
This concept would be used again in Beyblade Burst with Maximum Garuda 8Flow Flugel owned by Ghasem Madal.

Dranzer got a Shout-Out in Metal Fight Beyblade Zero-G, in which Kai's expy Karura wields Guardian Garudas with the titular Garudas being a phoenix-like reimagining of Garuda.

Additionally, Kai's bit-beast Suzaku aka Dranzer from Bakuten Shoot Beyblade is modeled after the Suzaku of The Four Gods. Beyblade: The two true phoenixes are Burn Phoenix 135MS note Renamed Burn Fireblaze 135MS outside Japan, possibly for copyright reasons., which is wielded by the appropriately name Char Clone Phoenix in Metal Fight Beyblade, and Thief Phoenix E 230 GCF, which is wielded by Ren Kurenai in Metal Fight Beyblade Zero-G.Despite looking human Tsukihi is very much a supernatural creature and has all the powers one might expect including a massive Healing Factor. The Dying Bird is a spiritual phoenix when the host dies of age it reincarnates as another newborn and essentially lives again. Bakemonogatari has Tsukihi Araragi and more specifically the Dying Bird which she is possessed by (or simply is, it's hard to tell).In the Middle Ages, it also became a symbol of the soul rising from the demise of the physical body. As a result of this cycle of resurrection, the Phoenix is often used a symbol of rebirth and renewal, and especially of new growth returning after destruction. Alternatively, the new Phoenix may born directly from the ashes of its predecessor. Unlike most other mythical beings, it's not immortal, instead it lives, ages, lays one single egg and burns itself up, after which the heat of its self-cremation causes the egg to hatch. More modern depictions will take this and run with it, depicting the phoenix as an Endangered Species, with the single specimen often being the Last of Its Kind. Traditionally this is not a species there is usually only one Phoenix (video games and other modern fantasy works may beg to differ, but that's another story). Similar myths include the Egyptian Bennu, the Chinese Fenghuang (or Houou to the Japanese), the Vermilion Bird Suzaku, and the Firebird of Russian folklore. At a certain time, the Phoenix would make a nest of cinnamon sticks, and then self-immolate, burning to ashes, from which a new Phoenix was born. The Phoenix of the Phoenician myth was an immortal bird that could regenerate from any injury. It's portrayed as a magnificent bird with a plumage of fiery colors and also with fiery powers or in some stories, a bird actually made of living flames. The Phoenix is an ancient and well known symbol of death and rebirth and is an idea that is found all over Asia and Europe.
