Sir Lance-A-Lot: Difference between revisions

From the Super Mario Wiki, the Mario encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
mNo edit summary
No edit summary
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{species infobox
{{species infobox
|image=[[File:Sir Lance-A-Lot.png]]
|image=[[File:Sir Lance-A-Lot.png]]<br>Sprite from ''Wario: Master of Disguise''
|first_appearance=''[[Wario: Master of Disguise]]'' ([[List of games by date#2007|2007]])
|first_appearance=''[[Wario: Master of Disguise]]'' ([[List of games by date#2007|2007]])
|variants=[[Sir Flap-A-Lot]]<br>[[Sir Hop-A-Lot]]<br>[[Sir Steal-A-Lot]]<br>[[Sir Worth-A-Lot]]
|variants=[[Sir Flap-A-Lot]]<br>[[Sir Hop-A-Lot]]<br>[[Sir Steal-A-Lot]]<br>[[Sir Worth-A-Lot]]

Latest revision as of 15:38, July 12, 2024

Sir Lance-A-Lot
Sprite of Sir Lance-A-Lot in Wario: Master of Disguise
Sprite from Wario: Master of Disguise
First appearance Wario: Master of Disguise (2007)
Variants
Comparable

Sir Lance-A-Lots are robot enemies found in Wario: Master of Disguise. They first appear in the Smithsnorian Museum and are also seen in Sneezemore Cave, Sweatmore Peak, and the area leading up to Carpaccio's Lab. If they see Wario, they will charge at him with their lances. Their name is derived from Sir Lancelot, a legendary knight. Upon defeat, they are revealed to actually be disguised armadillos, which then run away.

At the end of Episode 4, four Sir Lance-A-Lots merge with Carpaccio when he transforms into Head Honcho Carpaccio.

In-game description[edit]

This robot camouflages itself as a suit of armor and waits for unlucky passersby. Of course, the disguise only works if you usually keep armor around the house.

Appearances[edit]

Sir Lance-A-Lot appears in the following episodes:

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese シルバーナイト[?]
Shirubā Naito
Silver Knight
French Sire Lance-à-l'eau[?] A reference to the French name of Sir Lancelot, "Lancelot du Lac" (Lancelot of the Lake), while "eau" is the French word for "water".
German Sir Lanzeflott[?] Portmanteau of "lanze" (lance) and "flott" (fast) + a play on "Sir Lanzelot" (Sir Lancelot)
Italian Ser Lancellotto[?] Corrupted form of "Sir Lancillotto" (Sir Lancelot)
Spanish Caballero de acero[?] "Knight of Steel" or "Steel Knight"