Rrrumba: Difference between revisions

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|Jap=ゴロボー
|Jap=ゴロボー
|JapR=Gorobō
|JapR=Gorobō
|JapM=Portmanteau of「ごろごろ」(''gorogoro'', onomatopoeia for rolling) and「坊」(''bō'', "guy" in an affectionate way), and/or possibly「ボルダー」(''borudā'', "boulder"); shared with [[Mrs. Thwomp]]
|JapM=Portmanteau of「ごろごろ」(''gorogoro'', onomatopoeia for rolling) and「坊」(''bō'', "guy" in an affectionate way), and/or possibly「ボルダー」(''borudā'', "boulder"); shared with [[Mrs. Thwomp]] and similar to [[Gromba]]
|ChiS=滚宝宝
|ChiS=滚宝宝
|ChiSR=Gǔn Bǎobǎo
|ChiSR=Gǔn Bǎobǎo

Revision as of 16:20, April 26, 2024

Rrrumba
Rrrumba
First appearance Super Mario Bros. Wonder (2023)
Comparable

Rrrumbas are pillbug-like enemies with giant breakable rock shells that appear in Super Mario Bros. Wonder. Their name is derived from "rumble" (a reference to the sound a rolling boulder makes) and "Goomba". They walk around until they notice the player, walk down a slope, or fall down a ledge; at which point they start rolling, gaining speed if they are on sloped surfaces. A simple stomp on this enemy will make them roll once again, so the player is reserved to ground pound or jump at them from below in Drill form in order to defeat them, breaking its shell. Sparkling Rrrumbas have coins or power-ups inside that can only be obtained once defeated. Rrrumbas only appear in a level using their own name, Where the Rrrumbas Rule, where the Wonder Flower is stored inside one of the sparkling Rrrumbas.

Gallery

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese ゴロボー[?]
Gorobō
Portmanteau of「ごろごろ」(gorogoro, onomatopoeia for rolling) and「坊」(, "guy" in an affectionate way), and/or possibly「ボルダー」(borudā, "boulder"); shared with Mrs. Thwomp and similar to Gromba
Chinese (simplified) 滚宝宝[?]
Gǔn Bǎobǎo
Rolling Goomba
Chinese (traditional) 滾寶寶[?]
Gǔn Bǎobǎo
Rolling Goomba
Dutch Rrrumba[?] -
French Roulard[?] From rouler ("to roll") and the pejorative suffix -ard
German Rotumba[?] Portmanteau of rotieren ("rotate") and Gumba ("Goomba")
Italian Rotoloomba[?] Portmanteau of rotolare ("roll") and "Goomba"
Korean 굴러바[?]
Gulleoba
Portmanteau of "굴러가다" (gulleogada, "to roll") and "Goomba"
Portuguese Roquenroda[?] A homophonic pun between "rock 'n' roll" (in a Portuguese reading) and roda ("wheel")
Russian Катых[?]
Katykh
From катить (katit, "to roll") or катышек (katyshek, "lint")
Spanish Rocanrodo[?] From roca ("rock") and rodar ("to roll"); it's also a pun on "rock 'n' roll"