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Character page for the Something About web shorts.


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Heroes

  • Adaptational Dumbass: Even the most intelligent hero can become a shrieking, deranged, moron who runs into danger without a plan in this series.
  • Adaptational Jerkass: Some of what were in canon your typical paragons and all-loving virtuous heroes are mostly now violent and unstable blood knights who more often than not terrify their foes into submission.
  • Adaptational Ugliness: Thanks to the simplistic, lumpy art-style, a lot of them tend to look a lot less cute, dignified, or pretty, with Kirbo standing out in particular, due to being drawn as nowhere near as adorable as he is and having the greatest tendency for making bizarre and unusual facial expressions out of all the protagonists.
  • Anti-Hero: They don't stray away from doing something somewhat unscrupulous in order to achieve their goals.
  • Badass Preacher: A fair few of them are this, and it’s no wonder given some of the bosses they fight.
  • Flanderization: Rather common, as some characters' special traits from their game (Mario having innate speedrunner traits and Fox having his top tier abilities from Melee) are exaggerated quite a bit for their central character.
  • Screaming Warrior: As a general rule, most of them scream either as they charge into battle, or simply at the drop of a hat.

From The Bible

    God 
The Creator of All, He's The Father in The Holy Trinity.

     Jesus Christ 
Kirbo's greatest ally, He's the Son in The Holy Trinity.
  • Badass Boast:
    • "I am The Way, The Truth, and The Life. No one comes to The Father except through Me." Said just before He burns Nightmare to death.
    • "With man, this is impossible, but with God, all things are possible." note  Said when the Kir Bros revealed to Him (by reciting Psalm 59, KJV) Dark Mind's blasphemy (Dark Mind said that Christianity is unfunny).
  • Bash Brothers: With Kirbo whenever he summons Him.
  • Big Damn Heroes: Right as 02 was about to kill Kirbo, Jesus appears to restore 02's (or, as Jesus calls him, Saul's) faith in His Father, allowing Kirbo to baptize 02.
  • Curb-Stomp Battle: On the giving end of this against any demonic entity he's summoned to combat (Marx, Nightmare, Dark Mind). This is par of the course with The Bible, where Jesus managed to purge demons from multiple people (including an entire legion of them possessing one man!) with zero effort.
  • Shown Their Work: When the Kirbros summon Him to defeat Dark Mind in Something About Kirby and the Amazing Mirror, He appears almost exactly as He's described in Revelation 1:13-16, right down to the golden sash across His chest. (There's no double-edged sword protruding from His mouth, but the point likely got across anyway.)

From Super Mario Bros.

    Mario 
  • Always Someone Better:
    • Is this to Fox, coming out victorious in their duel.
    • Is technically on the receiving end of this to Sonic, considering he was only able to keep up with him due to being possessed by the Speed Demon although Sonic himself was also powered up in his Super Chili Dogs form and Mario still managed to defeat him rather easily during the second half of their fight.
  • Demonic Possession: His speedrunning obsession and reality-breaking powers are the result of a literal Speed Demon possessing him.
  • Dungeon Bypass: His go-to tactic for speedrunning.
    • Skips all of the stars in "Something About Super Mario 64".
    • Skips to Bowser's Castle through the Donut Plains Ghost House in "Something About Super Mario World". Even when Bowser convinces him to go back and save the Yoshi Eggs, Mario still skips most of the levels and three castles!
    • In "Something About Super Mario All-Stars", he skips most of it; SMB1 and 2 with his BLJ, and SMB3 by first warping to World 7 with a Warp Whistle, then using the 7-1 Wrong Warp to go straight to the credits screen.
  • The Dreaded: To Bowser in both the Super Mario 64 and Super Mario World episodes. In fact, when Mario's about to go through the final showdown, Bowser's desperately trying to leave. After some more lore is established with him, even Luigi and Kirby are frightened by him, yet are still determined to hunt him down. Telling is that not even Kirby's ace in the hole of the cross and power of god can do more than exorcise the speed demon in him and not destroy it outright like it does with literally everything else he uses it on. And that's only with Luigi's help.
  • Flat Character: Turns out to be this without the Speed Demon possessing him, even bordering on stoic levels at times.
  • Gratuitous Japanese: With Fox and later Sonic in their battles.
  • Heroic Sacrifice: Turns into a Master Hand and destroys Dharkon in "Something About... World of Light". He got better by "Super Mario World".
  • The Heavy: The villain with the most influence of the plot, appearing in every season with a major role (even being the main antagonist of Season 2).
  • Speed Demon: Mario is incapable of going through a level or world without wanting to Speedrun it, often using Dungeon Bypass as a favoured tactic. His speed-running obsession and reality-breaking powers are the result of him getting possessed by a literal Speed Demon.
  • There Was a Door: He's VERY fond of bursting through walls, even in the presence of a door. He'll even burst through the door rather than open it normally. He also pulls a few Bait-and-Switch moments where he properly uses a door only to burst through it shortly after.
  • Unexplained Recovery: Not that he didn't try to explain how he survived sacrificing himself to stop Dharkon, but all we get is that it had to do with parallel universes before Yoshi interrupts him at the beginning of Something About Super Mario World.

