Lahla
Lahla | |
---|---|
Artwork from the Nintendo Switch version of Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door | |
Species | Boo |
First appearance | Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door (2004) |
Latest appearance | Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door (Nintendo Switch) (2024) |
- “I hope you're not spending all your time trying to talk to little old me, Mario.”
- —Lahla, Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door
Lahla is Peeka's sister who works at the Pianta Parlor, Don Pianta's casino, in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door. She runs the casino's various games and sells items which can be bought with pianta tokens. Lahla can be interacted with behind the counter, where she reveals some facts about herself. Her mission at the Trouble Center is available after clearing Chapter 2. She gives Mario ten pianta tokens for speaking to her. Her name is likely a pun on the phrase "ooh la la", as in "Boo" Lahla.
In the Japanese version of the original, Lahla and Peeka wear bunny ears which, coupled with their cuffs and bow-tie, resembles a bunny suit. In other versions of the original and all versions of the remake, they wear cat ears.
General Information
- She is eighteen years old.
- She and her sister used to be models.
- Her favorite food is Honey Mushrooms.
- She is secretly on a diet and does not want her sister to know about it.
- She was asked out on a dinner date by Arfur the Doogan.
- She wants to open her own shop.
Tattle information
- That's Lahla, a Boo cutie. She works the desk at the Pianta Parlor. Her sister's Peeka, the Boo who works in the shop. I hear they both used to be models.
Gallery
Lahla's sprite from the Japanese version of Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door
Names in other languages
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | テレナ[?] Terena |
Play on「テレサ」(Teresa, "Boo") and possibly the Japanese feminine name suffix「~な」(-na) | |
Chinese (simplified) | 幽灵娜[?] Yōulíngnà |
Derived from「害羞幽灵」(Hàixiū Yōulíng, "Boo") and the Japanese name | |
Chinese (traditional) | 幽靈娜[?] Yōulíngnà |
Derived from「害羞幽靈」(Hàixiū Yōulíng, "Boo") and the Japanese name | |
Dutch | Geesje[?] | A common Dutch name that sounds simlar to geest ("ghost") | |
French | Boonie[?] | Play on "Boo" and "bunnie" | |
German | Blinky[?] | Diminutive of English verb "blink" | |
Italian | MaryBoo[?] | From the female name "Marylou" and "Boo" | |
Korean | 부끄미[?] Bukkeumi |
Derived from "부끄부끄" (Bukkeu-bukkeu, "Boo") and "이" (-i, Korean diminutive name ending) | |
Spanish | Pili[?] | Diminutive of the Spanish name "Pilar"; with her sister's name they're a reference to Maria del Pilar |