If you want to make an army look exotic and threatening, give them War Elephants. These towering, huge beasts with armor and spikes will strike fear in the enemy's hearts.
Trained war elephants have been used by some historical nations, but fairly sporadically, and usually by ones fighting against the Roman, European, and Chinese cultures that most modern writers are descended from (although these cultures eventually used war elephants too, only less often). Thus, war elephants' presence in an army easily establishes it as foreign and unusual. Elephants also have a domineering presence on the battlefield, smashing apart shieldwalls and light fortifications and trampling over regular troops, and their sheer fearsome bulk presents them as an obvious threat that will be very difficult to deal with. These creatures are typically be used by the Evil Army or The Horde, but if they're on the heroes' side then they might be used by foreign allies to indicate the army's exoticness.
In battle, elephants are mostly used for their fear factor, intimidating enemy troops while rallying yours, and as breakthrough troops with which to smash through enemy lines. They're typically provided with heavy armor to improve their staying power, and spikes or blades attached to their tusks are also a fairly common touch. It's also common for howdahs to be mounted on their backs, typically carrying additional soldiers, ranged troops to take advantage of the raised vantage point, or even whole cannons. More pragmatically, the beasts can also be used to haul around siege weaponry, supplies or mobile fortifications. The main downside to these creatures is the possibility of them stampeding if something scares them, at which point they'll usually trample their way through friend and foe alike; indeed, a common strategy employed by armies facing war elephants is to try to get them to stampede before battle is joined, ideally in the enemy's own camp.
War Mammoths and Mastodons work too, especially when used by armies coming from the endless cold of the northlands or in the distant past. Fantasy elephant equivalents can also serve this purpose, in order to further emphasize the exoticness of the army or world in question. In these cases, the elephants' size tends to be super-sized to the point where they almost qualify as war-barges with tusks. (In real life, war elephants were usually on the smaller side: either Indian elephants, or the now-extinct and even smaller North African elephant). They may also be accompanied by other large animals like rhinos or, if the writer is more fantastically inclined, even dinosaurs.
This trope was Truth in Television, as kingdoms in North Africa, the Middle East, and southeastern Asia have weaponized pachyderms at various points in history, and their enemies sometimes adopted them too. Elephants are huge, strong, tough, terrifying, and highly trainable animals capable of carrying multiple riders on their backs, whether they be officers wanting a better view of the battlefield, archers, or even artillerymen firing a ballista or cannon from a howdah. Horses unaccustomed to their presence were also generally terrified and wouldn't go near them, so a few elephants in front of your army could make enemy cavalry charges useless. However, they could easily panic in battle, trampling friend or foe, and their sensitive hearing made them even more prone to panic when loud firearms became widespread. They were also highly costly to maintain, due to the near-impossibility of breeding them and their large appetites—though for some rulers, this might actually be seen as a bonus, as any ruler with wealth and logistics enough to maintain an elephant corps must be a great one indeed.
Subtrope of Beast of Battle. Compare Horse of a Different Color. See Cruel Elephant for violent and dangerous elephants in general.
Other examples:
- Berserk: The Kushan Empire uses large numbers of war elephants in their invasion of Midland, equipped with armor and carrying platforms for warriors and archers. The exotic animals seem like unstoppable monsters to their enemies, and we are treated to graphic depictions of hapless infantry being trampled beneath their feet, though Rakshas also demonstrates that they can be easily terrified and made to stampede over their own forces. As if the regular elephants weren't enough, Daiba and his sorcerers have also provided the Empire with bipedal elephant-headed monsters armed with equally enormous weapons. Emperor Ganishka certainly prizes elephants as a sign of royal power, since we see him riding to and from Charlotte's prison on an elephant, and he commands the siege of Vritannis from a palace on wheels drawn by no fewer than sixteen elephants and surrounded by an escort of elephant cavalry.
- Digimon: In the various iterations of the franchise, Mammothmon are usually used in this fashion. The final battle of Digimon Fusion, which featured hundreds of the things serving under DarknessBagramon, stands out in this regard.
- The Heroic Legend of Arslan: A feature of Shindra's army, they can also be drugged into an even more dangerous berserker state (predictably, they up being just as dangerous to Shindran troops).
- Mazinger Z: Mechanical Beast Elephant γ3 is a bipedal elephant with long, curvy tusks, Arm Cannons, and big ears that shot heat rays.
- One Piece: Jack from the Beast Pirates and one of Kaido's Co-Dragons ate the Zou Zou no Mi, Model: Mammoth, giving him the ability to turn him into a massive mammoth (and he is already huge from the start). He tramples through the battlefield like a calamity and he's also extremely endurable coupled with very high stamina, making him The Juggernaut. Untypical for this trope, Jack is actually in charge of many of Kaido's troops, thanks to his status as one of Kaido's right-hand men.
- Zunisha, the colossal elephant that carries the island of Zu on its back, is not one of these normally, though it mentions that it committed some sin in the past for which it carries the island on its back. But if you try attacking it- as the afore-mentioned Jack does- then it will defend itself and its island- and it straight-up knocks Jack into the sea!
- Spandam tries to invoke this through Funkfreed, his Devil Fruit-powered sword, which can turn into an elephant with a huge blade for a trunk. Unfortunately, while it's strong enough to damage Franky while he is blocking, it's not really combat-trained, nor is its master, and was easily intimidated just by Franky pointing a gun in its face; most of the time it serves as more of a Right-Hand Cat for Spandam, giving him someone to monologue to.
- Magic: The Gathering: Elephants — a creature type that also includes mastodons, mammoths and fictional proboscideans — feature as a recurring creature type. In addition to the assumed implication that cards represent creatures the player has summoned to fight for them, some are explicitly trained for this role in-universe — Trained Armodon
is one such examples, while the Abzan Houses of Tarkir include elephants
and mastodons
among the giant creatures they use as beasts of battle and to pull their moving fortresses.
- Alan Ford: Parodied when "His Excellency" the Number One tells the story of Pyrrhus and his war against the Romans. The infamous victory is attributed to the fact that while the elephants proved decisive to win the battle, they still trampled 3000 roman soldiers and 18000 of Pyrrhus' own forces.
