In the manga and anime series 
Death Note, 
Shinigami (死神?, literally "death god")  are a race of extra-dimensional beings who survive by killing humans to  extend their own lives. Shinigami in this series are not responsible  for every death that occurs; people will eventually die regardless of  whether or not the Shinigami pay attention to them, but a Shinigami can  end their lives sooner than intended for their own benefit.
Creation and conception
Takeshi Obata, the artist for 
Death Note,  said that he had "a lot of fun" during the creation of the Shinigami.  He also felt that the process was "very difficult" since he started  "with nothing." He cited the difficulty in his creation of Ryuk as an  example. Obata said that at first Shinigami appeared like "beasts" and  that with later Shinigami such as Sidoh he designed them to look like  crustaceans and insects because "it was easier." Obata said that he felt  difficulty in basing characters on animal designs and keeping "the same  feeling of the series." Obata said that he considered basing Shinigami  on 
wizards  but decided against the idea; he says that the rags on some Shinigami  serves as a remnant of that concept. Obata added that Shinigami have no  physical differences separating males and females; he says that he knew  about the genders as he drew the characters and that the sole  differences consisted of details added "subconsciously."
[1]
Obata said that he used "no real design motif" for the 
Shinigami Realm, and that he never settled on any concrete appearance; Obata described the Realm as changing appearance in each instance in 
Death Note,  with it sometimes appearing to be a dry field and sometimes appearing  to be a room "full of bones." Obata says that he likes to think of the  Shinigami Realm as "an abandoned building with chunks of steel sitting  around." Obata said that he thought of the realm as being "inside  something" and having a "claustrophobic feeling." Obata added that he  would like to develop the Shinigami Realm further if it was used as the  setting for a story.
[2]
Tsugumi Ohba, the author, said that when he first inserted the numbers representing 
Light Yagami's lifespan (as visible with the 
Shinigami Eyes)  he created a "complicated math equation" that could determine Light's  lifespan in human terms; he added that he forgot the equation. Obata  created subsequent lifespan numbers.
[3]
The Shinigami are derived from the ancient Japanese myth of the 
Shikigami.  Shikigami cannot be seen by most people, but according to the Heian  period onmyōji who were said to control them, shikigami often looked  something like a child-sized oni demon. Although invisible, shikigami  supposedly could, at the onmyōji's command, take a variety of human or  animal forms, possess or bewitch people, and even cause bodily harm or  death.
Overview
Shinigami vary widely in appearance, and their bodies are built in  ways that would seem impossible by human standards. Like humans,  Shinigami also can die, of sorts
[4]  by extending the life of a human they care about: the purpose of a  Shinigami is to end life, not give it, and hence saving a human is  contrary to their nature. Shinigami who die in this manner are reduced  to dust, and their remaining lifespan is given to the human they saved.
  
  Ryuk looking at 
Light Yagami with the Shinigami Eyes, revealing Light's real name and remaining lifespan (in Shinigami time).
  The main thing all Shinigami have in common is the Death Note. This  supernatural notebook allows them to end the lives of humans before  their times, adding the human's remaining lifespans to their own (e.g. a  man who would have lived to sixty, but is killed at forty would add  twenty years to the Shinigami's lifespan). In this manner, a Shinigami  can extend their lives indefinitely, and can survive being shot in the  head and stabbed without any discomfort. To assist in this, their eyes  allow them to see the names and remaining lifespans of humans by seeing  the faces of their victims. For the Death Note to work, the Shinigami  must be thinking of the person's face as they write it in. Any cause of  death can be written down; if none is written, the human will simply die  of a 
heart attack,  although it cannot kill someone under 780 days old, or over 124 years  old, or with less than 12 minutes to live. A human using the Death Note  will not receive the same benefits as a Shinigami; while humans can kill  people, they cannot increase their lifespans by doing so.
According to Ryuk, life in the Shinigami realm is incredibly dull;  Shinigami pass the time by gambling with years of their lives, and using  the Death Note is considered to be 
workaholism and they only do it once in a while to increase their lifespan so they do not slack off entitrely.
