Panser

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Panser
Panser
Artwork of a red Panser from Super Mario Advance.
First appearance Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic (1987, overall)
Super Mario Bros. 2 (1988, Super Mario franchise)
Latest appearance Mario Kart Tour (cameo) (2019)
Relatives
Comparable

Pansers are enemies commonly found in Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic and Super Mario Bros. 2. Along with Pokeys, they are the only known hostile plant species in Subcon, although Pansers were created by Wart.[1] There are three types of Pansers: red, pink, and either green or gray depending on location. The red version stays in one place and shoot two fireballs in the player's direction, the green/gray variant (both just green in the remakes) patrols an area and shoot fireballs straight up, and the most powerful, the pink (blue in the remakes), chases the player and shoots fireballs towards them. These enemies can only be defeated by throwing another enemy or an item, like a vegetable or Mushroom Block, at them. Pansers originally had black stems, but in the remakes included in Super Mario All-Stars and Super Mario Advance, they have beige stems. The red Pansers are always depicted as having green stems in artwork.

The Lava Lotus from Super Mario Bros. 3 resembles a large, transparent Panser. The similar Volcano Lotus introduced in Super Mario World additionally shares the same Japanese name as Panser, suggesting a connection. However, neither of these plants are ever shown to be able to move, and they release their projectiles in periodic sets rather than rapidly fire in an arc. The Fiery Walking Piranha from Super Mario Bros. 3, Pompon Flower from Super Mario Land, Furafurawā from the Game Boy version of Donkey Kong, Wild Ptooie Piranha from Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island, and Pollen Plant from Virtual Boy Wario Land are also similar.

In Shy Guy Bazaar in Mario Kart 7 and Mario Kart Tour, many stalls (and even part of the track itself) are decorated with red carpets, all of which feature Panser sprites as motifs, along with Phantos and Cobrats.

In Super Mario-kun, a singular Panser appears in volume 9. After the Mushroom Kingdom falls into chaos, many strange creatures start to appear out of nowhere, including the Panser. It attacks Mario, Luigi and Yoshi, but Mario ties its petals right when it is about to spit another fireball barrage, exploding in the process.

Profiles and statistics

Super Mario Bros. 2 / Super Mario Advance

  • Instruction Booklet bio: The only plant life Wart created for the world of dreams. It spouts fire.[1]
  • Instruction Booklet bio (Game Boy Advance version): These fiery flowers are real hotheads. You'll be safe if you can avoid their fireballs.[2]

Perfect Ban Mario Character Daijiten

Template:PEGMCE profile

Gallery

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese ポンキー[3][4]
Ponkī
From「ぽん」(pon, Japanese onomatopoeia for popping out something) and suffix "-ky"; shared with Volcano Lotus
ポンキー(レッド)[5]
Ponkī (Reddo)
Panser (Red) (Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic / Super Mario USA, red type)
ポンキー(グレー)[5]
Ponkī (Gurē)
Panser (Gray) (Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic / Super Mario USA, gray/green type)
ポンキー(ピンク)[5]
Ponkī (Pinku)
Panser (Pink) (Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic / Super Mario USA, pink/blue type)
パンサー[6]
Pansā
Transliteration of the Super Mario Bros. 2 name
Chinese (simplified) 喷射花[10]
Pēnshè Huā
Spurting Flower; shared with Volcano Lotus
French Panser[?] -
German Panser[?] -
Italian Panser[7] -
Violaccia[8][9] Portmanteau of viola and erbaccia ("weed")

Trivia

  • Excluding Wart, Pansers are the only enemy from Super Mario Bros. 2 to not appear in The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! However, their ability of shooting fire was passed to Piranha Plants.
  • The Pansers' name is a portmanteau of "pansy", a type of flower, and "Panzer", the German word for "tank", perhaps in reference to the plant's ability to throw fireballs.

References

  1. ^ a b "The only plant life Wart created for the world of dreams. It spouts fire." – Nintendo (1988). Super Mario Bros. 2 instruction booklet. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 26.
  2. ^ Nintendo (2001). Super Mario Advance European instruction booklet. Nintendo of Europe (British English). Page 12.
  3. ^ Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic instruction booklet. Page 34.
  4. ^ Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Daijiten
  5. ^ a b c October 19, 2015. Super Mario Bros. Hyakka: Nintendo Kōshiki Guidebook, Super Mario USA section. Shogakukan. ISBN 978-4-09-106569-8. Page 68.
  6. ^ Perfect Ban Mario Character Daijiten. Shogakukan (Japanese). Page 225.
  7. ^ Super Mario Bros. 2 Italian manual. Page 26.
  8. ^ Nintendo. Super Mario Advance instruction booklet. Nintendo of Europe (Italian). Page 112.
  9. ^ November 15, 2018. Super Mario Bros. Enciclopedia. Magazzini Salani (Italian). ISBN 889367436X. Page 68.
  10. ^ From the ending scenes of Super Mario Advance as localized by iQue. 无敌阿尔宙斯 (August 28, 2013). 神游 超级马力欧2敌人官译. Baidu Tieba (Simplified Chinese). Retrieved June 4, 2024.[dead link]