- The Avengers: In Kurt Busiek's and George Perez' run, Red Sonja's nemesis Kulan Gath transmutes a couple of tanks into war elephants that nearly trample Iron Man before he is saved by teammate Triathlon. She-Hulk tells them "Back off, Jumbo" and flattens one with a punch while swinging the other one through the air by its trunk. Even war elephants don't stand a chance against the Emerald Amazon.
- Ghost Rider:
- The prehistoric Ghost Rider is a caveman who rides a woolly mammoth on fire.
- The Indian Ghost Rider Shoba Mirza rides a flaming skeletal Asian elephant. Coupled with her four arms in Rider form, she ends up resembling a raging Hindu god.
- Red Sonja: In Marvel's 1970s run, Sonja allied herself with the young ruler of a kingdom whose major military strength was its war mammoths.
- Tales of the Jedi: The armies of the Sith Empire use alien animals resembling giant pachyderms with the head of ceratopsids with giant, curving, mammoth-like tusks to haul gear and troops, mount heavy artillery, and break through Republic lines and fortifications. Doylistically, they also emphasize the exotic threat of the newly-discovered Sith against the more prosaic vehicles and weapons of the Republic.
- War of the Realms: The Dark Elf soldiers ride creatures resembling moss-covered woolly mammoths.
- An Empire of Ice and Fire: The Golden Company makes use of them, as per canon. During the Battle of Winterfell, they supplement their regular elephants with mammoths from North of the Wall.
- Equestria Divided: House Everfree can field both elephants and gigantic oliphaunts, mounting howdahs on their backs to carry warriors into battle. Boars, rhinos and hippos are also used as less powerful but cheaper alternatives for the same purpose.
- I Am Skantarios: The Byzantines fight these in their wars, and eventually get a herd of their own.
- The Mountain and the Wolf: The Wolf secretly arranges for the Golden Company to be present in Westeros along with their elephants, and later captures and breaks a mammoth into a Chaos monstrosity to use against those same elephants.
- The Price of Flight: After coming to an Arrangement with the God of Evolution, Olga orders six Osibisi, super-heavy flying elephants that are borne aloft on scaled-up Pegasus wings. Hanna von Strafenburg remarks that with the standard fighting castle strapped to their backs and lots of repeating crossbows, the Air Watch now has flying fortresses. The Osibisi become the nucleus of the spectacular Heavy Squadron.
- A Scotsman in Egypt: The final major battle of the fic against the Timurids features their war elephants. Of course, the Timurid hordes didn't count on being: a) outnumbered and b) facing Scotsmen. Angus the Mauler gets a special mention for going batshit insane (moreso than usual) at the sight of them, not calming down until he's finally killed one. Singlehandedly.
- Early Man: The Bronze Age civilization uses armored mammoths to bulldoze over the Stone Age tribe, ignore the anachronism.
- The Jungle Book (1967): Referenced when the elephants act like heroic (if dimwitted) British army officers.
- Khan Kluay, known as The Blue Elephant in the USA, has the protagonist grow up into a war elephant, complete with a war elephant battle at the climax.
- 300: Xerxes' army uses elephants against the Spartans, but they can't break the Spartans' phalanx and fall to their deaths off a cliff. Keeping in line with the "exotic nature" of this trope, the Persians also have a war rhinoceros.
- The Adventures of Baron Munchausen: The Grand Turk uses elephants to propel his war machines. The Baron gets them to back off with the strategic use of mice, which sends the whole herd into a panicked stampede through the Turkish camp.
- Alexander: Alexander's army faces "elephant monsters" at the Battle of Hydaspes, including an East vs. West shot of Alexander's horse rearing as it faces a war elephant, which also rears in response.
- King Arthur: Legend of the Sword: Mordred summons gigantic war elephants with his Black Magic and tears through the kingdom of Camelot with them. They are very much a Keystone Army, as one single strike of Excalibur by King Uther Pendragon on their summoners is enough to cause them to collapse into dust.
- The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King: The Oliphaunts, as in the books, are used by the Haradrim forces allied with Sauron. They're portrayed as fantastical dire elephants with eight tusks (four large and four small), and are even bigger than in the books, being roughly fifty to sixty feet at the shoulder. There are also some unnamed rhino-like creatures pulling the siege engines that the orcs bring to the Battle of Minas Tirith.
- Animorphs: Rachel and her elephant morph. True, she's only one elephant, but the "army" is the rest of the group. She manages to get in plenty of damage on her own anyway. Cassie, Ax and Tobias also acquire elephants in book 22, but they never use them other than that one mission.
- The Belgariad: War elephants make an appearance in the sequel series The Malloreon. The men of Gandahar, in southern Mallorea, breed and train war elephants. A regiment of Gandaharan elephant cavalry joins Zandramas's army and proves almost invincible, until the enemy sets the brush around the battlefield on fire.
- The Black Company: War elephants are used during during the Battle at Charm and Dejagore, and it is mentioned that they come from the Jewel Cities.
- Conqueror: Jelaudin's army uses elephants extensively. They backfire when the Mongols shoot them in the knees, causing a panic.
- Discworld: Battle elephants are mentioned in Pyramids. According to the protagonist, they're useless, since all they do is trample on their own troops when they inevitably panic. The military responded to this setback by breeding bigger elephants.
- The Executioner: In Tiger War, Mack Bolan has to defend a village from a punitive expedition sent to punish them for aiding Bolan. He waits for the column to move past, then charges an elephant (used by the villagers for carrying logs) up their rear, panicking the soldiers and causing them to flee to the sides of the trail where the villagers have placed punji sticks. One of the villains shoots the mahout, where upon the elephant rips off the man's limbs and tramples him underfoot.
- The Heroes of Olympus: Camp Jupiter has a resident war elephant named Hannibal. Somewhat ironic, since his human namesake was an enemy of Rome.
- John Carter of Mars: The nomadic communities of the Green Martians often include enormous beasts called zitidars that Carter, in his role as narrator, repeatedly compares to mastodons, suggesting an elephantine aspect to them.
- The Jungle Book: In "The Queen's Servants", Kipling gives the camp-animals archetypical army personalities. The cavalry horse is a gung-ho Blood Knight, the mountain-gun mules are Old Soldiers, and the siege-gun elephant is a Dirty Coward.
- Leviathan: While the Darwinists have created a number of elephant- and mammoth-derived beasts, these are not used for war and are instead mostly employed as supersized draft animals. What is an example is the elephant-shaped walking machines used by the Ottoman Empire, outfitted with gun emplacements on their backs and used to guard the Sultan.