All Shinigami must possess at least one Death Note, a necessity to  extend their lives. Should they manage to come across a second, it can  be loaned to a human. The Shinigami must accompany the human until they  die or the Death Note is willingly given back or reach its expiration  date; should the human give the notebook to another human, the same  would apply to the new owner. Shinigami can explain the purpose of the  Death Note to the human, but this is done at their discretion. They can  also offer Shinigami Eyes to the human at the cost of half the human's  remaining lifespan; however, while a human with the Eyes can also see  the name and lifespan of most humans, they cannot see the lifespan of  any Death Note owner, themselves included. Likewise, Shinigami cannot  see lifespans of other Shinigami. In addition, Shinigami are forbidden  from telling the Death Note owner their remaining lifespan, both because  it would cause confusion and because a human aware of their fate might  react unpredictably (in a negative way). While in the human world,  Shinigami are invisible and inaudible to everyone except the owner of  their Death Note and anyone else who has touched it. Other unrelated  Death Note users can only see their specific Shinigami. At the beginning  of the series, it is stated that humans who have used the Death Note  are unable to go to 
Heaven or 
Hell  upon their death, instead they go to Mu ("Nothingness"). Shinigami may  be male or female. Shinigami cannot and are not permitted to have sexual  relations with humans; they cannot have sexual intercourse with each  other, nor can they reproduce. In addition, humans cannot easily tell  which Shinigami are male and which Shinigami are female. 
Death Note 13: How to Read adds that Shinigami may have emotions "relating to the opposite sex." For instance Ryuk feels shy and embarrassed when 
Misa Amane hugs him.
[5][6]
Shinigami do not need to eat food; they possess senses of taste  similar to those of humans; as Shinigami do not gain nutrients from food  many do not eat. In addition Shinigami do not need to sleep and will  not die from a lack of sleep; Shinigami view sleeping as "evidence of  laziness."
[6]
The Shinigami have a language; each Shinigami has his or her own  written language, with some opting for letters and some opting for  pictures. 
Takeshi Obata, artist of the series, said that he assumes that all Shinigami can understand the languages of one another.
[2]
If a Shinigami breaks laws, the Shinigami will face one of nine  punishment levels. The severity is least at Level Eight and most at  Level One; in addition an "Extreme Level" exists. The Shinigami will die  if a level below Level Three is applied to him or her.
[5]
Shinigami may not kill a human in any manner outside of using a Death  Note; killing a human without using a Death Note merits "Extreme Level"  punishment.
[5]
Shinigami have rankings, with the King of Death as having the highest ranking. 
13: How to Read states that the rankings do not "seem to affect" the Shinigami's "day-to-day activities" "very much."
[7]
Shinigami Eyes
Ohba said that a human with Shinigami eyes will always see names and  lifespans of other people, although just as Shinigami can't see each  other's lifespans, Shinigami Eyes will not display the lifespan of a  human in possession of a Death Note. The most significant rule with  regard to humans is that to obtain the eyes, a person must halve their  own remaining lifespan in a trade with a Shinigami. The only exception  to this rule is 
Beyond Birthday,  who was somehow born with Shinigami Eyes. In addition, as per the  rules, the human owner of the Shinigami eyes gains 3.6 (20/10) vision.  Ohba described the rule as "very close to being a stupid rule".
[3]  The way how to read a person's death date is years, months, days,  hours, minutes, and finally seconds. At least half the face must be seen  though. If the person is deceased, their name will not appear in a  photograph or video footage.
Recurring Shinigami
Ryuk (リューク, Ryūku?) is the main Shinigami of the 
Death Note  series. He is 6'6" according to Death Note volume 1. Bored with the  activities (or lack thereof) of the Shinigami realm, Ryuk obtains a  second Death Note by tricking the Shinigami king and drops it in the  human realm for someone to find, hoping to amuse himself. He  deliberately writes the instructions on the front page (in English,  which he assumed to be the most popular language in the human realm) so  people would understand its purpose. The Death Note is discovered by 
Light Yagami,  and Ryuk follows him around for much of the series to see how Light  uses it. Ryuk has a fairly humanoid appearance. His skin is gray, or a  purplish color, his limbs are abnormally long, and he has bulging yellow  eyes with black irises (red in the anime); in the films, he is  represented by 
CGI. He is voiced by 
Shidō Nakamura in the Japanese anime and live-action adaptations, while 
Brian Drummond voices him in the English dub.