    Yoshi 
  • A Day in the Limelight: The "Yoshi's Island" and "Yoshi's Story" episodes are this.
  • Idiot Hero: He can't read. Doesn't stop him from kicking ass, however.
  • Synthetic Voice Actor: Speaks using a computer voicenote . This applies to almost all other Yoshis.
  • Would Hurt a Child: In Something about Yoshi's Island, he slaps Baby Bowser, gives him a spanking, and then throw him out the window. Then in Something about Yoshi's Story, he and the entire Yoshi clan smacks Baby Bowser until his head is reduced to pulp.
  • You Don't Look Like You: The animation style has most of the characters given simpler looks, but Yoshi's appearance is changed DRASTICALLY as a result. He's very skinny, his head is a different shape, and he has an elongated snout that servers as his upper jaw as opposed to his canon counterpart's Gag Nose. This also applies to all other Yoshis in the series, including Boshi.

    Boshi 
  • The Ace: All of the Yoshis are at least somewhat competent, but Boshi is easily the strongest of them.
  • Ascended Extra: Appears in the "Yoshi's Island", "Yoshi's Story" and "World of Light" episodes despite not appearing in the games themselves.
  • Adaptational Heroism: Displays none of the more villainous traits he had in Super Mario RPG in the Yoshi's Island and Yoshi's Story adaptations. He's actually doing his part to help in carrying Baby Mario and searching for the Super Happy Tree.
  • Chekhov's Gun: His constellation that appears in the "Yoshi's Island" and "Super Mario World" episodes serves as his Ultima attack against Cloudjin in "Yoshi's Story".
  • Composite Character: In the "Yoshi's Island" episode, Boshi takes the Blue Yoshi's role of storming Raphael the Raven's castle.
  • Cool Shades: Wears sunglasses at all times.
  • You Don't Look Like You: Aside from the physical changes noted in Yoshi's folder, whereas his counterpart had a spiked collar as well as his clawed toes ripping through his shoes, in this series, Boshi is simply a blue Yoshi with his shades being the sole thing that makes him stand out from the other Yoshis.

    Luigi 

From Kirby

    Kirbo 

Kirbo

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/screenshot_242.png

  • Achilles' Heel:
    • If he lacks his cross and Bible, he has no way of dealing with demonic forces. It's zig-zagged in that it doesn't stop him from being able to just kill them instead.
    • Similarly, his cross and Bible have no physical effect on sufficiently powerful forces that aren't themselves demonic.
  • Adaptational Backstory Change: In the original Kirby and the Amazing Mirror, the four Kirbys are the original Kirby split into four by Dark Meta Knight, and by the end of the game fuse back into the one, pink Kirby. In Something About's version, the red, yellow, and green Kirbys are apparently brothers.
  • Adaptational Expansion: Kirby in the games never has a backstory, he just lives on Popstar and gets into adventures. Kirbo is shown to have been created by God to spread his word, and is his most beloved child. note 
  • Badass Preacher: One cross and Bible is enough for him to vanquish Marx and exorcise Nightmare from the Fountain of Dreams. Upon being told by Dark Mind that the joke was unfunny, Kirbo simply recites Psalm 59, KJV, before uniting his cross with the other Kirbies, vanquishing Dark Mind completely and utterly with the power of God.
  • Berserk Button:
    • Do NOT tell Kirbo (or his brothers) that his Christianity is unfunny, or needs to be dialed back. Dark Mind found this out the hard way.
    • Pyramids. He was really traumatized by The Prince of Egypt.
  • Character Catchphrase: Poyo!
  • The Dreaded: To the point where the Sailor Waddle Dee manages to grow a mouth the moment Kirby breaks through the deck thanks to its own screams of utter fear.
  • Friendly Enemy: Toward Marx. Even though the latter tricked him and tried to take over Popstar, there are no hard feelings on Kirbo's part. Or at least, not enough to stop him from sending Marx a Christmas letter.
  • Good Is Not Soft: He exists to do God's work. God's noble, loving, and violent work.
  • Idiot Hero: He doesn’t seem to understand that Marx is Obviously Evil. Of course, that doesn’t make him any less deadly.
  • In-Series Nickname: Kirbo. Adding to this in "Kirby and The Amazing Mirror", the red, orange and green Kirbys are named Korbo, Kiibo and Kirb respectively.
  • Irony: He doesn't take too well to the idea of being eaten himself.
  • Intelligible Unintelligible: Luigi seems to understand him fine, according to the stinger of "Something About Sonic the Hedgehog".
  • Macross Missile Massacre: Usually his strategy when he's not preaching the Word of God to people, specifically shooting them with a revolver, followed by a bazooka, then dropping a nuclear warhead on them.
  • Nice Guy: While somewhat more aggressive than in the source material, Kirbo is still a good natured lad.
  • Toilet Humor: A belching, farting, drooling adventurer. The second one is also how he summons his Warp Star.