- The Lord of the Rings: The Haradrim ride to battle on "Oliphaunts" (as the hobbits call them) or mûmakil (as they're referred to by the Men of Gondor). They are described as being far larger than modern elephants, and are nearly impervious to arrows (unless they get hit in the eye). Sam is an awe-struck witness when a strikeforce of Gondorian Rangers ambushes a Haradrim force on its way to join Sauron's armies, causing one of these animals to go mad and trample Rangers and Haradrim alike as it rampages. Others are seen in the siege proper, first hauling Siege Engines and towers and then being used to sow destruction among the Gondorian ranks.
- Mik's Mammoth: Mik uses his mammoth friend Rumm as one to save his tribe from another tribe.
- In Sandokan elephants are normally used to transport people and large loads, but have occasionally been used in combat. The most notable instance is in "Yanez's Revenge", when Sandokan comes to rescue his old friend with twelve mounting early machine guns alongside two hundred Dayaks armed with repeating rifles and casually breaks through Sindhia's lines.
- A Song of Ice and Fire:
- Crossing this trope with Horse of a Different Color, the giants who live north of the Wall ride woolly mammoths into war like men ride horses. Several mammoth-mounted giants are seen within Mance Rayder's Wildling army.
- The finest and most disciplined sellsword army in the series, the Golden Company, has a unit of elephants, though in the voyage to Westeros to support the claim of the apparently-still-alive Aegon Targaryen, most of them are lost or late making landfall; only three are mentioned to be present at Griffin's Roost. Their captain frequently laments not having them available.
- Daenerys acquires several elephants after her conquest of Meereen, and her generals are divided on whether to use them in battle.
- Spellsinger: One of the novels includes an armor-wearing warrior rhinoceros, who's as sentient as any other mammal in the Warmlands. An equally-sentient tickbird acts as his squire and companion.
- Tales of Kaimere:
- Munarak Aramu Bhatugal, the son of a banished Qajar lord, gathered an army of 70 mammoths and Drenduga plus 500 men to invade Qajar, fighting the various lords and bringing the peninsula together into the modern Qajar Republic. Notably, these elephants were all willing volunteers, and Munarak would invest heavily in things like armor for them to keep them alive.
- While not elephants, the war ghlanos, giant chalicotheres, were very similar in application. The Shu would accomplish this by both gelding young male ghlanos and having them imprint on their herds of horses so as to make them easier to train. They would also be fitted with armor and use their massive claws to help tear down castle walls.
- Like Munarak, the Boar Clan of Pakardia will often ride into battle on the backs of mastodons, their clan's sacred animal. Like Munarak's army, the mastodons are said to be neither domesticated nor tamed by the Boar Clan, but volunteer to help the warriors in defending their home.
- Thais of Athens: Seleucus (one of Alexander the Great's generals) gathers a whole unit of battle elephants while campaigning in India. It never sees much action in the novel, but Thais gets to ride one in Babylon.
- The Wheel of Time: The Seanchan (who have weird animal husbandry as one of their hats) use "s'redit", which are described as very much like elephants, in battle and for labor. One character who is unfamiliar with the animals dubs them "boar-horses".
- The Windup Girl: War megodonts (genetically-engineered giant elephants) have carbon fibre armour, blades attached to their tusks and machine-gun cages on their backs.
- Game of Thrones:
- The Wildling army led by Mance Rayder use the mammoth variant in the Season 4 episode "The Watchers on the Wall".
- The sellsword army the Golden Company, first mentioned in Season 7, is stated to have elephants in their army. However, when they arrive in Westeros in Season 8, Surprisingly Realistic Outcome as they found it too difficult to ship them across the Narrow Sea and had to leave them in Essos.
- Horrible Histories did its own take on Hannibal, of course, with a fake trailer for Elephants on a Plain, starring Hannibal as a 'maverick Carthaginian general' (complete with a Southern accent).
- Kamen Rider: As with Sentai, multiple series use elephant or mammoth monsters as the Monster of the Week.
- Kamen Rider Blade: A non-mecha example comes from Leangle's Fusion Elephant card that he uses to transform into his Jack form, although with the lack of a Rouze Absorber, he doesn't use it at all in the TV series and at best used it once to unseal Daichi/Elephant Undead for help in battle.
- Kamen Rider Double: Movie War 2010 featured Super Shocker's Mammoth Mecha that attacked the Heisei Riders up until Decade decimated its beam cannon eyes, with Double taking control of it, thus turning it into HardMammother. It then got destroyed by Double as they crashed it into the Super Crisis Fortress to also destroy it.
- The title character of Kamen Rider OOO uses O Medals to transform. One of his gray medals is the Zou note Medal, which grants him Seismic stomps.
- Kamen Rider Zero-One: One of Aruto's Progrise Keys includes Breaking Mammoth, which was converted from the broken Mammoth Zetsumerise Key by Yua. Unlike his other forms, Breaking Mammoth is essentially a Transforming Mecha that includes a part of satellite Zea detached from it to its jet form and then Zero-One enters it to complete the transformation. ZAIA Enterprise also has their knockoffs with A.I.M.S.' Gigers that got at least one hacked by MetsubouJinrai.net then destroyed by Zero-One Breaking Mammoth.
- The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power: While not shown on screen, the mûmakil are mentioned by the Easterlings. For some reason, they reside in Rhun instead of Harad like in the books.
- Rome. After their defeat at Thapsus in Africa, Cato and Scipio contemplate a dying war elephant.
Cato: They sleep standing up, you know. Elephants. On account that once laid down they cannot rise again.
- Super Sentai and its U.S. counterpart Power Rangers:
- Kyōryū Sentai Zyuranger / Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers: Guardian Beast ZyuMammoth / Mastodon Dinozord. Huge, tough, and snorts a freezing mist.
- Hyakujuu Sentai Gaoranger / Power Rangers Wild Force: Gao Elephant / Elephant Wild Zord, the first Mecha Expansion Pack for the series (it turns into a sword and shield).
- Ninpuu Sentai Hurricaneger / Power Rangers Ninja Storm: Super Karakuri Beast Revolver Mammoth / Mammothzord. The resident Carrierzord, which is even more enormous.