Ryuk is characterized by his constant amusement by, and apathy in  regards to, Light's problems. He enjoys seeing Light overcome the  various challenges put to him, and often waits until the worst possible  moment to inform him of a certain aspect of the Death Note just to get a  laugh. He is occasionally helpful if it serves his own interests, such  as obtaining apples or furthering his own amusement, but for the most  part will jokingly ask Light what his next move will be or have Light  explain to him the point of a certain action. He tells Light in the  first volume he does not look at what Light writes always because he  finds it more amusing. The sfist describes Ryuk as a "crazy-looking,  supernatural creature with these wicked eyes" who becomes  "(surprisingly)" a "moral compass" for Light in the film version of 
Death Note.
[8]
Ryuk has a great fondness for 
apples,  comparing them to cigarettes and alcohol for Shinigami (Shinigami  apples are withered and taste like sand, as he shows Misa at one point),  and will go through a type of 
withdrawal  if he goes for too long without eating them. His withdrawal symptoms  involve twisting himself up like a pretzel and doing handstands. He also  states that he is shy around girls. In addition to apples, Ryuk is fond  of video games, first shown in the 
omake eight-panel comic series, where he asks for a Silver 
Game Boy Advance SP, originally published in 
Weekly Shonen Jump Volume 4-5 (double issue) in 2005. On another occasion, Ryuk asks Light if he wants to play 
Mario Golf (changed to "video games" in the anime), but receives no answer since Light's bedroom is bugged with cameras.
[9]
As Ryuk explains when he first meets Light, he is bound to take  Light's life when his time comes. In the manga, Ryuk does this after  Light is shot several times by Matsuda. He desperately begs Ryuk to  write the names of the investigation team and the SPK members in the  Death Note, but Ryuk, reminding Light that he is not on anyone's side,  just writes Light's name instead. He was expecting Light might have  thought of some way out of his situation, but seeing as he was desperate  enough to go to Ryuk for help, he decided it was all over for him. Ryuk  returns to the Shinigami realm.
[10]
In the anime, Light does not ask for Ryuk's help and manages to escape the warehouse thanks to Mikami's 
suicide  distracting everyone else. However, his wounds are too severe for him  to escape very far, and Ryuk, who is watching him from atop a pole,  decides that following Light around during a prison sentence is not  worth his time and thus writes Light's name in his Death Note, remarking  that he had a lot of fun with him regardless. Light dies peacefully,  with an apparition of 
L standing over him - mirroring Light standing over L on his death.
The second film ends in much the same manner as the manga, except  Ryuk's silence leads Light to believe that he is willing to help. When  Light learns differently, Light yells at Ryuk and jumps through him,  trying in vain to stop his death before dying in his father's arms;  before this, Ryuk takes this opportunity to reveal to Light that humans  who have used the Death Note are unable to enter either Heaven or Hell  regardless of their actions in life. In the 
spin-off L: Change the WorLd  Ryuk offers L the Death Note, but when L refuses and proceeds to burn  it, Ryuk moans about L being boring and disappears, returning to the  Shinigami realm.
Tsugumi Ohba, story writer of 
Death Note, said that Ryuk is his favorite Shinigami and that "If I didn't say Ryuk here, his whole character would be in vain. [
laughs]
[11]
[edit] Ryuk in the pilot chapter
In the pilot chapter of 
Death Note Ryuk is the master of two  Death Notes that he dropped into the human world; Taro Kagami picks up  the first one, and Ryuk talks to Taro. The other is picked up by Taro's  classmate, Miura. The police burn Miura's book, not knowing of the  existence of the first book. At the end of the chapter Ryuk follows an  older Taro.
