erttheking said:
After Twilight ruined the concept of vampires for a lot of people I think we could all use a refresher course of how vampires work. It was at that point that I realized that I really only know the sterotypes of vampires (can't be in sunlight, doesn't like holy objects and garlic and bites people) so I was hoping that we could have a discussion on how vampires work with people reminding me how they do work. A couple of things kinda stick out for me.
Erm, there is no ONE TRUE WAY of vampires. I van point to several franchises that do vampires completely differently form one another and yet they are all vampires. I'll give you a quick rundown
erttheking said:
How come when a vampire bites someone it just drains their victim's blood and sometimes it changes them, what determines that? In Hellsing it says that they're only turned if the person being bitten is a virgin of the opposite gender, but considering how over the top Hellsing is I'm hesitant to take it's word for it.
Yeah, that's just Hellsing (I don't recall the "opposite gender" being a requirement, though) - in Dracula, bites don't transform people, the count had to give them blood to drink. Several times, in fact - it was a more complicated process. Dracula himself became a vampire pretty much on a whim - he's the first one. In Anne Rice's works (and Vampire the Masquerade/Requiem), drinking a mortal's blood and turning them into a vampire are two unrelated things - the vampire has to give a dying mortal just a sip of their blood (few drops should be enough) and that makes a new one. The mortal need not be dying off blood loss, either, just generally dying. In Blade...hmm, I'm a little hazy there, but I think any victim turns into one of them, unless they die. Many horror movies have vampires spreading their curse like a disease - just a bite is all it takes (but that's more of a general horror movie trope - werewolves and zombies operate the same way). In the Elder Scrolls, vampirism
is a disease - it can be transmitted through a bite, or a scratch or whatever. Twilight has the disease spread as well, it seems to be transmitted through a bite.
As for feeding requirements, again - different works operate differently. In some a vampire has to drink the blood of a whole mortal, or maybe more than one (though that is rarer) every night or every few nights (like, a week). In other works, vampires need just a little bit of blood and don't have to kill a mortal at all (back to the previous ones - some actually
require a kill). Others don't actually
need to feed. As in, they can happily operate without drinking blood, maybe even eat other food. Hellsing is one of these - Seras managed to stay quite long without drinking blood - she didn't starve or anything.
erttheking said:
Can vampires reproduce via sex? If so, do they create full blooded vampires or just damphirs?
Depends - on both questions. Some works have them as walking cadavers. Pretty much zombies that don't call out "Bra-a-ains". Cadavers are generally not good for reproduction. Other times, vampires are actually living...to an extent, at least - they won't be undead, as a minimum. Living vampires may be able to have sex (well, undead ones might still get the...equipment to work, but it's more muscle control than actually
working) but are more often than not sterile, alternatively they'll create a dhampir (if they exist in the universe) and least likely they'll create a new vampire. If they do, most likely that would be with another vampire.
erttheking said:
Or am I just shooting in the dark and are vampires a lot like demons and that the author can do whatever the Hell they want with them?
Yup, pretty much. I haven't even touched upon the legends here - different works cover all the spectrum, the legendary ones might even offer more. The requirement for something to be a "vampire" seems to be "feeds on the living". More or less it's this. Blood is recommended but not a must. Similarly, having some sort of relationship with the night (or the dark/lack of sun) that makes them stronger or alternatively a relationship with the sun that makes them weaker is recommended but not a must again. Finally, new vampires would most likely come after some actions of other vampires. But that's it.