Creeper: Difference between revisions

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Line 48: Line 48:
|ItaM=Crusher or Grinder
|ItaM=Crusher or Grinder
|SpaA=Viscosillo
|SpaA=Viscosillo
|SpaAM=
|SpaAM=From "viscoso" (gooey) with diminutive "-illo"
|SpaE=Visculio
|SpaE=Visculio
|SpaEM=From "viscoso" (viscous)
|SpaEM=From "viscoso" (gooey) and possibly the masculine form of "-uli" (infected form of Latin diminutive "-ulus")
|Dut=Slijmbal
|Dut=Slijmbal
|DutM=Slimeball; it is also a wordplay, as a "slijmbal" refers to a person who bribes people with compliments
|DutM=Slimeball; it is also a wordplay, as a "slijmbal" refers to a person who bribes people with compliments
Line 56: Line 56:
|GerM=Crawler or Creeper
|GerM=Crawler or Creeper
|Fra=Podekoll
|Fra=Podekoll
|FraM=Modified orthography of "pot de colle" (meaning "pot of glue")
|FraM=Modified orthography of "pot de colle" (an expression meaning "a clingy person")
|Por=Pegajoso
|Por=Pegajoso
|PorM=Sticky
|PorM=Sticky
|Kor=기이기
|Kor=기이기
|KorR=Giigi
|KorR=Giigi
|KorM
|KorM=From a partial repetition of "기다" (''gida'', to crawl) with Korean diminutive "이" (''-i'')
|Rus=Страшник
|Rus=Страшник
|RusR=Strashnik
|RusR=Strashnik
|RusM=Likely a diminutive of "страх" (''strakh'', fear)
|RusM=Diminutive of "страшный" (''strashnyj'', scary)
}}
}}



Revision as of 21:11, April 18, 2023

Creeper
A Creeper getting ahold of Luigi from Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon
First appearance Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon (2013)
Latest appearance Luigi's Mansion Arcade (2015)
Variant of Ghost
Variants
Comparable

Creepers are gooey, gelatinous ghosts that appear in Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon. They have infinite HP because their defense is their attachment to the floor; simply pulling in the opposite direction cannot defeat them, so the player must charge up the Power Gauge and press A Button to unleash a Power Surge and pull them off the ground.

Appearance

When Creepers are first encountered, they appear as large purple puddles. When fully revealed, they are purple beings with white eyes and always-smiling mouths with tiny upper and lower fangs, two arms, and a puddle underneath them.

Abilities

Luigi trapped inside a Creeper

Creepers can turn into puddles, making them invincible. Once the Dark-Light is shone on them or if the Poltergust 5000 vacuums them long enough, they reveal themselves. If Luigi walks over them when they are in puddle form, they rise up and imprison him in their bodies, causing damage. They can also split into smaller versions of themselves. Once smaller, they can be sucked up without a power surge. In the main story, Creepers can hang from ceilings and drop on Luigi if he walks underneath them.

In ScareScraper, if a normal Creeper is summoned by a boss Creeper attack, and Luigi frees himself from it, it will disappear instead of breaking into smaller ones. They additionally make different sound effects than Dark Moon Quest.

Ghost Container description

American English: These gooey ghosts just love to cuddle, and they'll never want to let you go. But after the Dark Moon broke apart, they forgot about the cuddling part. Watch out for them on floors and ceilings!
British English: These gooey ghosts love to cuddle and hold you tight. But when the Dark Moon broke apart, they forgot about the cuddling part. Watch out for them above and below!

Forms

Dark Moon Quest

  • Puddle Form
  • Mini Creeper
    • Mini Creeper (Puddle Form)

ScareScraper

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese ルクリパ[?]
Rukuripa
From「ルノーマ」(Runōma, Greenie) and "creeper"
Dutch Slijmbal[?] Slimeball; it is also a wordplay, as a "slijmbal" refers to a person who bribes people with compliments
German Kriecher[?] Crawler or Creeper
Italian Stritolatore[?] Crusher or Grinder
Korean 기이기[?]
Giigi
From a partial repetition of "기다" (gida, to crawl) with Korean diminutive "이" (-i)
Portuguese Pegajoso[?] Sticky
Russian Страшник[?]
Strashnik
Diminutive of "страшный" (strashnyj, scary)
Spanish (NOA) Viscosillo[?] From "viscoso" (gooey) with diminutive "-illo"
Spanish (NOE) Visculio[?] From "viscoso" (gooey) and possibly the masculine form of "-uli" (infected form of Latin diminutive "-ulus")