[12] Death Note 13: How to Read describes the pilot chapter Ryuk as "really lazy" and "incompetent".
[13]
[edit] Ryuk in the yonkoma
Death Note 13: How to Read describes Ryuk in the 
Death Note yonkoma as, of the characters, one who "may" be the character most resembling the equivalent character in the 
Death Note series.
[13]
[edit] Conception and design of Ryuk
Ohba said that he always mentioned apples in the thumbnails because  he wished to use "the dying message that Shinigami only eat apples" and  therefore he needed Ryuk to hold apples and that "There's no other  reason." Ohba also said that he specifically chose apples as the 
red "goes well" with Ryuk's black body and that the apples "fit well" with Ryuk's "big" mouth.
[14]  When Obata informed Ohba that apples held religious and psychological  significance and that a person could "read a lot" into the inclusion of  apples and that he assumed that was the reason why Ohba included the  apples, Ohba said that he did not "think about that at all" and that he  believes that "apples are cool... that's it. [
laughs]" Ohba added  that he felt including aspects that could become later plot points was  beneficial, and the apples were used as a point when Light asked Ryuk to  search for the cameras in exchange for apples.
[15]
Obata said that he encountered difficulty in creating Ryuk.
[1]  He said that his original idea of Ryuk consisted of Ryuk looking like a  "young man similar to Light" with black hair and wings. Obata said that  he had the idea of Shinigami looking like "attractive rock stars."  Obata felt that if Ryuk appeared to be more attractive than Light he  would "appear to be the main character" and "things wouldn't work as  well." Obata said that he decided to erase the previous design and use  the final design when his editor told that Ryuk did not have to appear  to be human. Obata said that he liked the "monster"-like appearance and  added that, with his face, "you can never really tell what he is  thinking." Obata said that he encountered difficulty while drawing Ryuk  in the pilot chapter since he did not "have a good handle" on the "bone  structure of his face." Obata said that during serialization he became  "so used" to the underlying structure that he could visualize it. Obata  describes Ryuk's face as appearing different between the pilot chapter  and the actual 
Death Note series. In 
13: How to Read Obata thought of an idea involving Ryuk's face being a mask, and under the mask would be an "attractive" face.
[16]
When designing Ryuk's Death Note Obata thought about the appearance  of Ryuk's handwriting. Ryuk wrote the words "Death Note" on the cover of  his own notebook, and when he took possession of Sidoh's book he wrote  the same words on the front cover.
[2]
Shūsuke Kaneko,  director of the films, said that he chose to create Ryuk with computer  graphics as it would make the aspect of Ryuk only appearing to people  who have touched the Death Note "believable" and that the audience could  "tell instinctually" that Ryuk is a shinigami with "no real presence."  Kaneko added that if a human actor represented Ryuk, the appearance  would have been "too realistic," the actor may have impacted Ryuk's  "presence," and the audience may have "doubted he was a death god, if  only for a second." Kaneko ordered the graphics team to design the  graphics as if it was an actor "inside a rubber suit."
[17]
[edit] Filming process of Ryuk character
Digital Frontier, a computer graphics company, animated Ryuk. Kaneko  said that because Ryuk's physical structure is "different from a  human’s," he thought of an idea of visualizing a person in a Ryuk  costume. He also wanted the audience to think of Ryuk as a person in a  Ryuk costume talking to 
Tatsuya Fujiwara,  the actor who played Light. He said that he was "asking for too much"  and that he wanted audiences to see the film Ryuk as more than "a  product of the latest CG technology." Fujiwara said that due to the  constant filming with Ryuk he rarely interacted other actors during  filming of the first film; 
The Star of 
Malaysia  describes Fujiwara's emotions as "mock frustration." Fujiwara described  the CG Ryuk as "so selfish" and "far more difficult to work with" than a  human actor.
[18]
[edit] Reception to Ryuk
On the actor's voicework in the anime, Tom S. Pepirium of 
IGN said that "
Brian Drummond IS Ryuk."
