Ol' Grandsappy: Difference between revisions
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|Jap=デクじい | |Jap=デクじい | ||
|JapR=Deku-jī | |JapR=Deku-jī | ||
|JapM= | |JapM=From「木偶」(''deku'', wooden puppet) and「おじいさん」(''ojī-san'', grandpa) | ||
|SpaA=Viejo Savino | |SpaA=Viejo Savino | ||
|SpaAM= Pun of viejo (old), savia (sap) sabino (sabine). | |SpaAM= Pun of viejo (old), savia (sap) sabino (sabine). | ||
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|Jap=デク兄 | |Jap=デク兄 | ||
|JapR=Deku-nī | |JapR=Deku-nī | ||
|JapM= | |JapM=From「木偶」(''deku'', wooden puppet) and「お兄さん」(''onī-san'', big brother) | ||
|SpaA=Savino | |SpaA=Savino | ||
|SpaAM= | |SpaAM= |
Revision as of 19:15, January 3, 2022
Template:Quote2 Template:Character-infobox Ol' Grandsappy is an old tree in Paper Mario: The Origami King. Mario and Olivia encounter him in Whispering Woods when they sit on a tree stump, which is actually Ol' Grandsappy. The Sap Sisters tell Mario that he is very sick because some Toads chopped him down. Mario then has to find a Soul Seed to help revive him. After Mario obtains the Soul Seed, he hears Ol' Grandsappy scream in pain. Mario returns to him and finds that Ol' Grandsappy has been ambushed and eaten up by some Paper Macho Goombas. Mario uses confetti on him to bring him back to life and gives him the Soul Seed, which makes him sing a song and grow into Sweet Sap Loggins, a large tree and a younger version of himself. In the credits, one of the photos shows some Toads decorating Sweet Sap Loggins with flower wreaths.
A Collectible Treasure of Ol' Grandsappy (No. 3) can be found in a chest inside a cabin in Toad's BBQ Foodeatery once the area's caretaker returns home. When collected, the caretaker mentions how Ol' Grandsappy was the biggest tree they logged.
Profiles
- Collectible Treasure No. 3: "The withered form of Ol' Grandsappy, reduced to a mere stump. This trunk contains zero funk."
- Sweet Sap Loggins
- Collectible Treasure No. 105: "The vibrant form of Sweet Sap Loggins, Ol' Grandsappy's stage name from the glory days."
Gallery
Names in other languages
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | デクじい[?] Deku-jī |
From「木偶」(deku, wooden puppet) and「おじいさん」(ojī-san, grandpa) | |
Dutch | Vadertje Stronk[?] | Father Stump From the diminutive form of vader (father) and stronk (stump) |
|
German | Gevatter Stumpfenstrunk[?] | Godfather Stumpfenstrunk (aprx. "Stumpenstump") From Stumpf and Strunk, both meaning tree stump |
|
Italian | Nonno Fusto[?] | Grandpa Trunk | |
Korean | 큰나무 할아버지[?] Keunnamu Harabeoji |
Grandpa Big Tree | |
Spanish (NOA) | Viejo Savino[?] | Pun of viejo (old), savia (sap) sabino (sabine). | |
Spanish (NOE) | Don Tronquelio[?] | From tronco (trunk) |
Sweet Sap Loggins
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | デク兄[?] Deku-nī |
From「木偶」(deku, wooden puppet) and「お兄さん」(onī-san, big brother) | |
Dutch | Wout Reus[?] | ? | |
German | Meister Edelwuchs[?] | Master "Noblegrowth" | |
Italian | Bellinfusto[?] | From bellimbusto (handsome) and fusto (trunk) | |
Korean | 큰나무 오빠[?] Keunnamu Oppa |
Big Brother Big Tree | |
Spanish (NOA) | Savino[?] | ? | |
Spanish (NOE) | Tronquilón[?] | Pun of tronco (trunk) and dormilón (sleepyhead). |