The Thousand-Year Door enemy
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Dark Lakitu
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Location(s)
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Pit of 100 Trials (Levels 61, 64-66, 69)
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Max HP
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13
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Attack
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5
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Defense
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0
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Moves
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Pipe Flip (5), Charge Up (ATK+5), Thunder Throw (10), Pipe Hatch (Summons Sky-Blue Spiny)
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Items
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Thunder Rage, Shooting Star, Super Shroom, Volt Shroom
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Coins
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1 - 3
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Log
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A Lakitu on a dark cloud. It throws pipes[sic] at you that sometimes hatch into Sky-Blue Spinies.
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More
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Level
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26
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Exp. points
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1
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Sleep?
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60%
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Dizzy?
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95%
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Confuse?
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60%
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Tiny?
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85%
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Burn?
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100%
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Freeze?
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80%
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Stop?
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70%
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Soft?
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90%
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Fright?
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70%
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Gale Force?
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80%
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KO?
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50%
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Tattle
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That's a Dark Lakitu. It rides a rain cloud. Max HP is 13, Attack is 5, and Defense is 0. It attacks by throwing pipes at you. If it's holding up a pipe[sic] when you jump on it, you'll get hurt. And sometimes the pipes[sic] it throws turn into Sky-Blue Spinies. Whoa! If you only attack the Spinies, you'll never win, so go after the Dark Lakitu!
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Tattle Log #: 28
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Dark Lakitus are stronger variants of normal Lakitus that appear in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door. They are not found in the main quest, but instead are found in the Pit of 100 Trials between floors 61-69. Unlike normal Lakitus, Dark Lakitus throw Sky-Blue Spinies instead of the normal Spinies. Compared to Lakitus, they are also darker in skin tone and have red shells. It is implied in one of Goombella's tattles that it rides a rain cloud, although the cloud itself never demonstrates the ability.
Names in other languages
Language
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Name
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Meaning
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Notes
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Japanese
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クモリジュゲム[?] Template:Nowrap
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Cloudy Lakitu
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German
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Hyper-Lakitu[?]
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Hyper Lakitu
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Italian
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Lakitu Nuvolo[?]
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Cloudy Lakitu
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Spanish
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Lakitu Oscuro[?]
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Dark Lakitu
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Trivia
- In the English localization, it is mistakenly stated that Dark Lakitu's Sky-Blue Spinies hatch from "pipes" in Goombella's Tattle for both enemies. However, the supposed "pipes" which spawn Sky-Blue Spinies bear no resemblance to the conventional pipes of the Mario franchise and instead appear as regular blue Spiny Eggs. Their name is the result of a mistranslation: Spiny Eggs are referred to as 「パイポ」 Paipo in Japanese, which comes from a well-known Japanese folktale[1] but can also be interpreted (incorrectly, in this case) as an approximation of the English "pipe" into Japanese katakana. While 「パイポ」 Paipo was correctly rendered as "Spiny Egg" elsewhere in the English script of Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door - namely, with regard to the standard species of Spiny fought in the game - the translation team seems to have overlooked the established convention with this variant, resulting in the "pipe" name.[2]
References