[19]  Pepirium described Drummond's voice as "excellent" and that this makes  it "hilarious" to watch "Ryuk and his never-ending grin giggle at the  events he put into motion."
[20]
Kitty Sensei of 
OtakuZone had her opinions of the film portrayal of Ryuk published in 
The Star, a 
Malaysian  newspaper. In it Kitty Sensei said that Ryuk "looks a little artificial  in the beginning." She says that she became used to the portrayal and  loved "Ryuk’s gleeful chuckles and fish-faced grins."
[21]
The 
sfist describes Ryuk as the sole "(potential) cheeseball  factor" of the first film and that he may be "difficult to get used to";  the article stated that Ryuk "adds" to the film if the viewers "let go  enough to accept Ryuk's presence."
[8]
  
  Rem as she appears in the manga.
  Rem (レム, Remu?)  is the Shinigami who gives Misa her Death Note. Like Ryuk, Rem  possesses two Death Notes; however, Rem did not get hers through  trickery. The Shinigami Gelus, who had fallen in love with Misa,  intentionally killed someone who was going to murder Misa. Doing so  caused him to be reduced to dust and ash, leaving only his Death Note.  Touched by this act, Rem delivered Gelus's Death Note to Misa, since it  was her life he saved. Her appearance is quite skeletal, with long,  spinal cord-like arms and bone-like skin. Rem is voiced by 
Kimiko Saitō in the Japanese anime and 
Coleen Wheeler  in the English dub. While Ryuk takes amusement in everything in the  human world, Rem is almost the exact opposite. She views most humans  with contempt, seeing Shinigami as the more evolved race. Also, while  Ryuk is 
ambivalent  to Light's success or failure, Rem actively assists Misa, having  inherited Gelus's love for her. She is even willing to sacrifice her  life to defend Misa, as evidenced by her threat to kill Light should  Misa die before her time. For Misa's sake, however, she still assists  Light in his schemes, although she despises the human she gave the Death  Note to. 
Death Note 13: How to Read said Rem "supposedly" experiences difficulty while writing the 
Japanese language. Also stated in 
Death Note 13: How to Read,  Rem is female, contrary to some beliefs, supported by the fact that in  manga, chapter 47, page 15, panel 3, she states that she is, in fact,  female. Although never clearly stated, Rem appears to be male in the  film adaptation.
Light manages to force Rem into working for him by presenting a  situation in which harm would come to Misa otherwise. As such, she dies  when she writes L's name. In the second movie, Rem declares her love for  Misa and her spite for Light moments before her death. While her Death  Note is left behind in the manga and anime, she burns it in the film out  of spite.
Obata said that Rem is his favorite Shinigami since she is a Shinigami and "a good person."
[11]
[edit] Conception and design of Rem
Obata said that he decided to create a design contrasting with Ryuk's  design, using a white body with "rounder" lines. He says that he used  fashion collections to create his motif. He described her resulting  appearance as if she wore a "really bizarre suit." Obata said that 
Medusa inspired the design of Rem's head.
[16]
Gelus (ジェラス, Jerasu?)  appears in a flashback when Rem explains how to kill a Shinigami. He is  a small, doll-like Shinigami who appears to be patched together out of  mismatched fabric. He only has one eye, despite having two eye sockets.
In the flashback, Rem recalls Gelus watching over a younger Misa  Amane in the human world, which he spends most of his time doing.  Knowing that it was Misa's final day, she watches with him, interested  in how she will die. Having fallen in love with Misa, Gelus uses his  Death Note to kill Misa's destined murderer, a crazed stalker, against  Rem's protests. Gelus is reduced to a pile of dust as punishment for  extending a human life, leaving behind only his Death Note. His  remaining years are added to Misa's lifespan. Rem delivers his Death  Note to Misa because it was she whom he saved. In the film, he simply  drops it and it lands near Misa. He is voiced by 
Ken'ichi Matsuyama (who played L in the films) in the Japanese version and 
Michael Dobson in the English dub.