- Juken Sentai Gekiranger / Power Rangers Jungle Fury: GekiElephant / Elephant Animal Spirit, another Mecha Expansion Pack for the series (it turns into an Epic Flail).
- Engine Sentai Go-onger / Power Rangers RPM: Engine Kishamoth / Paleozord. The main portion of the final mecha combination introduced, armed with freezing mist like ZyuMammoth.
- Tensou Sentai Goseiger / Power Rangers Megaforce: The Elephant Headder / Elephant Zord, part of an auxiliary zord that made its Sentai debut in a movie and later one appearance in the series, with Megaforce adapting only the later appearance.
- Shuriken Sentai Ninninger / Power Rangers Ninja Steel: Paonmaru / Rumble Tusk Zord, yet another Mecha Expansion Pack that can assume its own humanoid mode and arms Shurikenjin with twin axes.
- Doubutsu Sentai Zyuohger: Cube Elephant, the personal mecha of Zyuoh Elephant and the first modern elephant mecha to be a core one rather than a Mecha Expansion Pack. It can fire energy beams or a cooling mist to put out fires.
- In addition, multiple series use elephant or mammoth monsters as the Monster of the Week.
- Them Crooked Vultures: These are apparently the types of "Elephants" referred to in the song of the same name, since the lyrics specifically refer to "lepers riding atop pachyderms full of germs."
- The Bible: The Seleucid general Antiochus Epiphanes fields war elephants against the Maccabees.
- The Qur'an: One verse mentions the story of Abrahah, a general marching with his army of war elephants to destroy Kaaba, the Islamic holy site. They were thwarted when God sent a flock of birds carrying brimstone from Hell, pelting Abrahah and his men to death.
- 7th Sea: The East: These are the preferred mounts of Nagaja's warriors. The commoners boast that the reason the Khazars never tried to invade their realm is the prowess of their war elephants in battle. They may find out if that's true very soon, when the Khans set sail.
- Dungeons & Dragons:
- Frost giants are known to train mammoths for use as mounts and ride them into battle.
- Dragon #243: "The Dragon's Bestiary: Magical Crossbreeds": Armadillephants are elephants with armadillo-like armor that offers them as much protection as full plate. Most armadillephants are created for combat, usually gifted by the gods of savage demihuman tribes of orcs, goblins or gnolls, who might treat their warbeast as more valuable than the members of the tribe. They also have clawed forelimbs, which allows them to be trained to dig trenches, latrines, spike pits, and the like. Other races' mages can try to use magic to a similar result, "but such an act is likely to incur the wrath of various humanoid deities, who consider the creation of such a beast to be their own purview".
- Chess: The Bishop used to be called the Elephant, and could only move exactly two diagonal squares. In some languages, they are still called Elephants. Other games of the same family, like Xiangqi, and Makruk, still use the old Elephant piece, though, at least in Xiangqi, their offensive use is limited by their not being able to cross the river in the middle of the board. Some editions of chess also design the Rook (castle) unit to be an elephant with a howdah on its back.
- Gods of the Fall: A group of mushroom growers ride elderly war elephants, patrolling the main road through the Dead Wood and bordering fungi fields. Many once served as mounts of Corso's cavalry before the Fall.
- Iron Kingdoms: Titans (which can be described as small, trunkless, bipedal, four-armed elephants) and their larger cousins, the mammoths, are widely used as warbeasts by skorne warlocks.
- Pathfinder:
- The Realm of the Mammoth Lords is an inhospitable tundra inhabited by mighty-thewed Barbarian Heroes who ride mammoths and other enormous mammals into battle.
- There are many ways for a player to get an elephant or mammoth friend, but the one that most specifically invokes this tropes — and is clearly intended for the above Mammoth Lords — is the prestige class Mammoth Rider.
- Behemoth golems are shaped like pachyderms or other giant quadrupeds with a castle attached to their backs, which can be manned like a howdah.
- RuneQuest: Elephants and other giant pachyderms, including rhinos and "shovel-tuskers" — Ambelodon, prehistoric elephant relatives with shovel-like tusks on their lower jaws — are used as super-heavy cavalry in a number of societies; in particular, Teshnos, a culture based on southeastern Asia, and the Fonritian city-states, located in Pamaltela where horses are rare, keep large stables of such animals; Teshnos mainly uses true elephants, while shovel-tuskers are the most common type in Fonrit. Dragonewts and the cult of Maran Gor use Triceratops in a similar manner. All of these creatures are fearsome on the charge and can act as mobile platforms for archers, slingers, and wizards, but can be vulnerable to encirclement by large numbers of disciplined troops.
- The Strange: The scarbacks of Mesozoica sometimes ride mammoths when they hunt.
- Wargames Research Group: War Elephants are the most powerful (and most expensive) units in the DBA, DBM and DBMM game systems. They are vulnerable to shooting and light troops, however.
- Warhammer:
- The Norscans use giant Warp-mutated mammoths. The Arabyans also use war elephants, but theirs are normal beasts trained for combat instead of monsters like the ones used by the Norscans.
- The Ogre Kingdoms also have the vaguely mammoth-like Thundertusks, so enormous that they can carry two ogres at a time, and true mammoths that can carry four.
- Warhammer 40,000: The Orks come closest to this trope with their Squiggoths
; tusked, dinosaur-like beasts fitted with howdahs filled with guns, artillery or howling Orks, and driven into battle to rampage their way through the enemy army. Squiggoths native to icy worlds, which develop mammoth-like fur and tusks, come particularly close.
- The King and I: The King planned to send war elephants to help Abraham Lincoln. See the Real Life section below.
- 0 A.D.: War elephants are units available to Carthage, Egypt, Persia and India.
- Age of Empires:
- Age of Empires I gives War Elephants (which attack with their tusks), Armored Elephants (an upgrade of War Elephants with improved armor and attacks), and Elephant Archers (where the elephant in question does not attack at all, but the Bowman mounted on its back does). It also has wild elephants which can be hunted for food (though strangely, they cannot be tamed; elephant units simply create a trained elephant and rider).
