The saber-toothed cat genus Smilodon (erroneously known as the "saber-toothed tiger" in media, despite saber-toothed cats being from a different branch of the felid family tree than tigers) is second only to woolly mammoths as the most famous of the prehistoric ice age fauna. In fiction, it is usually portrayed inhabiting the same kind of snowy tundra climates mammoths were known for dwelling in, and often preying on mammoths itself. This trope is so deeply-ingrained in the public conscious that even in speculative sci-fi or fantasy Grim Up North settings, saber-toothed predators clearly inspired by Smilodon will be shown hunting mammoth-like prey.
In real life, despite living during the last glacial period of the Pleistocene, Smilodon actually wasn't super fond of cold regions. While the North American S. fatalis would've had to endure cold winters, it didn't live any further north than Alberta, and preferred warm woodlands. Meanwhile, the South American S. populator was found primarily in tropical grasslands, although fossils of it have been found as far south as the southern tip of Chile, where it can get rather chilly (even more so during the Pleistocene). Also, the genus didn't typically coexist with woolly mammoths (although S. fatalis was found alongside the less famous Columbian mammoth and American mastodon), and its preferred diet was medium-sized herbivores such as bison, horses, and camels.
Interestingly enough, the lesser-seen saber-toothed cat genus Homotherium actually fits this trope better than its more famous cousin, as it inhabited cold steppe throughout North America and Eurasia, and may have hunted mammoths, albeit younger ones instead of fully-grown ones. However, its proportions were very different from Smilodon; while Smilodon had a bulky bear-like body and massive canines that could grow nearly a foot in length, Homotherium had a gracile long-legged body like a hyena and shorter canines that probably weren't visible when the mouth was closed.
Subtrope of Artistic License – Paleontology and Misplaced Wildlife. See also Mammoths Mean Ice Age and Panthera Awesome, and compare Polar Penguins for other animals narrowly associated with cold climates.
Examples:
- Daikyouryu no Jidai: A saber-toothed cat is among the prehistoric animals witnessed by the cast in the Ice Age. It chases after an early human, only to be crushed by a woolly mammoth.
- Kimba the White Lion: In the 1966 sequel series Onward, Leo, a saber-toothed tiger appears as the villain for one episode. He’s shown living on the frigid slopes of Mt. Moon alongside the recurring woolly mammoth character Pachyderma (Ofukuro) and tries to dig up her frozen (and absurdly gigantic) grandfather in order to eat him. He also has a long tail and absurdly long sabers, akin to a walrus’s tusks.
- Ice Age: One of the main characters is a Smilodon named Diego. The first film features him as part of a pack of fellow sabers attempting to take down Manny, a mammoth, before Diego undergoes a Heel–Face Turn.
- Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger: The lost city of Hyperborea, far above the arctic circle, contains the body of a massive Smilodon the size of a Clydesdale frozen as a Monster in the Ice. Apparently, it was the Guardian of the Shrine of the Aramaspi. The film’s climax has the Wicked Witch Zenobia possessing the Smilodon to break out and attack the film’s heroes.
- After Man: A Zoology of the Future: The apex predator of the arctic is the sexually-dimorphic bardelot. While the male is polar bear-like in appearance and behavior, the female has saber teeth that she uses to hunt woolly gigantelopes.
- The Future is Wild: "Return of the Ice" is set in France during a glacial period, and features the snowstalker, a saber-toothed descendant of the wolverine, preying on shagrats, large herding rodents descended from lemmings.
- Dungeons & Dragons:
- Dungeons & Dragons 3rd Edition: In Revised 3rd Edition (or 3.5E), the Smilodon appears as a monster in the Frostburn sourcebook, which is all about playing in snowy regions. The art depicts it with a snow-white coat, striding through a blizzard.
- Dungeons & Dragons 5th Edition: In the adventure Icewind Dale Rime Of The Frostmaiden, saber-toothed tigers are part of the wildlife in the arctic expanses of the Frozenfar, where the adventure takes place. One of the animal-themed nomadic tribes who lives in the tundra, the Tribe of the Tiger, is even named after them, and their queen keeps one as a pet that she rides on into battle.
- Warhammer Fantasy: Sabretusks are huge cats native to the frigid Mountains of Mourn (the local equivalent of the Himalayas) and are used by ogres as mounts and hunting animals. Unlike most depictions of sabertooth cats, their tusks are on the lower jaw.
- Age of Wonders 4: Introduced in Primal Fury, muscular sabertooths (sporting an exaggerated "smile") are present as animals and mounts. However, sabertooths spawn mainly in temperate climates rather than snow, and the "Ash Sabertooth" that Primal cultures may worship outright inverts the trope by having an association with volcanic ashlands.
- Carnivores: The third game, Carnivores: Ice Age, is set in a snowy environment, and the huntable animals include Smilodon.
- The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim: The game takes place in the cold and snowy province of Skyrim, and one of the animals the player and come across is the saber cats, which are large feline predators with large fangs. There's also the snowy sabre cat, a stronger variant with a white coat found in the northernmost regions of the map.