In the Japanese 
13: How to Read book, his name is romanized as 
Jealous. In the English versions his name is romanized as 
Gelus.
[edit] Conception and development of Gelus
Obata said that Gelus appeared to be "a really beautiful" Shinigami  in the thumbnails but decided to use his concept instead; Obata designed  Gelus with a patchwork body since Gelus is a "really pitiful  character." Obata added the trait of Gelus having difficulty writing  names into the Death Note. Obata said that he believed that readers  could relate to him and sympathize with him more if he looked "pathetic"  instead of "beautiful."
[22]
Obata said that at first he placed "detailed patterns" on Gelus's  Death Note. When deciding that the patterns looked "too pretty" Obata  covered the patterns with black, leaving the white portions visible. The  text of the notebook is in a "Shinigami language."
[2]
Sidoh (シドウ, Shidou?)  is the Shinigami whose Death Note was stolen by Ryuk. By the time he  realizes this, however, the note has already changed hands several  times, ending up in the hands of 
Mello's  gang (more specifically, Mello's subordinate, Jack Neylon whose real  name is Kal Snyder). After repeatedly hounding Ryuk for its return, he  tracks down the gang to get it back.He discovers his notebook is in 
Los Angeles, 
California  and upon arrival takes the notebook out of Mello's hands (making it  look as if it just floated in mid-air) and touches it to the notebook's  current owner, Kal Snyder (a.k.a. Jack Neylon). After Snyder freaks out,  he gets Mello and the others to touch the notebook. In order to regain  his Note, Sidoh agrees to help Mello's gang against Near's SPK and the  Kira investigation team. Snyder is forced to make the eye trade with  Sidoh, who exposes the fake 13 day rule. He wears heavy clothing,  obscuring most of his features, and his head is wrapped in bandages. He  is voiced by 
Kazuki Yao in the Japanese anime and 
Sam Vincent in the English dub.
Sidoh shares Mello's great liking for chocolate, similar to Ryuk's  liking of apples. Sidoh is fairly timid; Mello frightens Sidoh, despite  the fact that Mello is a human. 
Death Note 13: How to Read describes Sidoh as unintelligent and forgetful, rarely remembering the names of other Shinigami.
[23] After Light regains the Death Note from Mello, he returns it to Sidoh to keep him from interfering.
Obata described Sidoh as "very funny," citing the time when Sidoh  becomes the first Shinigami to distribute flyers. Obata said he wished  that Sidoh appeared more often in the story.
[22]
In the Japanese 
13: How to Read book, his name is romanized as 
Shidoh. In the English versions his name is romanized as 
Sidoh.
[edit] Conception and development of Sidoh
Tsugumi Ohba, writer for 
Death Note,  said that he used Sidoh as another Shinigami appearing in the human  world because he liked Sidoh's appearance; Ohba described Daril Ghiroza  as a "candidate" and that he wanted a "pretty pathetic" character.
[24]
Obata said that when he discovered that another Shinigami would  appear on Earth, he filed through designs and nominated Sidoh and Daril  Ghiroza. Obata said that he believed that Ghiroza would be chosen and  prepared for that decision; instead Ohba selected Sidoh. Obata said that  he based Sidoh's design on the appearance of a bird with his mouth  being based on a beak of a 
canary. Obata described Sidoh's foldable arms as more "insect-like."
[22]
[edit] Minor Shinigami
[edit] Armonia Justin Beyondormason
Armonia Justin Beyondormason (アラモニア=ジャスティン=ビヨンドルメーソン, Aramonia-Jasutin-Biyondorumēson?),  otherwise known as Justin the Jewel Skeleton, is a briefly-featured  Shinigami who informs Sidoh that his Death Note was stolen by the  Shinigami Ryuk and gives him the rules for different situations. As his  names suggests, Justin's appearance is that of a skeleton adorned with  all manner of jewellery. He is voiced by 
Hideyuki Umezu in the Japanese anime and 
Michael Dobson in the English dub.