- Age of Empires II dials back the elephants, having (riderless) War Elephants as the unique unit of the Persians, but eventually introduced more with The Forgotten's Indian Elephant Archers and Rise of the Rajas that gave its four new factions Battle Elephants (and one of them, the Khmer, a Ballista Elephant as their unique unit). The dlc Dynasties of India turns the Elephant Archers into regional units (in place of Horse Archers) as well as the brand new Armored Elephant/Siege Elephant, a massive, armor-covered elephant which is a living substitute for Rams available to Indian civs.
- Age of Empires III has the Indian faction which has a variety of elephant units. From the standard Mahout Lancer which are like the slower but stronger version of the Spanish Lancer and deals trample damage to boot, The Howdah which are elephants with a musketeer on the back and retains elephants' deadly melee attack, Flail Elephant that is basically a battering ram but on an elephant, and the Siege Elephant which has a cannon on the back and also has the advantage over other artillery by being faster and not having to unpack the cannon before it can start firing. There is also the Sufi War Elephant which can be obtained from a Sufi trading post.
- Age of Mythology has them as the Egyptian faction's strongest cavalry unit.
- Age of Wonders: Some factions have access to war elephants and war mammoths.
- In the first game, only the Azracs could build war elephants,which replaced siege rams for that race.
- Age of Wonders II: The Wizard's Throne: Nomads had access to Elephant riders and Frostlings could use Mammoth Riders
- Age of Wonders III: Frostlings still have their mammoths, but war elephants are absent. However, playing as the Arch Druid class enables the taming of wild elephants through the use of the befriend animal ability.
- ARK: Survival Evolved: Numerous animals can fit the motif. Mammoths prove to be it quite literally, being competent fighters and reasonably fast for mounts. The larger, slower Paraceratherium and Brontosaurus can even have siege weapons and towers built onto their platform saddles like old illustrations of war elephants.
- Assassin's Creed Origins features war elephants as high-level Optional Bosses.
- Aztec Wars: The Chinese use these; they have cannons mounted on their backs.
- Civilization has had war elephant units since II, where they were inexplicably available as a result of discovering Polytheism.
- Civilization III: They're the Indians' special unit, replacing Knights but requiring no special resources.
- Civilization IV: All factions can build them so long as they have a source of ivory, and though slower than horse units they have a combat bonus against them. The Khmer from the Beyond the Sword expansion have Ballista Elephants as a unique unit, which specifically target enemy cavalry when attacking a stack.
- Civilization V: India, Carthage, and Siam get elephants as special units, replacing Chariot Archers, Horsemen, and Knights respectively.
- Civilization VI: India's special unit is the Varu war elephant, a heavy melee cavalry unit that reduces the combat effectiveness of nearby enemies. The Khmer have the Domrey (which is the Khmer word for "elephant"), which once again carries a ballista, for mobile siege weapon strikes. Vietnam has the Voi Chiến, an elephant archer that is both strong and capable of Hit-and-Run Tactics.
- Conqueror's Blade: Subverted. Booming Games promised to add them as a mount for player characters, but ultimately canceled their development.
- The Crystal of Kings: The forces of chaos have multiple elephant-like monsters as their steeds, with the first boss being a giant elephant who tries to trample your character, as the halfling archers seated on it attempts to loose arrows on you. Later on two degraded elephant enemies show up in the third stage as Giant Mook foes.
- Dominions: Elephants can be recruited by some nations, or anyone with access to a province that has them. They have plenty of health and they can trample anything smaller then them which can really rack up damage, but their poor magic resistance makes them weak to spells, and their low morale means they'll easily flee once they start to get scared, often right through the rest of their army.
- Dwarf Fortress: DF:2010 added the option for elephants to be trained for war. However, your dwarves can't actually ride them.
- Dynasty Warriors: War elephants are generally used as mounts by the Nanman, and sometimes unlockable as a companion animal by the player character.
- Empire Earth:
- The first game has war elephants available to everyone in ranged and melee varieties from the Bronze to Dark ages. They have the same amount of health, but the ranged one's arrows do more damage than its tusks.
- Empire Earth II: The war elephant is Egypt's early unique unit, and also unique in that its counted as Heavy Cavalry, it has a ranged attack (the only one until cavalry is replaced with tanks).
- Etrian Odyssey V: Beyond the Myth has a war elephant with branching tusks called the Primordiphant that roams a vast, wide-open terrain in Jagged Reach (the second stratum). When first met, its attack power and threat level are far beyond the capabilities of the player's character party, so they have to figure out a way to evade them. In the postgame, there's a sidequest where it's fought as a Superboss, and by that point the party should be ready for it.
- Far Cry:
- Far Cry 4: The Golden Path uses war elephants as weapons against Pagan Min. They're unbelievably destructive when used against soldiers and vehicles, and being hit by one when driving a car results in a One-Hit Kill. Rabi Ray Rana and Hurk certainly love them.
- Far Cry Primal: Takkar, The Beastmaster, can tame woolly mammoths. Admittedly, they're young woolly mammoths, but they're equally dangerous to anyone Takkar rides them into.
- For Honor: At one point in the story mode, a playable Samurai hero has to break out of a rival Samurai fort by goading a war elephant into breaking the gate mechanisms via Ramming Always Works.
- Gems of War: the War Elephant is a troop from the Leonis Empire. They're classified as Beast/Knight units and their magic can empower the other troops.
- Heroes of Might and Magic: The wizards of the Silver Cities use elephants as war-steeds in Heroes of Might and Magic V, providing them with a good view of the battlefield from which to cast spells. The expansion packs add Dwarven Runemages who ride into battle atop mammoths, casting spells while their steed gores the enemy with its tusks.
- Imperator: Rome: War elephants are available to anyone who can trade with a province that supplies elephants, which generally means North Africa and India. They also cost double the supply limit of any unit.
- Kingdom Rush: Vengeance: Two variants appear in the Hammerhold Campaign, both of which count as Mini-Boss units (with Contractual Boss Immunity) that move extremely slowly, but have a gargantuan amount of health and cannot be blocked by troops/heroes, instead just dealing huge, constant damage to those in their way. The War Elephant has two archers on its back that send volleys of arrows on your troops, while the Drum Elephant has a drummer that buffs the damage and speed of mooks around it.
- Legends of Runeterra: Armored Tuskriders are elephants bred as war mounts for the Noxian army. They're absolutely massive too, easily several sizes bigger than a real life elephant. And true to the trope, the flavor text and character interactions make it out to be a symbol of fear for its enemies.
