| Description | Samurai | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| Two things that made him stand out were his crescent-shaped crest and his missing eye | Date Masamune | 82%
|
| Fought in sixty-one duels and founded a style of swordsmanship | Miyamoto Musashi | 71%
|
| Continued the unification of Japan after Oda Nobunaga's assassination | Toyotomi Hideyoshi | 66%
|
| A ninja as well as a samurai, he contributed greatly to Tokugawa Ieyasu rise to power | Hattori Hanzō | 63%
|
| Samurai of African origin who served under Oda Nobunaga | Yasuke | 53%
|
| Known as the "Tiger of Kai" | Takeda Shingen | 39%
|
| The leading general on the defending side of the Siege of Osaka, and considered the greatest warrior in Japan at the time | Sanada Yukimura | 37%
|
| Known as the "Dragon of Echigo" | Uesugi Kenshin | 37%
|
| Survivors of a Dutch fleet who arrived in Japan in 1600, who later became samurai (name either) | William Adams (Miura Anjin) | Jan Joosten van Lodensteijn (Yayōsu) | 32%
|
| One of the leaders of the Meiji Restoration, who later led the Satsuma Rebellion | Saigō Takamori | 29%
|
| Notable onna-musha who served Minamoto no Yoshinaka during the Genpei War | Tomoe Gozen | 29%
|
| Samurai who died at the Battle of Minatogawa after following an order from Emperor Go-Daigo | Kusunoki Masashige | 13%
|
| Christian samurai who is considered to have been the first Japanese ambassador in the Americas and in Spain | Hasekura Tsunenaga | 8%
|
| Onna-musha who helped defend Aizu during the Boshin War, and later served as a nurse during the Russo-Japanese War and the Sino-Japanese War | Niijima Yae | 5%
|
| He was the leader of the Forty-seven Rōnin | Ōishi Yoshio | 5%
|
| Onna-musha who led a corps of female combatants during the Battle of Aizu | Nakano Takeko | 3%
|