"Even though there are many full gameplay videos of Black Myth: Wukong available on RU-vid, I really enjoy yours because of your storytelling. I look forward to each new part of the series!" ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ PLEASE CONTINUE THIS SERIES💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕
Dattrax bhaiya aap kitne mehnati ho! Dono channel pe Roz videos daal rhe ho full length and best quality! Aapko dekh ke bhaut inspire hota hun bhaiya! ❤❤❤
Osm bro I watched all this black myth Wukong without skipping 0 zero section literally I fell god level interest to watch more episodes well done my dear bruh❤
Sun Wukong may have also been influenced by local folk religion from Fuzhou province, where monkey gods were worshipped long before the novel. This included the three Monkey Saints of Lin Shui Palace. Once fiends, they were subdued by the goddess Chen Jinggu, the Empress Lin Shui. The three were Dan Xia Da Sheng (丹霞大聖), the Red Face Monkey Sage, Tong Tian Da Sheng (通天大聖), the Black Face Monkey Sage, and Shuang Shuang San Lang (爽爽三聖), the White Face Monkey Sage.[12] The two traditional mainstream religions practiced in Fuzhou are Mahayana Buddhism and Taoism. Traditionally, many people practice both religions simultaneously. However, the roots of local religion dated back many years before the institutionalization of these traditions
41:26 Nahin!! Bhagvan hanuman aur Monkey king mein ek antar hain, vo yeh ki bhagvan hanuman ji ko apni saktiyo padd ghamand nahin tha!! Unhone kabhi bhi bhagavan (jaise, Vishnu ji, Shiv ji aur bharama ji arthat Tridevo) ko chunoti nahin di thi jaise ki Mokeny king ne Bhudha ji ko de diya tha!! Monkey King ko amar hone ka vardaan tab Mila tha jab oon hone kaafi saalon tak tapaysa ki thi. Padd Hanuman ji ko vardaan bharama ji ne diya tha tab jab, Indra dev ne Hanuman ji padd bajra fekk kar mara tha jab vo Suraj ko nigalane wale thai!! ❤❤
Some believe the association with Xuanzang is based on the first disciple of Xuanzang, Shi Pantuo [zh][7].Hu Shih first suggested that Wu Cheng'en may have been influenced by the Hindu deity Hanuman from the Ramayana in his depictions of the Monkey King.[8][9] Others such as Lu Xun point out there is no proof that the Ramayana has been translated into Chinese or was accessible to Wu Cheng'en.[10] Instead, Lu Xun suggested the 9th-Century Chinese deity Wuzhiqi, who appears as a sibling of Sun Wukong in older Yuan Dynasty stories, as the inspiration.[10] Anthony C. Yu writes in his unabridged translation of The Journey to the West that Wuzhiqi "has provided many scholars with a prototype of Sun Wukong" and that the author of Journey himself had "certainly" read of Wuzhiqi.[11]