"There's no stopping a warbeast once it's in motion—best just to get out of the way."
- The Lord of the Rings Online features mûmakil among the Haradrim ranks, beginning when the player reaches Eastern Gondor. They are classified as Nemesis-level enemies, and quests dealing with them typically require a Small Fellowship.
- March of War: The African Warlords tend to use these in place of armored vehicles, in the 1940s, going up against super-heavy tanks and Diesel Punk Mecha.
- Master of Magic: The trolls make use of war mammoths.
- Metal Slug: One route in Metal Slug 3 has you free an elephant from ice and use it to stomp on all the zombies that got in your way. It could also pick up and eat chili peppers and batteries to spew flames/lightning at them as well.
- Noblemen 1896 from Foursaken Media: The final technology you get by advancing your global level is the War Elephant. Since the game is set in a steampunk America, the War Elephant is not used for trampling enemies or other melee fights (though this creature is so gigantic that a tank comes up to its knees). Instead it's been armoured and made into an artillery platform. The War Elephant carries a rig that holds three large mortars for firing in rapid succession.
- Original War: Mastodons can be trained for this role by Arab sheikhs.
- RimWorld: Skilled animal handlers can use trained elephants as attack animals. They can't ride on them, though, unless you get a Game Mod like "Giddy-Up."
- Rise of Nations: War Elephants used by the Persians and Indians are the only unique units that aren't replacements of existing units like other nation-exclusive units. They're effective against crowds of infantry while being vulnerable to archers and heavy cavalry.
- Ryse: Son of Rome features Boudica, of all people, invading Rome with a bunch of elephants to take revenge on Nero and his son Commodus, the latter of whom killed her father. They're pretty resilient, unless you have a siege crossbow, or are Commander Vitallion with his pilum.
- Tears to Tiara 2: Noa the elephant. Tart and Charis can ride it in battle. Also the other eleven elephants Tart summons as part of The Cavalry.
- Tembo the Badass Elephant is a slightly more literal example than most.
- Total War:
- Rome: Total War: War elephants appear, with the more advanced types carrying archers on their backs. Only Carthage, Parthia and the Seleucids can train them, though mercenary versions are available to be hired in North Africa and in the area around Syria. In Rome II, some factions located in Africa or India are capable of raising war elephant units. War elephants are also available to hire as mercenaries for armies that are located in some relevant regions of Africa, India and Syria. In both games, war elephants are pretty much a Death or Glory Attack of a unit, being expensive but pretty tough and highly damaging units that will crush almost anything that gets in their way (even gates) and understandably terrify enemies, but are prone to rampaging uncontrollably after they take enough damage (which is easily done by enough ranged units loosing on them) which can cause them to harm your own army when they do. If this is happening, the handlers can be told to kill their charges, which will completely annihilate the unit on both the battlefield and the subsequent campaign map.
- Medieval II: Total War: Elephants are Game Breakers, hugely effective in combat and capable of charging through enemy lines, flattening everything in front of them. Their only downside is their tendency to go berserk and rampage at random, which is only a problem if you have friendly units nearby. The vanilla version has a howdah full of gunners, while cannon and even rocket elephants are also recruitable. They make the scripted Timurid Invasion all the more terrifying.
- Third Age: Total War (a mod for Medieval II): Harad has access to Mûmakil in their late game. Mordor has similar units in the form of their Great Beasts.
- Total War: Warhammer: Norsca can field massive war mammoths twisted by Chaos, with visible mutations such as multiple tusks and trunks tipped with clawed, hand-like appendages. They come in a few variants, namely as feral monster units (the cheapest, but with low leadership, no armor and a tendency to rampage), as semi-tamed war beasts with howdahs on their backs, as an upgraded version thereof mounted with a shrine to the Chaos Gods and with the ability to buff and encourage nearby units, as mounts for Norscan generals, and as a unique Regiment of Renown in the form a white-furred specimen known as the Soulcrusher.
- Total War: Three Kingdoms: In The Furious Wild DLC, the Nanman tribes can mount their generals on war elephants, which prevents access to the general's character traits and ability to duel other characters but makes them combat juggernauts with powerful trampling and goring attacks. In addition, three actual units of elephants are present — southern elephants, which carry howdahs of slingers on their backs; more heavily armored war elephants better suited for charging into enemy units while still sending out ranged fire; and Nazhong elephants, which lack the slingers but instead carry drummers who boost other units' stats and morale.
- Warlords Battlecry: Mounted elephants serve as elite cavalry for The Empire faction.
- World of Warcraft: The Draenei utilize elekks (elephant-like creatures brought over from their homeworld) as their racial mount. Mammoths are also available to players in the northern region. Neither of these were specifically used in combat very much, though, until the Shadowlands expansion allowed Hunters to tame both mammoths and elekks.
- The Order of the Stick: During the goblin's siege of Azure City, the goblin cleric Redcloak summons a fiendish mammoth and uses it as a steed to lead a charge against a breach in the city walls.
- Hamster's Paradise: The Bruteriders gain the upper hand in the Second Great Harmster World War with the use of rakatusks: twenty-ton, four-tusked mammoth-like herbivores that, like every other vertebrate on the planet, are actually hamsters. They put them to excellent use a living siege weapons due to them being damn near unstoppable until the Bruteriders encounter the more technologically advanced Rockcookers, who use long-ranged artillery weapons to blow the rakatusk's heads off before they can even get close. This completely pulls the rug out from under the Bruteriders as they aren't able to replace them due to only having a limited number of them and the process of catching and training rakatusks being a long and difficult one.
- SCP Foundation: SCP-3813
is the wreckage of a Humongous Mecha (375 meters tall) in the shape of a war elephant, built by Carthage to assault Rome in the Second Punic War.
- Adventure Time has an Ancient Psychic Tandem War Elephant.
- Bugs Bunny: In "Prince Violent", Viking Yosemite Sam uses an elephant to assault Bugs' fortress. After the "stupid packy-derm" does Sam more harm than good, Sam chases him off... only for the elephant to wind up helping Bugs.
- Danger Mouse: Hannibal Hogarty, the villain of the episode "One of Our Stately Homes is Missing," has an army of elephants who guard the Duke of Bedbug mansion which he's stolen and will attack incursions at Hogarty's command. DM, of course, outwits them.