    Waddle Dee/Bandana Waddle Dee 
  • Butt-Monkey: Tends to suffer a lot of abuse whenever he appears.
  • Canon Character All Along: Something About Kirby 64 alludes to the common fan theory that the original Waddle Dee from that game would later become Bandana Dee with a scene where he receives his iconic bandana to cover a head injury.

    Adeleine 
  • Brainwashed and Crazy: Averted, unlike her canon appearance. Dark Matter wisely decides to run away when it sees Kirbo slap Adeleine's painting into oblivion.
  • Break the Cutie: Her time on Shiver Star ends up traumatizing her, as she's the only one who really sees how horrifying the area is.
  • Nervous Wreck: She seems to be the only being on Pop Star that recognizes how horrifying some of the things they see are. Especially on Shiver Star.

    Ribbon 
  • Made of Iron: Despite burning up on her descent into Pop Star and being momentarily reduced to a charred corpse, Ribbon literally shakes it off and gets up no worse for wear. She also survives getting launched into the sun via a high-five with Kirbo, only covered in ashes for the next scene.
  • Vocal Dissonance: Her first line – aside from screaming in pain while burning up in atmospheric re-entry – has her speaking in a comically deep voice.
    Ribbon: Hello. I need those crystals. Will you help me?
  • Why Don't You Just Shoot Him?: She casually offers Kirbo the restored Crystal – actually a gun with two crystal shards attached – for his fight with 02. But Kirbo rejects the weapon, saying he has "the power of God and Poyo" on his side.

From Donkey Kong

    Donkey Kong 

    Diddy Kong 
  • Badass Adorable: Arguably even more so than Donkey Kong himself.
  • Gangsta Style: When he goes to finish off K. Rool in Donkey Kong Country 2, he shoots his Peanut Popgun like this.
  • Vocal Dissonance: When Donkey Kong asks if the Kremlins are digging holes in his mountain, Diddy response with an absurdly deep yes.

From Star Fox

    Fox McCloud 

From Metroid

    Samus Aran 
  • Badass Boast: "I know this labyrinth like the back of my hand, Ridley. And I'm getting that Baby Brain back." She looks directly into the camera and says this to the Space Pirates watching. They start reconsidering whether this was a good idea.
  • Character Catchphrase: The baby.
  • Drunk with Power: Gets this way when the Metroid Larva gives her the Hyper Beam power, declaring that she's immortal.
  • Lightning Bruiser: She more or less blitzes through everything Zebes can throw at her with speed and acrobatics, and that's before she obtains the speed booster.
  • Made of Iron: She easily takes some of the heaviest abuse of the heroes, and most of it is intentional as she wades through spike pits or impales herself just to use the damage recoil to extend the reach of her jump.
  • Mama Bear: Ridley appearing behind the baby causes Samus to roll up her gun to expose her extremely jacked arm with full intent to punish. Ridley nopes out. Her reaction to Mother Brain killing the Baby is to scream in what is subtitled "maternal rage" before one-shotting her.
  • Non Sequitur: Delivers one to Mother Brain before blowing the hell out of her jar.
    Samus: CHICKEN STRIIIIPS!
  • Roaring Rampage of Revenge: She goes on an absolute tear through Zebes when Ridley abducts the baby Metroid.
  • Super-Speed: Her speed booster powerup allows her to blow through anything and escape a lava trap. Even before this, she was moving so fast that the Space Pirates couldn't even find her.