As described in 
13: How to Read, Justin is the right-hand man  of the Shinigami King and sits on a throne. Highly intelligent, Justin  knows everything there is to know about the Death Note, and Shinigami  often go to him in trouble.
[25] Obata describes him as "conceited."
[1]  Justin provides Sidoh with several scrolls describing the various rules  that Shinigami have for interacting with humans, which Sidoh uses to  guide his interactions with Mello in the human world. The scrolls are  not mentioned in the anime.
Obata said that for Justin's body he referenced 
Tibetan art that features skulls. He also used ideas stemming from 
Italian antique accessories that feature faces covered in jewels.
[1]
In the Japanese version his name is 
Armonia Jastin Beyondllemason.
[edit] Calikarcha
Calikarcha (カリカーチャ, Karikācha?)  is considered strange-looking even by Shinigami standards, having eight  eyes lined up two rows on each side of his head. He has a penchant for  blueberries but dislikes sunlight.
[26]
Obata said that he based Calikarcha's design off of 
Balinese bird masks.
[1]
[edit] Daril Ghiroza
Daril Ghiroza (ダリル=ギロオーザ, Dariru-Giroōza?)  is a female Shinigami who passes time by stacking human skeletons.  Known for her "goofy" laugh. She has a liking for gold but dislikes  bright places.
[25]
Obata described her as "more of an Orthodox-looking Shinigami." Obata  said that since Obata designed her at the same time as his design work  for Sidoh for use as a new main character he gave her some contrast with  Sidoh's design. Obata said that he based Ghiroza on Ryuk's design and  tried to make her appear "higher-ranked."
[1]  Obata said that when he discovered that another Shinigami would appear  on Earth, he filed through designs and nominated Sidoh and Daril  Ghiroza. Obata said that he believed that Ghiroza would be chosen and  prepared for that decision; instead Ohba selected Sidoh. Obata said that  the reason why Sidoh was chosen is that Ghiroza attained a high  Shinigami rank and therefore would not fit the role of a Shinigami being  "pushed around" by a human being. Obata said that he was glad that  Ghiroza was not selected since her design included many details that he  felt would have caused "real trouble" if he tried to draw her in every  chapter.
[22]
In the Japanese version her name is 
Dalil Guillohrtha.
[edit] Deridovely
Deridovely (デリダブリー, Deridaburī?)  is a Shinigami who spends his time gambling. He is humanoid in  appearance, but wears a bone mask over his face. He carries a scythe,  making him thematically similar to the classical depiction of the Grim  Reaper. He usually gambles with Gukku.
[27] His Japanese voice actor is 
Tetsuo Goto and his English voice actor is 
David Pettitt.
Obata said that he based Deridovely on a "gross-looking transparent insect." Obata believes that the bandages aid the design.
[1]
In the Japanese version his name is 
Dellidubbly.
Gukku (グック?)  is a very lazy Shinigami whose most prominent feature is his animal  mask. Like Deridovely, he enjoys gambling. Despite gambling with  Deridovely much of the time, he is a poor gambler.
[28] He is voiced by Takeharu Onishi in the Japanese version and by 
Lee Tockar in English.
Obata said that, as Gukku appears in the first chapter, he wanted for  Gukku to "look like a monster to keep it simple." Obata decided to use a  
cattle skull in the design as he felt that using a "regular skull would be boring."
[1]
In the Japanese version his name is 
Gook.
[edit] Kinddara Guivelostain
Kinddara Guivelostain (キンダラ・ギベロスタイン, Kindara Giberosutain?)  is a female Shinigami with a fierce appearance, having a huge fissure  jutting from her head and sharp teeth. She enjoys violence but hates  excessive thinking.
[29] She does not appear in the actual 
Death Note story; she appears on the spine of Volume 12.
[1]
Obata said that, since the final volume release pended, he wanted to create a new Shinigami to appear in the volume.
[1]
[edit] Midora
Midora (ミードラ, Mīdora?)  is a large, slug-like Shinigami with stubby limbs. Unlike most  Shinigami, she does not wear any clothing or decorative elements on her  body. She enjoys moist weather but loathes dry seasons. Her enormous  size gives her a dominating presence.