- Far Cry Primal: Played With, as the game's sabertooth cats, modeled after Smilodon populator, can be found throughout the entire region of Oros, from the snowbound mountains in the North, to the much more temperate valleys and forests in the South, East and West. Averted with the Bloodfang Sabertooth, a Legendary Beast which took up residence in the same cave where it first attacked Takkar and Sayla in the Southern region of Oros.
- Let's Build a Zoo: Dinosaur Island: The sabertooth prefers Arctic enclosures. This is despite the fact that their fossils are dug up in South America, suggesting they're the tropical-dwelling Smilodon populator.
- Monster Hunter: The Barioth, a Pseudo Flying Wyvern first introduced in the third game, is a massive white creature that lives in the Tundra, which looks like a cross between a saber-toothed cat and a dragon. In addition to its chosen living habitat, the Barioth also has ice-based elemental attacks, such as blowing freezing blasts from its mouth or creating freezing twisters to throw itself at hunters. The Frostfang variation, introduced in Monster Hunter: World Iceborne, is even more rugged and actually has a thick sheeting of ice armoring its body. The Frostfang's breath attacks are more powerful than a normal Barioth's, and it can create icy patches to slow down hunters. Their subspecies Sand Barioth, which debuted in Monster Hunter Portable 3rd is a desert-dwelling variation instead of this trope.
- Both Pathfinder: Kingmaker and Pathfinder: Wrath of the Righteous have smilodons as enemies and animal companions. They can have up to five attacks per round, making them very nasty in combat.
- Pokémon Scarlet and Violet introduces the legendary Pokémon Chien-Pao, an Ice type who looks like a combination of a sabretooth tiger and a snow leopard. It's also literally made out of snow and ice (save for the cursed sword whose two halves form its fangs).
- Slime Rancher: The saber slimes are themed around sabre-toothed cats. While this trope is averted in the first game, where their hybrids are found in the tropical Wilds, in the sequel they're exclusive to the Slippy-Slidey Ice World.
- In Solasta: Crown of the Magister, saber-toothed cats are enemies found in the northern regions. Unlike you, they are never affected by the cold weather.
- In Titan Quest, those felines are known as Sabrelions and are fought in cold or semi-cold areas of China and the Himalayas.
- Zoo Tycoon: The first game portrays its saber-toothed cats as favoring tundra, whereas the second game portrays them as preferring boreal forests.
- Hamster's Paradise: The daggarats are predators that have an enlarged fang-like upper incisor that they use to pierce through the thick hide of their prey. The largest species, the slayber, inhabits tundras and taigas during the Glaciocene and prey on the mammoth-like hammoths.
- Pop Cross Studios:
- In "What if SPIDER-VERSE Characters were DINOSAURS?!", one of the characters in question, created by world-weary sarcastic dinosaur geneticist Dr. Champagne McGreggor, is the Prowler made into an incongruously purple sabretooth tiger (and yes, Dr. Champagne knows that creature is not a dinosaur, but his comically stupid superiors at DinoCross Park don't care), depicted living in a snowy forest habitat.
- In "MONSTER HUNTER Creatures As FOLKLORE BEASTS?!", the Barioth (covered in the Video-Games section) is depicted as a type of yeti that lives in the snowy Himalayas. It looks different from standard yetis due to having a saber-toothed cat's fangs, horns, scaly, spiky, armour-coated skin, and a draconic tail, and it can freeze humans solid with its breath to either eat them later, or just leave their bodies on display to ward off humans who step into its territory uninvited.
- Serina: The evolution of the mammoth trunkos during the mid-Ultimocene ice age gives rise to the saber-toothed circuagodog, which has an enlarged upper tooth that can be rotated up and down to provide vicious slashes to its prey.
- Futurama: In the episode "Fun on a Bun", Fry ends up in a frozen Lost World inhabited by Neanderthals and prehistoric mammals. Among said prehistoric mammals is the saber-toothed cat Machairodus, which the Neanderthals use for a Cat-apult in the battle against modern humans.
- Grizzly Tales for Gruesome Kids: In "The Weather Witch", a boy named Jack gets sent back in time to the Ice Age by the Weather Witch. During his time there, he gets chased by a sabertooth tiger and is able to outsmart it.
- Legends of Chima: Season 3 introduces the Ice Hunters, an Ancient Evil clan of conquerors long imprisoned in an icy cavern, who were recently released by Scorm the King of Scorpions throwing Chi into their prison and have now decided to start conquering again. The Ice Hunters consist of woolly mammoths, vultures, ice bears, and saber-toothed tigers. In addition to their habitat, a lot of the saber-toothed tigers have bones and body parts actually made of ice, including their leader Sir Fangar, who has an arm and a leg made of solid ice, in addition to wielding freezing powers.
- Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle: "Tarzan and the Conquistadors" features a saber-toothed cat named Tar-Sheeta (meaning "White Leopard") who lives high up in a snowy mountain range and sports pure white fur. He also has a long tail and is built like a modern big cat, mainly because most of his animation is retraced from the show’s usual lion and panther models (this is a Filmation cartoon, after all).