From Castlevania

    Simon Belmont 

From Sonic the Hedgehog

    Sonic the Hedgehog 
  • Adaptational Badass: He was already fast in the game, but here he's depicted as being so fast that Robotnik is literally unable to do anything about him.
  • Big Damn Heroes: in Something About Smash Bros THE SUBSPACE EMISSARY, he manages to intercept the possessed Mario before he could suck out Tabuu's soul completely, and fight him long enough, to the point where Mario was completely focused on Sonic, allowing him to be blindsided by Luigi and Kirby, so they could exercise the Speed Demon possessing Mario.
  • Character Catchphrase: Chili Dogs!
  • Early Installment Character-Design Difference: His first transformation into Super Chili Dogs takes the form of Sanic and a Nightmare Face implying some sort of Demonic Possession, but all future appearances show him fully in control of himself without any trace of demonic influence.
  • Karmic Trickster: This Sonic effortlessly runs rings around Robotnik, beating him to every location to mess up his stuff and using his super speed to mock him. He's like Bugs Bunny crossed with the Roadrunner.
  • Painful Transformation: He screams in agony as he transforms into Super Sanic/Super Chili Dogs for the first time.
  • Super Mode: Has one in Super Chili Dogs, which is powerful enough to rival Mario at full power for a short period of time.
  • Super-Speed: Comes with the original, but he also stands out even in this series. He almost always appears as a blur trail while using his speed, and at his fastest point, he circles the entire planet in one second.
  • Time Travel: A new ability he acquires in his Super Chili Dogs form, as he attempts to time travel to the start of his fight with Mario in order to get the upper hand... Though as detailed below, it didn't work as well as he hoped.
  • The Worf Effect: His Super Chili Dogs form makes him one of THE most powerful foes in the Something About universe, arguably the most powerful under normal circumstances, enough to rival Mario when he's possessed by the Speed Demon...At least for a short time before possessed Mario manages to foresee his time travel tactic, due the Speed Demon's reality warping, and easily knock him out of the form.
  • Worthy Opponent: Is seen as such by Speedrunner Mario.

     Miles "Tails" Prowler 
  • Hostage For Macguffin: The hostage in this instance. Eggman captures Tails in the Casino Night Zone and attempts to haggle him for the Chaos Emeralds. Sonic easily pulls Tails out.
  • Kid Sidekick: As usual, following Sonic around in his search for the Chaos Emeralds in "Something about Sonic the Hedgehog 2".

From The Legend of Zelda

    Link 
  • Adaptational Wimp: Justified. "Something About Ocarina of Time PART 2" makes a point that Adult Link is still mentally a child due to the 7-year timeskip he underwent, thus most of the horrors of the Adult timeline tend to naturally terrify him (ironic considering his Triforce element). He also tends to get caught in most traps and bumble his way through obstacles.
  • Butt-Monkey: Unlike the other heroes on the list, Link is usually the victim of slapstick during his videos.
    • In "Something About Super Smash Bros", Fox runs circles around him in the Melee segment, and in Smash 4, he's quickly caught in the crossfire of an 8-Player Smash and ganged up on.
    • In "Something About Ocarina of Time PART 1", he gets beat up when Saria forces her ocarina onto him, then gets run over by the fleeing Impa and pursuing Ganondorf, who also zaps him for good measure.
    • In "Something About Smash Bros THE SUBSPACE EMISSARY", he's the first playable character to become a victim of SS-Tier Meta Knight.
    • In "Something About Ocarina of Time PART 2", he struggles with many of the Forest Temple enemies, especially the Stalfos, which he's unable to defeat, and Phantom Ganon nearly overwhelms him with his attacks.
    • "Something About Ocarina of Time PART 3" is easily the most unkind this series has been to him so far, as the Fire Temple seemingly always finds a new way to maul/burn him to a crisp every five seconds. He doesn't even get to beat Volvagia, needing to be saved by a cucco swarm of all things.
  • Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep": Evidently, as the Great Deku Tree and the Goron named after him both point to his name actually being Pepto Bismol.
  • Fish out of Temporal Water: Deconstructed - it's made abundantly clear that Link's mind is still that of a child's after awakening from his 7-year slumber, leaving him vastly out of his depth when dealing with the various problems plaguing future Hyrule.
  • Kill It with Fire: Link's main method of dealing with problems that his sword can't solve, such as the Deku Tree's pest problem, exorcising Dampé's ghost, and destroying Phantom Ganon's paintings.
  • Only Sane Man: VERY downplayed, but he usually reacts to the strange events around him with confusion and irritation.
  • Silent Protagonist: Bizzarely, only as an adult. His young self actually speaks a few times.

    Link (BOTW) 

    Zelda 
  • Ass Shove: It is heavily implied that this is where she kept her letter.
  • Butt-Monkey: Ends up as this while disguised as Sheik - every time she shows up to give advice to Link, he mistakes her for an enemy and attacks on instinct. Perhaps the worst of it comes in the Fire Temple, where she gets sliced up by Link and falls into the surrounding lava, all while she's still recovering from the wounds she got in her previous encounters with him.
  • The Scream: As a child, half of her "lines" are loud screams.
  • Speech Impediment: She really struggles to ask Link a question as a child. Link gets her meaning, though.
  • Squee: Lets out one when Link answers yes to her little question. The memory in which she leaves him advice is also the same squeal.

