Nabbit

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Template:Character-infobox Nabbit is a recurring character that first appeared as an enemy in New Super Mario Bros. U and a playable character in New Super Luigi U. The name "Nabbit" is a play on the words "nab" and "rabbit". Nabbit is a thief who steals items from Toad Houses and runs away with them in his bag. He is a purple rabbit with round eyes, long ears, and black limbs. He also wears a white handkerchief with a drawing of a large mouth with sharpened teeth, similar to Bowser Jr.'s mask, as well as orange shoes and white gloves.

History

Super Mario series

New Super Mario Bros. U

Nabbit stealing an item in New Super Luigi U.
Nabbit stealing an item in an Enemy Course.

In New Super Mario Bros. U, Nabbit appears throughout several levels. When encountered by Mario and friends, they must chase him throughout the course within 100 seconds. The heroes can also toss Koopa Shells at Nabbit, slide into him, or throw iceballs or fireballs to stun him for a couple of seconds. When Nabbit is eventually caught, Toad will take the P-Acorn out of the bag and give it to the player as a reward. If players fail to catch him three times, Nabbit will flee and disappear until conditions are met.

Nabbit appears in every world, except Peach's Castle and Superstar Road, and catching him in each of these worlds will congratulate the person. Once he is caught in the necessary worlds, he will still appear in the same levels as before after playing three levels.

The player can first find Nabbit in seven levels:

He also appears if the player takes too long to open the chest after defeating the enemies in an enemy course, in which case he will steal the item from the chest. To do this, it takes 30 seconds to 45 seconds.

New Super Luigi U

File:WUPP NSLU scrn05 Ev05.png
Nabbit finishing a level with the heroes in New Super Luigi U.

Nabbit reappears in New Super Luigi U, this time as a new playable character (replacing Mario from the original game). Unlike other playable characters, Nabbit cannot use power-ups (except for Super Mushrooms) or ride Yoshis, but he is immune to all enemy attacks, though he can still get knocked back by tougher enemies, such as Grrrols. Also, despite his immunity to enemy attacks, Nabbit can still lose lives by falling into lava, poison water, an abyss, simply getting crushed by certain obstacles, getting eaten by a Cheep Chomp, or running out of time.

The power-ups he collects are released as 1-Up Mushrooms at the end of the level.[1] In single player mode, Luigi must chase him like in the original, in the same levels as in New Super Mario Bros. U. Nabbit can also be playable anytime in single player mode by holding Classic Controller ZL Button on the Gamepad or the Pro Controller or holding the B Button on the Wii Remote while entering any level, except the Flying Squirrel Ovation level in Superstar Road world where Mii can be played as instead of Nabbit.

Once again, Nabbit still comes and steals the item from a chest if the player waits too long to collect a chest despite being on Luigi's side. If the player is playing as Nabbit, the screen fades after taking too long.

Mario Golf: World Tour

Nabbit in Mario Golf: World Tour.
Nabbit playing golf in Layer-Cake Desert in Mario Golf: World Tour.

Nabbit appears for the first time in the Mario Golf series, as well as his first spin-off and handheld appearance, in Mario Golf: World Tour as a DLC-exclusive bonus character. He is obtained by purchasing the Flower Pack, either individually or via the Season Pass. His normal driving distance is 213 yards, while his star driving distance is 274 yards. His shot trajectory has a huge draw that travels at the lowest height out of all characters.

Super Smash Bros. for Wii U

Nabbit in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U.
Nabbit in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U.

Nabbit makes an appearance in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U in the Mushroom Kingdom U stage. After Kamek changes the stage's layout, he may appear and attempts to catch fighters in his bag. If he does so, he blasts off and takes the fighter with him, KO-ing them.[2] However, the players can also attack Nabbit, which can release fighters in his bag and KO him.

Mario Party 10

Nabbit made his Mario Party debut in Mario Party 10 as a non-playable character. He appears if Team Mario lands on a specific space to take a Dice Block away from Bowser.

Mario & Sonic at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games

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Nabbit is set to appear as a new playable character in Mario & Sonic at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games.[3] He appears to be a speed character, seen when he dwarfs Sonic's and Shadow's speed without any additional boost from a special move.

Gallery

Screenshots

Artwork

Super Smash Bros. for Wii U trophy

Name Image Appears in Description
Nabbit Nabbit trophy from Super Smash Bros. for Wii U Wii U New Super Mario Bros. U (11/2012)
Wii U New Super Luigi U (6/2013)
An underhanded little rascal who steals items from the Toad Houses and runs away with them. If you catch him, Toad might repay you with a nice present. In New Super Luigi U, he even manages to nab a position as a playable character! From burglar to hero in the blink of an eye... Not bad work, all things considered.

List of appearances by date

Title Description Release Date System/Format
New Super Mario Bros. U Rival/Enemy 2012 Wii U
New Super Luigi U Playable Character/Rival 2013 Wii U
Mario Golf: World Tour Playable Character (DLC) 2014 Nintendo 3DS
Super Smash Bros. for Wii U Non-Playable Character, Trophy 2014 Wii U
Mario Party 10 Non-Playable Character 2015 Wii U

Names in other languages

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Trivia

  • The character Ravio from The Legend of Zelda: A Link Between Worlds has a similar appearance to Nabbit, as pointed out by several fans in the comments of a Miiverse post with an in-development screenshot showing the character. However, Satoru Iwata, during the October 1, 2013 Nintendo Direct, officially dismissed the similarities as an unintentional coincidence. Although, Iwata added that because the developers work so closely together it is not surprising that similar designs could manifest in different, unrelated games.[4]

References

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