâ is used, but that doesnât necessarily mean Tolkien got his inspiration there (though I think he got some inspiration). Keep in mind that Tolkien used the term âfairyâ/âfaeryâ for basically his whole life and, in the earliest versions of the LegendariumâŚyeah, the elves were just fairies.
Valkyria Chronicles
The Valkyrur from Valkyria Chronicles are vaguely elf-shaped. Yup, thatâs all Iâm saying. Actually, I realized that my criteria determine that the Valkyrur are Fey. So once I have the motivation, Iâll probably describe them there instead.
WarCraft
Warcraftâs elves are obviously derived from the D&D/Warhammer elves. This is obvious from the fact Chris Metzen keeps repeating D&D terminology when talking about the story.
Though they differentiate themselves in the form of the Blood Elves and Night Elves. I donât care about the void elves. The High/Blood Elves both suffer from magic addiction, which adds an extra layer of uniqueness.
Warhammer (& 40K)
I know a tiny bit more about the elves that appear in Warhammer than those that appear in D&D, which is why Iâm convinced most modern elves come from here.
Trivilinks
- Iâll figure out what to put here first.