    Navi 
  • Blood Knight: As a subversion to how it usually goes in these videos, she is the one who ends up violently maiming anyone who gets in Link's way, instead of the Link himself.
  • Even the Subtitler Is Stumped: Whenever she speaks without an accompanying "in-game" text, her captions will come up all corrupted or with awkward formatting. You can make out a "HEY LISTEN!" behind all the junk, however.
  • Hypercompetent Sidekick: To the point she arguably contributes more to saving the world than Link himself.
  • No Indoor Voice: Always communicates loudly and hyperactively, sometimes by hogging most of the camera.
  • Voice Grunting: Only speaks through her famous "Hey" and "Listen" voice clips, but sped up and overlaid over themselves to such a degree that it almost sounds incomprehensible. This is notable because even usual Silent Protagonist Link has occasional dialogue.

From Mega Man X

    X 
  • Manchild: During most of the video, he acts like a kid who tries to prove he is a "big boy".
  • Nice Guy: He's easily one of the most straightforwardly heroic of the Something About protagonists. The worst he does is take Zero's arm upgrade before he can finish, and even then he was going to give it to him anyway.

    Zero 

From Monster Hunter

    The Hunters 

Bill and Bogues

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/07775aa5_cfdd_4a52_a9db_cbb8a3bccb87.jpeg
Bill on the left, Bogues on the right
Their starting attire
Their Master Rank attire

  • Amazing Technicolor Population: Their skintones are white and dark grey respectively in the first three shorts, but these were changed to much more natural skintones in the Iceborne short (most likely to stand out against the stark white winter uniforms they wear in the first half).
  • Bad Boss: Treat their Handler like shit, from screaming in her face to throwing her frozen corpse to monsters like bait. It’s all Played for Laughs, given the Handler's reputation.
  • BFG: Bill totes a heavy bowgun around for all his More Dakka purposes.
  • Blood Knight: Actively ignore their Handler’s advice to go hunt down monsters.
  • Bunny-Eared Lawyers: They may be absolutely crazy, but they’re still legitimately good Hunters.
  • The Chew Toy: Often literally this to some of the monsters they hunt.
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni: Bogues is the Blue Oni to Bill’s Red Oni, though they both tend to be equally chaotic.
  • The Voiceless: Downplayed. Bill only talks a couple of times (usually to punctuate a joke) and Bogues even less so.

From Undertale

    Frisk 
  • Of Corpse He's Alive: Spends the ENTIRETY of the Alternate Pacifist Route dead or crippled after a very bad fall to the Underground, only being launched around through sheer luck and circumstances.
  • Unusually Uninteresting Sight: No one ever considers the possibility that Frisk is dead except maybe Sans, who notes that they lack Determination. He shrugs it off in typical Sans fashion.
    Sans: Hmmmmmm... this is a weird timeline.
    • Toriel at least notices that they're badly hurt and tries to nurse them back to health, but doesn't realize in time that they rolled off the couch.
  • The Voiceless: One of the few main protagonists in Something About to not say a word, mostly due to being dead or crippled.
  • Wins by Doing Absolutely Nothing: Somehow, despite being dead or crippled, they manage to complete a full Pacifist run, albeit a rather unorthodox one.

From Pikmin

    Olimar 
  • Adaptational Jerkass: In the original game, Olimar always laments massive losses of Pikmin in his logs. Here, he's perfectly fine sacrificing them in droves for flimsy reasons. A Freeze-Frame Bonus implies that he is culling the Pikmin population because they have developed ritualistic behaviors after he saw them throw a yellow Pikmin in the S.S. Dolphin for being out of line.
  • Serious Business: He sacrifices an uncountable amount of Pikmin against the Emperor Bulblax, all for the sake of his VHS copy of Mac and Me.
  • We Have Reserves: His go to strategy is to throw as many pikmin at the problem as possible until the problem dies.
  • You Don't Look Like You: His head is far more triangular compared to game Olimar's circular head. Especially unusual since in earlier episodes, he's drawn more on model.

    The Pikmin 
  • Adaptational Jerkass: They're shown sacrificing a Yellow Pikmin simply for cheering out of line, a behavior they would never showcase in the main series.
  • Adaptation-Induced Plot Hole: When Olimar leaves the planet, the S.S. Dolphin's exhaust incinerates the Pikmin behind it, including the red Pikmin, which are immune to fire.
  • Butt-Monkey: Mass Pikmin death is common in their starring video.
  • Cargo Cult: Olimar believes that the Pikmin revered the S.S. Dolphin as a god, because they sacrificed a Yellow Pikmin for stepping out of line. He tries to kill as many Pikmin as possible, because of it.
  • Everyone Has Standards: Despite their casual disregard for each others lives, they consider the massacre that Olimar causes to take down the Emperor Bulblax to be too far, begging the captain to stop.
  • Improvised Cross: In Something About World of Light, a Red Pikmin is apparently close enough in shape to a cross that it can banish Marx the same way Kirby does with a real one.

