Draglet

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Draglet
Artwork of a Draglet from Super Mario 3D Land
Artwork of a Draglet from Super Mario 3D Land
First appearance Super Mario 3D Land (2011)

Draglets[1] are enemies in Super Mario 3D Land. They are small blue dragons with small purple bat-like wings and pink spikes attached to their backs. Draglets have two fangs, and their eyes have dash-like pupils instead of circular ones. They bear a slight resemblance to Eeries, Rexes, and Dino-Torches. Draglets are found in the castle stages. They stay in one spot, but when a Draglet spots Mario or Luigi, they will attack by shooting a single fireball at him. Draglets make a distinct sneezing sound before shooting a fireball, indicating that their attack is coming. Draglets can easily be defeated by jumping on them or swinging Tanooki Mario's tail at them, or with a projectile such as a fireball or boomerang. Draglets also appear briefly during the cutscene that plays when Mario is entering World 8 for the first time.

Profiles[edit]

Super Mario 3D Land[edit]

  • European website bio: "Draglets use their tiny wings to hover just above the ground. They also use their fiery breath to shoot fireballs at Mario!"

Gallery[edit]

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese メラゴン[2]
Meragon
Pun on「めらめら」(meramera, onomatopoeia for something flaring up) and「ドラゴン」(doragon, "dragon")
Chinese (simplified) 吐焰龙[3]
Tǔ Yàn Lóng
Spitting Flame Dragon
Chinese (traditional) 吐焰龍[4]
Tǔ Yàn Lóng
Spitting Flame Dragon
Dutch Draglet[?] -
French Pyrodragon[?] From pyro (Greek word for "fire") + "dragon"
German Loderdrache[?] Blaze Dragon
Italian Dragardo[?] Possibly a portmanteau of drago ("dragon") and testardo ("stubborn")
Korean 이글래곤[?]
Igeullaegon
Possibly from "이글이글" (igeul-igeul, onomatopoeia for burning) + "드래곤" (deuraegon, "dragon")
Portuguese Dragão chama[?] Flame dragon
Russian Дракон-огнеплюй[?]
Drakon-ogneplyuy
From дракон (drakon, "dragon") + огненный (ognennyy, "fiery") and плевать (plebat, "to spit")
Spanish (NOE) Draguígneo[?] Pun on dragón ("dragon") and ígneo ("igneous")

References[edit]

  1. ^ von Esmarch, Nick (November 13, 2011). Super Mario 3D Land PRIMA Official Game Guide. Prima Games (American English). ISBN 978-0-307-89386-4. Page 14.
  2. ^ October 19, 2015. Super Mario Bros. Hyakka: Nintendo Kōshiki Guidebook, Super Mario 3D Land section. Shogakukan (Japanese). ISBN 978-4-09-106569-8. Page 181.
  3. ^ Super Mario 3D Land website. iQue (Simplified Chinese). Retrieved December 20, 2019.
  4. ^ Super Mario 3D Land website. Nintendo.com.hk (Traditional Chinese). Retrieved December 20, 2019.