Sackit

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Sackit
Sackit's artwork for Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars
First appearance Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars (1996)
Latest appearance Super Mario RPG (Nintendo Switch) (2023)
Variant of Crook

Sackits are hooded enemies in Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars and its remake. They are a stronger variant of Crooks. They are found in Star Hill, where they fight alongside Throphers and Geckos.

Profiles and statistics[edit]

Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars[edit]

Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars enemy
Sackit
Battle idle animation of a Sackit from Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars HP 152 FP 100 Speed 26
Location(s) Star Hill, The Trial Course Attack 70 Magic attack 13
Role Common Defense 53 Magic defense 20
Bonus Flower Once Again! (30%) Yoshi Cookie Max Mushroom Morph rate 100%
Evade 20% Magic evade 0% Spells Escape
Weak None Strong None Sp. attacks Knife Toss
Coins 30 Exp. points 20 Items Max Mushroom (25%), Royal Syrup (5%)
Psychopath "This is just how I am."

Super Mario RPG (Nintendo Switch)[edit]

Super Mario RPG enemy
Sackit
Image of a Sackit from the Nintendo Switch version of Super Mario RPG HP 152 Weak Elements N/A Drops Max Mushroom
Exp. 20 Weak Statuses FearPoisonSleepMute Rare Drops Royal Syrup
Found in Star Hill
Monster List profile Like Crooks, Sackits run away on quick legs. If a Crook and a Sackit met, which do you think would flee first?
Thought Peek "I can't help being roguish. It's how I am."
Animations

Gallery[edit]

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese パクール[?]
Pakūru
Corruption of「パクる」(pakuru, Japanese slang meaning "to steal"), following the format of「パチール」(Pachīru, "Crook")
Chinese 偷小子[?]
Tōu Xiǎozi
Stealing Guy
Dutch Bandito[?] Italian for "bandit"
French Nescrok[?] From escroc ("scammer") and Narnak ("Crook")
German Ganovling[?] Diminutive form of Ganove ("hoodlum")
Italian Rapinio[?] From rapina ("robbery") and Italian adjective/noun-deriving suffix -io
Korean 훔치미[?]
Humchimi
From "훔침" (humchim, "stealing") and Korean noun-forming suffix "~이" (-i)
Spanish Salteador[?] Robber