From Street Fighter

    Ryu 
  • Career-Ending Injury: During the final battle with M. Bison, the dictator ends up using his Psycho Power to break Ryu's crouching kick leg, leaving him unable to fight... And leaving him wide open to the Bonus Game Car's attempt to finish him off.
  • Oh, Crap!: When Guile is the first opponent who actually blocks his crouching kicks Ryu's face is the very picture of immediate concern.
  • Spam Attack: REALLY loves to use his crouching kick to deal with various fighters, at least until Guile shows he's able to counter it, and M. Bison breaks his leg. And in the former case when his crouching kick doesn't work, he goes to spam his Hadoukens instead against Guile's Sonic Booms.
  • Uncertain Doom: "Something About Street Fighter II" ends with the Bonus Game Car slamming into Ryu after he seemingly escaped, blowing up the two in a kamikaze attack. Though there's nothing said about whether or not Ryu died, the same could be said about any hint to him surviving the incident.

From Pokémon

    Dawn 
  • Adaptational Name Change: While in the main game her default name is Akari, here, the credits refer to her as Dawn.
  • Adapted Out: Out of the Ride Pokemon in the game, she never recruits Ursaluna. As a result, she rides Wyrdeer in the Crimson Mirelands instead, with... less than favorable results for the Wyrdeer.
  • Death by Adaptation: Not Dawn herself, but rather her Ride Pokemon Wyrdeer who drowns in the Crimson Mirelands in a reference to Artax's death.
  • Heroic Comedic Sociopath: As Dawn's running through her We Have Reserves strategy against Giratina, her Vaporeon (Who just got clobbered by Giratina and revived twice) is left looking back at her in fear. Dawn's only response is to give them a cold stare, silently demanding they keep attacking Giratina.
  • Iron Butt Monkey: Goes through a lot of crap during Something About Pokemon Legends Arceus, including getting pelted by meteors strong enough to destroy the Temple of Sinnoh. Twice. But she always bounces back from these incidents and continues forward.
  • "Shaggy Dog" Story: After going through her entire journey and finding herself face to face with Arceus, Dawn asks if she can go home. Arceus' response is a booming Blunt "No", but offering to be her best friend in exchange.
  • Teleport Spam: Her Abra tends to do this, usually just dropping her opponent off from a high point to fall to their presumed death.
  • We Have Reserves: When it comes time for the battle with Giratina, after having most of her team worn down by Volo, her battle strategy defaults to the usual player tactic of "spam revives until battle won". Until she runs out of revives, in which case she simply sacrifices her Pokemon one by one until Giratina is beaten.
  • You Can't Go Home Again: Courtesy of Arceus who bluntly refuses to send her back to her time period in the end.

Original to Something About

    Carl and Perry 
  • The Artifact: Even after the threat of COPPA passed, there have been a few episodes surrounding these two characters in their "very adult" setting.
  • Ascended Extra: They originated in a short that simply made fun of COPPA and how it would affect Youtube. They later got a series devoted to their adult conversations.
  • Characterization Marches On: Somewhat. They trip up a bit in following COPPA's guidelines in Something About COPPA, but they don't do this in Adult Conversations With Carl and Perry. They've also picked up referring to certain subjects, such as Carl's condition, his prescription drugs and the names of anybody other than them as [INSERT X HERE]. They also do activities that are explicitly shown to be in violation of COPPA's rules, such as telling "stories."
  • Eldritch Location: The city around them is constantly flying about and glitching in "Stay In Your Lane/Work Performance." The stinger even shows a tower overlooking the road they're currently on unveiling a giant eye, looking at the traffic.
  • Heterosexual Life-Partners: They are good friends. Nothing more. That would be a bit too risque for COPPA's ideal version of Youtube.
  • Hypocrite: Carl talks about somebody who talked about something out of their profession, and says that they should have just stayed in their lane and kept it to themself. Perry chews him out on this, saying that, since they work in [INSERT PROFESSION HERE], by his logic they should only ever talk about [INSERT PROFESSION HERE], but they very often talk about other topics. Carl admits he has been inconsistent.
  • Mad Libs Catchphrase: [INSERT X HERE] becomes this in Adult Conversations With Carl and Perry.
  • Plot-Induced Illness: Carl occasionally talks about his [REDACTED]. Getting money for [INSERT PRESCRIPTION DRUG HERE] is why he needs his job.
  • Seinfeldian Conversation: As per COPPA's guidelines, this is effectively all they can do without being marked as being "for kids."
  • Space "X": They only talk about adult topics, in adult conversations, occasionally whilst consuming adult steaks.
  • Take That!: Their very existence is this, making fun of what COPPA deems as designated for kids. Even after the looming threat of COPPA was gone, they returned, retaining their satirical nature.
  • Those Two Guys: They are good friends.
  • Trademark Favorite Food: Adult steaks. Carl enjoys how bland they are.