[25]  While she is a background character in the main series, a one-shot  chapter set three years after Light's death focuses on her. In the  chapter, Ryuk's actions have made apples a commodity among the  Shinigami. Midora uses this to bribe the Shinigami King into giving her a  second Death Note, which she gives to a human in an attempt to  replicate Ryuk's experience with Light. When this "Cheap Kira" is  brushed off by Near as "boring", he kills himself. Midora tells Ryuk  about this, and he relates Light's claim that someone must have strong  spiritual strength and conviction to use the Death Note; Midora simply  picked a weakling. She admits that Ryuk is better at judging such  things, then gives the extra Death Note to him.
[30]
Midora appears to have the same feeling toward bananas, as seen in  one panel of the one-shot when she is in the new Kira's room, she is  eating a banana while lying amongst an enormous pile of banana peels.
Obata said that he liked Midora's design as she appears "more like a 
salamander" and has a "vastly different" design when compared to other Shinigami. Obata said that her skin feels moist like 
amphibian skin; due to this Obata said that he worries "if she can survive in the heat of the Shinigami realm. [
laughs]"
[1]
Nu (ヌ?)  is a Shinigami whose body is covered from head to toe with eyes. Nu is  "supposedly" the second most-powerful Shinigami, with the King of  Death's powers eclipsing hers. She is very intelligent and likes the  feeling of others' regret, but she dislikes sound.
[26]  Obata described Nu as like "a giant rock covered in eyes that sticks  out of the ground." Although she has never appeared in any actual  episodes in the anime, Nu is shown very briefly in the second opening  sequence, along with Ryuk, Rem, Gelus, Sidoh and Gukku.
Obata said that Shinigami like Nu exist and are "rare."
[1]
[edit] Zellogi
Zellogi (ゼルオギー, Zeruogī?) wears a 
Native American  headdress and has a hook in place of his left hand. He takes an  interest in Ryuk's activities in the human world, and humans in  particular after learning that Ryuk's Death Note is in a human's  possession. Despite his feeble appearance, he has a highly inquisitive  nature. His interests are in furry items and he dislikes moist  temperature.
[28] He is voiced by Kibou Tokumei in the original and by 
John Novak in the dub.
Obata said that he used a Native American motif for Zellogi. Obata  said that after covering his eyes and adding feathers "the rest just  came naturally. [
laughs]"
[1]
In the Japanese version his name is 
Zerhogie.
[edit] King of Death
The 
King of Death,
[31] also known as the 
Shinigami King (死神大王, Shinigami Daiō?),
[32]  is the ruler of the Shinigami. An unseen character in the main series,  the Shinigami King governs the Shinigami and controls distribution of  the Death Notes. It is not made clear if he creates them or just has a  certain supply, as he is unwilling to replace lost ones. He appears to  at least write the rules for the Death Notes, but whether or not he  enforces them himself is unclear. The Shinigami King is regarded as a  sort of father figure by lesser Shinigami, and is said to be almost  immortal. Chapter 109 depicts the King as a large mass suspended in the  air with chains. He has a skull for a head, which is surrounded by a  larger, skull-like formation. He has four arms, each with only three  fingers on the hands, which hang from his body.
[33]
One of the eyecatch rules given in the series states that extra Death  Notes found by Shinigami are generally expected to be returned to the  King, though this clearly is not something Shinigami are forced to abide  by. Likewise, lost notebooks must also be reported to him.
[34]  Little information is given about the character itself, aside from  Rem's assertion that the King is not easy to trick, which Ryuk  successfully did. In contrast, he is quite easily bribed, as Midora was  able to trade thirteen apples for a second Death Note.
[33]
Obata said that he felt too afraid to design the King of Death; he  said that he considered placing the King of Death on a book spine but  felt that the spine would not have enough space to depict the King of  Death.
[1]  The King of Death is included as a figure with the Japanese release of  the final volume of the DVD series, and appears in the one-shot set  three years after the manga's finale.