- Futurama: In "Fun on a Bun", Neanderthals riding woolly mammoths attack Oktoberfest.
- Jason and the Heroes of Mount Olympus: In an apparent nod to this, Mars, the Roman God of War, was reimagined as an anthropomorphic elephant.
- Pinky and the Brain: The song "A Meticulous Analysis of History" mentions Hannibal of Carthage's war elephants.
Brain: Hannibal, our book confirms,
Tried conquering Italy with pachyderms.
Just why he failed, nobody tells,
But he never could get past the Roman sentinels.
Pinky: And he couldn't find his weapons in the peanut shells. - Primal (2019): The Babylonian army has several massive war elephants — enormously oversized ones, notably, larger even that the extinct Palaeoxodon namadicus — who can carry several archers on their backs.
- It's established Indians were the first to use elephants in war, as Indian elephants were more controllable than their African counterparts. Many Indian kingdoms used alcohol and other intoxicants to get the elephants high before sending them into battle, making them more pain-resistant and less prone to being terrified, and their riders were trained to sacrifice them with poisoned lances in case they got out of control anyway. A charge of intoxicated elephants with archers shooting down from their backs was pretty much enough to wreck any enemy formation. And to make matters worse for enemies, Indians developed elephant armor, turning them into living tanks. Elephants were considered of such great importance that the Brahma Purana refers to "the fourfold army"—infantry, mounted horsemen, charioteers, and elephants. The term stuck around even after chariots were retired, and elephants kept being used for thousands of years, being an important symbol of kingship.
- The Persians got their elephants and elephant trainers from India and frequently used the same tactics. Fifteen of them were meant to be used against Alexander the Great in the Battle of Gaugamela, and they caused such an impression that Alexander had to celebrate sacrifices to Phobos, the god of fear, the night before. Ironically, the Macedonians won the battle rather easily after the Persians ultimately decided not to deploy the elephants, as they deemed the beasts too tired to be used in the attack after they had used them to haul supplies (it's a matter to speculate whether having fresh elephants would have given the Persians victory, though, as the tactics used against the Persian war chariots might have probably been effective against them too). Still, after they captured the elephants, Alexander was so impressed with them that he added them to his own army. They proved useful when they began invading Pakistan and India, as his men already knew about them.
- Alexander would finally face war elephants during the Battle of the Hydaspes against the Indian king Porus, who brought around 90 of them with tusks equipped with iron spikes. However, knowing he would probably lose an elephant-on-elephant battle and preferring finesse over force, Alexander only deployed his infantry and cavalry against Porus's army. He sustained heavy losses, but he ended up winning the battle thanks to his military genius: he ordered his men to loosen their ranks to allow the elephants to pass through and shower them with javelins and arrows, specifically targettting the mahouts so they could not sacrifice the beasts when they turned against them.
- He would have advanced more into India, but seeing that the next kings could deploy thousands of elephants against him, he wisely backed out. He founded an elephant guard in Babylon and created the post of "elephantarch" to lead them.
- Alexander's general Seleucus used these to gain a decisive advantage over the other Macedonian generals in the Wars of the Successors, eventually conquering the lion's share of Alexander's empire minus Egypt. Elephants were used in many Hellenistic armies after that, and were helpful for instance in defeating the Galatians in Turkey in the 3rd century BC. However, after a while, professional soldiers got used to the sight of elephants, meaning their psychological impact was lost.
- The Egyptian Ptolemaic kingdom (also descended from Alexander's conquests) and the city of Carthage (a Phoenician colony in Africa) also started using African elephants, as they discovered, probably from looking at the neighboring kingdoms of Numidia and Nubia, that there were local elephants they could use. However, they chose to take the smaller North African elephants rather than the huge savanna elephants, as African specimens proved to be much harder to tame than their Asian homologues (although it is known Ptolemaics and Carthaginians still traded abroad some Asian elephants). There is debate about whether those small elephants could still carry howdahs and turrets.
- An elephant-on-elephant battle between the Hellenistic kingdoms of Ptolemaic Egypt and the Seleucid Empire happened at Raphia. However, the Ptolemaics' African elephants were scared away by the sight and smell of their larger Asian cousins, and the whole battle was a fiasco for them.
- Carthaginians apparently only started thinking on war elephants after they saw those used by Pyrrhus of Epirus, who acquired a contingent of them from Ptolemy II in order to invade Rome. Ironically, although Pyrrhus managed to salvage two Pyrrhic Victories because he had been the first invader to use elephants against Rome, the Romans adapted typically fast, and by the third battle they had learned how to kill the elephants or set them on their owners. Even although Pyrrhus was technically the victor, he never dared to show up in Italy again.
- Carthage's use of elephants through the Punic Wars became the stuff of legend, but in reality its success was similarly mixed, as by this point enough foes had already seen their fair share of trunks and tusks, so their usage now required some keen strategy and sense of chance rather than just sending them forward. They could still get away with it against the Gauls, who had never faced elephants, but the Romans and Iberians were another story — Carthage's chief general Hamilcar died himself when the Iberian chieftain Orissus sent carts of burning wood against his elephants, making them panic and wreak havoc in his own camp. Hamilcar's son Hannibal Barca learned the lesson and became good enough to literally trample the Hispanics and Romans at several battles, managing to defeat and kill Orissus, but by the battle of Zama, the Roman anti-elephant measures had equally improved too much. At that place, Scipio Africanus left wide lanes open between his disciplined units, so that the elephants could take the line of least resistance by charging between them instead of over them, and also had some of his troops blow loud horns, which turned some of the elephants back on their masters. Nonetheless, Scipio took the elephants so seriously as a threat that he dictated, as part of the peace terms, that the Carthaginians should get rid of all their remaining elephants and not tame any more.
- The Romans adopted war elephants for a time but, perhaps because they were now so accustomed to neutralizing them, they only used them occasionally, with Roman military thinkers eventually regarding them as Awesome, but Impractical gimmick weapons compared to the more practical solution of just throwing another legion at the problem.
- A repeat of Raphia seemed to be coming between Rome and the Hellenistic Seleucids at Magnesia, where Roman general Lucius Scipio (Africanus' brother) brought 16 North African elephants against King Antiochus III's 54 Asían ones, but like Alexander in the Hydaspes, the Roman ultimately chose not to deploy his beasts, aware of what had happened to the Ptolemaics. He instead utilized the usual anti-elephant measures and was victorious that way. Antiochus' use of his elephants was also frankly bad, placing them in spaces between his troops where they would cause most damage to his own ranks if they turned around (ironically, Antiochus had Hannibal himself as a consultant, but the king seemingly believed himself smarter and overruled him at any chance).