Villains

  • Adaptational Wimp: See Curb-Stomp Battle below.
  • Butt-Monkey: Many of them get utterly curb-stomped by their irrationally powerful and neurotic nemeses, often screaming in pain and trying to escape. There are few that avert this, like Ganondorf.
  • Curb-Stomp Battle: Regardless of how much of a fight they put up in their source material, all of them tend to be taken out in just a few seconds by the protagonists. The only one to actually put up a threat and not get taken out in a few seconds is the Speed Demon, who is able to fight off Super Sonic with ease and is only taken out by Geno and Rosalina, the Bonus Game Car who seemingly manages to kill Ryu, and Zero-Two who would have killed Kirbo had Jesus Christ not convinced him to have a Heel–Faith Turn.
  • Unexplained Recovery: Tends to happen to recurring villains like Bowser and King Dedede. They will die painful deaths every episode (as examples, Bowser was dragged off to hell after being slapped into paste when he was a kid, and Dedede has had his inside sucked out by Kirby), but by the next installment they're featured in, they're good as new.

Original to Something About

    The Speed Demon (UNMARKED SPOILERS) 
  • Arch-Enemy: Becomes this to Kirby and Luigi.
  • Big Bad: While Mario possesses the most influence, the Speed Demon is the one with the most impact, as the one possessing Mario and thus causing a lot of the plot.
  • The Bus Came Back: After his arrest in Something About Smash Bros THE SUBSPACE EMISSARY, he (or at least another speed demon) appears in a Freeze-Frame Bonus possessing Guile. He doesn't get to have an impact in the story since the game is reset to break out of the softlock he caused.
  • Canon Character All Along: Sort of, since, while he's seemingly an Original Generation character made for the series, a blink and you'll miss it moment at the end of Something About Smash Bros THE SUBSPACE EMISSARY shows he's also named for an actual bit of third-party Nintendo hardware, the Game Genie.
  • Demonic Possession: His main host for most of the series has been Mario himself. He attempted to possess Sonic in THE SUBSPACE EMISSARY once he was exorcised from Mario, but Geno and Rosalina saw to it he was unable to do so.
    • During "Something About Street Fighter II", either them or a new one appears to possess Guile as he performs a Game-Breaking Bug against Ryu, softlocking the game. Though this situation is unresolved as the player is forced to reset the game to bypass the fight with Guile.
  • Greater-Scope Villain: Appears as this in Seasons 1 and 2, being the one possessing Mario.
  • Knight of Cerebus: Downplayed. He is treated dead serious on his own, but while possessing Mario, he is comedic frequently.
  • Non-Linear Character: While he's captured and imprisoned at the end of "Something About The Subspace Emissary", he implies that he was in other games/time periods before his capture. This is seemingly confirmed in "Something about Street Fighter II" when he could be seen possessing Guile to perform a Game-Breaking Bug.
    The Demon: This may be the end for me... But it is not my end for you.
  • Reality Warper: Some of his abilities includes building up speed for all eternity and even rewinding time itself altogether.
  • Red Is Violent: Besides of his host Mario being a red character, he himself is colored in red and is very hostile towards everyone.
  • Visual Pun: He's a demon whose whole thing is granting the people he possesses unnatural speed.
  • Your Soul Is Mine!: Seemed to try this on Tabuu, but Sonic intervened before he could do it.

From Super Mario Bros.

