Eeker

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Superstar Saga + Bowser's Minions enemy
Eeker
An Eeker from Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga + Bowser's Minions.
Location(s) Woohoo Hooniversity
Level 15
HP 60
POW 47
DEF 41
SPEED 45
Experience 25
Coins 10
Item drop Super Syrup (14%)
Smart Pants (12%)
Smart Pants (40%)
More
Fire Heal
Thunder Critical
Jump Normal
Hammer Normal
Stat down 60%
Dizzy 60%
Burn 0%
Speed down 30%
Superstar Saga enemy
Eeker
An Eeker from Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga.
Location(s) Woohoo Hooniversity
Level 15
Role Common
HP 20
POW 42-46
Defense 34
Speed 60
Experience 24 (25)
Coins 0 (5)
Item drop School Slacks (Syrup Jar) – 16.13%
Smart Pants – 25.81% (32.26%)
More
Fire Normal
Thunder Normal
Jump Normal
Hammer Normal
Hand Normal
Stun? 30%
Burn? 0%
Stat down? 100%
Notice
  • Stats in parentheses are from the Japanese version (if they differ from the original American and European stats).
  • Stats in gray are only found in the game's coding and are not available during "normal" gameplay.

Eekers are enemies found at Woohoo Hooniversity in Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga. They resemble beakers wearing grass skirts and holding two torches. Their name is a portmanteau of "eek" and "beaker". They do not show up on the field, but they fight alongside Viruses. The Eeker has two attacks, each with a different counter: its first attack involves crossing its arms and then tilting an equal number of times before charging at Mario or Luigi, which is countered by jumping on it, and its second attack has it charge up with fire and spew out fireballs, which must be countered with the hammer before it releases them. If an Eeker is attacked on offense, but not defeated by Mario or Luigi on his first attempt, the Eeker will immediately charge up with fire so that the next time it performs the latter attack, it cannot be countered before releasing fireballs at one of the brothers.

In the remake, their eyes are no longer red, their feet are no longer in the air, and their first attack has them dancing to music before attacking, making it easier to attack them.

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese フラ・ダンサー[?]
Fura Dansā
Pun on furasuku (flask) and Hula Dancer
German Urkolben[?] Primordial Flask
Italian Ekro[?] Possibly variation of the English name
Spanish Frailarín[?] Pun on "Frasco" (beaker) and "Bailarín" (dancer)

Trivia