- Rome also used the North African elephant in the conquest of Hispania, always as part of allied Numidian cavalry contingents, but they proved to be not too good for it, because many Hispanic peoples had previously fought either against or for Carthage and had passed on at least some second hand knowledge about elephants to their descendants (not to mention many of those had mercenary experience in Africa themselves). Roman war elephants marched at both the Celtiberian Wars and the Lusitanian Wars, but they achieved little success, and in the latter it even coincided with Rome's worst local defeat against the famous rebel Viriathus.
- Special mention goes also to the Celtiberian city of Numantia. The sight of the Romans' ten elephants made the Numantines flee behind their walls, but when the Romans tried to tear down the gates of the city with the elephants, the defenders just threw rocks at them until a lucky shot injured an elephant on the head. The animal panicked, which in turn panicked the other elephants, and they all together trampled the Roman forces. The Numantines then made a sortie and killed three elephants and 4,000 men. This was such a catastrophe for the Romans that they called the day damned and never fought a battle on the same date, and the war against Numantia prolonged for almost ten years.
- Some sources claim that the Romans brought one or two elephants along on their invasions of Britain, presumably on the basis that those natives, unlike the previous, would surely never have even heard of elephants, and so would be scared witless by the mere sight of them. It is unclear whether it was Julius Caesar or Claudius who was in command, but they apparently succeeded in scaring the Britons.
- One of the last uses of elephants in Mediterranean warfare was against Julius Caesar at Thapsus. Specifically, they played a decisive role in saving Caesar from defeat, even though they were on the opposing side. Many of Caesar's legions were so sick of the civil war at that point that they charged without orders. With a sizable chunk of his army going rogue and making contact with the enemy, Caesar had no choice but to order the rest of his army to charge as well, which put him at a disadvantage against the already numerically-superior Republican army. This might have ended in total disaster for Caesar had it not been for the advancing enemy elephants. As the elephants charged Caesar's approaching legions, the legions created huge gaps within their ranks to let the elephants passed through, who then met with Caesar's 5th Legion. The 5th was specifically prepared with axes and trained to fight elephants, so they were ready to stop the beasts. While Caesar's army was fighting tooth and nails against the superior Republican army, the 5th Legion routed the elephants and sent them running back to the Republican army. Caesar's legions quickly got out of the way of the panicked beasts and allowed them to crash into the Republican's line, which completely devastated them. What followed was a complete massacre as Caesar's legions used the ensuing chaos to encircle the enemy legions and butchered everyone.
- The Umayyad Caliphate had been on the wrong end of war elephants during their invasions of Sindh, the first being foiled when the elephants' smell sent the Arab horses into panic. By the time of the second invasion, however, the Arabs had figured out that large volleys of flaming arrows would do the trick, and were able to crush the enemy army in open battle.
- The Abbasid Caliph Harun al-Rashid gifted an elephant named Abul-Abbas to Charlemagne at the beginning of the 9th century. It is actually unclear if Abul-Abbas was trained for war or if Charlemagne ever intended to use it as such, because later accounts were sensationalized. What is certain is that Abul-Abbas lived for eight years after arriving in Aachen, that Charlemagne took it with him when he marched north to answer a Danish attack on Friesland, and that the elephant died suddenly at some place beyond the Rhine called "Lippeham". The prevailing theory is that Lippeham is the confluence of the rivers Lippe and Rhine, and that Abul-Abbas died of pneumonia after being made to swim across the Rhine, which proved to be far too wide and cold for him.
- When Timur the Lame invaded India, the Indians brought 120 armor-clad elephants with poisoned tusks against him. Timur ordered all his camels lit on fire and sent towards the elephants. The giant beasts turned around and trampled their own troops, thus winning the battle for Timur. He then had the same elephants incorporated into his own army, apparently thinking that he was the only one crazy enough to come up with a counter.
- The people of Thailand have historically ridden elephants into battle. They are sacred animals there.
- King Naresuan, who is still venerated in Thailand, is said to have fought and won a one-on-one duel with Maha Uparaja of Burma, with both on the backs of elephants wielding halberds (Naresuan's elephant had gone out of control and taken him too far into the Burmese lines, but instead of surrendering or trying to retreat, he went for good old Bavarian Fire Drill and pretended he had come deliberately to challenge the enemy leader to single combat). The duel is disputed by historians as only one official Thai source mentioned it with none of the Burmese and European ones mentioning the duel.
- The King of Siam (Thailand's original name) famously offered Abraham Lincoln a herd of war elephants to help with The American Civil War. Lincoln politely declined
King Mongkut's offer on the grounds that the States do not extend South enough to comfortably raise them.
- The Burmese, Yunnanese, and Vietnamese all used war elephants in their wars against the Mongols, Chinese, British, and French among others. The Ming Chinese later took war elephants as tribute from Vietnam, even though the Ming never used them in war themselves.
- The Khmer temples in Angkor Wat have several depictions of war elephants, including elephants carrying ballistae on their backs. It is unknown if these ballistae were shot from atop the elephants or they just transported them, however.
- Genghis Khan was thoroughly unimpressed with war elephants, although he never met them in their prime. When the Mongols marched on Samarkand, the locals rejected an open battle and stayed within the walls until they were made desperate by dwindling food and water. Then the garrison's weakened elephants charged at the Mongols but were forced to retreat inside when attacked by catapults. After the city fell, Genghis had the chance to add the elephants to his forces. When told that the elephants were hungry, he asked what they ate; when the Samarkandans replied that they ate vegetation, he said that there was plenty grass in the steppe and had them released. The elephants then died of thirst and starvation.
- The Portuguese found war elephants used against them in the siege of Malacca during the Conquest of Portuguese India, but they overcame them through pike and shot.
Modern
- Though elephants had long lost their value as frontline units by World War II, they were still used for guerrilla warfare and logistics in Southeast Asia by both Allied and Axis forces, as they could be fed local vegetation instead of requiring fuel, and could traverse jungles and other rough terrain ill-suited for vehicles.

