Toadia

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Toadia
Sprite of a green Toad girl in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door.
Sprite from Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door
Species Toad
First appearance Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door (2004)
Latest appearance Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door (Nintendo Switch) (2024)
“People ask me if I get tired of walking the same route every day... And I say, "No way, Jose!" Because it's a bit different every day, you know? I'm not the same as I was yesterday... Neither are you... Even the town changes... And you'll never see another day just like today, so treat each day like it is: unique!”
Toadia, Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door

Toadia is a female Toad who lives in Poshley Heights during the events of Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door. She is a huge fan of Luigi, so much so that she is the secretary of the Luigi Fan Club.

She has a trouble where she says she wants to meet Luigi. Mario must get the L Emblem, wear it, and go to her to complete the trouble. Towards the end of the trouble, the real Luigi shows up on scene. Toadia, thinking that the real Luigi is an impostor, starts yelling at Luigi. Luigi thinks that it is "all a bad dream". In the end, Toadia rewards Mario by giving him a Choco Cake.

When Bowser and Kammy Koopa visit Poshley Heights during an intermission after Chapter 7, Bowser can optionally talk to Toadia, who will only scream and tremble in fear at the sight of him.

In the remake on the Nintendo Switch, Toadia is added to the group in Poshley Heights as they shout support into the Crystal Star to aid Mario and his partners during the final battle.

Tattle[edit]

  • "That's Toadia of Poshley Heights. She spends a lot of time thinking by this fountain. She's actually leading a double life as the secretary of the Luigi Fan Club."

Gallery[edit]

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning
Japanese キノビア
Kinobia
Portmanteau of「キノピオ」(Kinopio, "Toad") and possibly the feminine name suffix "-via"

Chinese (simplified) 奇诺皮亚
Qīnuòpíyà
Transliteration of the Japanese name

Chinese (traditional) 奇諾皮亞
Qīnuòpíyà
Transliteration of the Japanese name

French Epa T.
Pun on épater ("to be amazed")
German Fan T.
-
Italian Toadiva
Portmanteau of "Toad" and "Diva"
Korean 키노비아
Kinobia
From the Japanese name

Spanish T. Silvia
Sylvia T.