    Bowser 
  • Attack of the 50-Foot Whatever:
    • In "Yoshi's Island," Kamek grows Baby Bowser to a colossal size to deal with the Yoshis, however, Baby Bowser remains knocked out due to Yoshi's punishment.
    • Taken to absurdity in "World of Light," where Bowser grew to a size of the known universe. However, Samus destroys his Master Han, which returns him back to his normal size and falls into his castle from a galactic height.
  • Big Bad: The closest one to this in Season 1.
  • Butt-Monkey: While all of the villains are this, Bowser is especially prone to abuse.
    • For starters he is always slapped around by Mario and thrown vast distances after said slapping.
    • He was this as a baby too. In "Yoshi's Island" Yoshi spanked and threw him out of his castle. He remains unconscious (or dead) despite Kamek using his magic to enlarge him. In "Yoshi's Story" he is slapped by all of the Yoshis and reduced to a lump trying to crawl away, before being dragged into (presumably) Hell.
    • Mario and Yoshi take turns to slap him in "World of Light". The last slap removes Bowser's face (and reduces him to Dry Bowser).
  • Nice Job Fixing It, Villain: In the "World of Light" episode, Bowser grows to such a galactic size that he inadvertently destroys the Temple of Light, freeing Pit and Simon from Galeem's control without the heroes having to rescue them themselves.
  • You Don't Look Like You: Much like with Yoshi, the series' art style drastically alters Bowser's appearance. His head is a different shape, he lacks the bushy eyebrows, his hands have only three fingers instead of four, his feet aren't clawed, his neck collar and arm collars lack spikes, and he doesn't have a visible tail.

    King Boo 
  • Anachronism Stew: Appears in the "Super Mario World" episode, despite the game having come out a little over 10 years before he debuted in "Luigi's Mansion".
  • Foreshadowing: If you put subtitles on, King Boo says this.
    (while grinning) Looks like he's already possessed!.
  • Hollywood Satanism: In "Luigi's Mansion", he literally performs a Satanic ritual, with Mario trapped in a painting as a Human Sacrifice on the middle of the pentagram.
  • Weaksauce Weakness: The Mario Bros. defeat him pretty easily in both of his appearances.
    • Luigi defeats him by slicing him in half with Mario's painting in "Luigi's Mansion".
    • Mario defeats him in "Super Mario World" by tossing a FLOORBOARD at him!

From Kirby

    Marx 
  • A God Am I: "While you were busy sucking up everything like a fat boy in a Golden Corral, I gathered all the star power in the universe and became GOD!"
  • Hell Is That Noise: Much like when he's defeated in Kirby Super Star and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, he lets out an otherworldly shriek when defeated, but here it's taken to earrape levels.
  • Holy Burns Evil: One cross is all it takes.
  • Laughing Mad: Combined with Ax-Crazy when he takes on his One-Winged Angel form.
  • Obviously Evil: He screams in Kirby’s face during the intro, and yet Kirby still doesn’t connect the dots.
  • Satanic Archetype: An upside-down cross on his head coupled with a pentagram necklace.
  • Suddenly Shouting: Does so three times in the Kirby Super Star episode. Every time he does so, he shifts into a more freaky look.
    Kirby, you gotta do SOMETHING!
    Hahahahaha, FOOLS!
    While you were busy sucking up everything like a fat boy in a Golden Corral, I gathered all the star power in the universe and became GOD!
  • Voice of the Legion: Whenever Marx starts shouting.
  • Weaksauce Weakness: In "Something About World of Light", he's exorcised by a Red Pikmin of all things, which itself is a reference to a glitch on how overpowered Pikmin were prior to an update in Smash Ultimate.

    King Dedede 
  • Accent Adaptation: His voice in the Kirby Super Star and Kirby's Adventure episodes are reused clips from his anime adaptation.
  • Body Horror: He gets his insides swallowed by Kirby in the Kirby Super Star episode. And survives.
  • Heel–Face Turn: As in canon, he stops being a villain after a while, and allies with Kirby in Something About Kirby 64.
  • Irony: While riding in through the skies of Shiver Star, King Dedede – a penguin dressed in his thick kingly robe – is the most visibly affected by the cold.
  • Odd Friendship: He's friends with Meta Knight, and invites him to come chill with him in a hot tub at one point.

    Meta Knight 
  • Anti-Villain: He's probably the most accurate to canon character in the "Something About" series, as his motivations are largely unchanged from the games.
  • Blood Knight: As is accurate to canon. He's constantly trying to pick fights with Kirbo. When granted his SS Tier Brawl form by Masahiro Sakurai in Something About Subspace Emmissary, he takes a detour to annihalate a smash tournament just because.
  • Butt-Monkey: His fights against Kirbo never end well for him, usually dying before he can even get out an attack.
  • The Dog Bites Back: After getting crushed, throttled, and pushed around by the Kirbos in the opening of the Dream Buffet parody, he starts actively competing against and attacking them to great effect.
  • Not So Above It All: In Something About Kirby's Dream Buffet, he ends up getting really into the eating contest, to the point where he ends up winning it outright, and was screaming "chocolate" over and over again.
  • Sanity Slippage: Saying he goes crazy during Kirby's Dream Buffet would be an understatement.
  • Sweet Tooth: This is something that he has in canon, but its in Something About Kirby's Dream Buffet where this gets pushed past its limit. By the end of that video, he is several times larger than any of the other Kirbos and is screaming and laughing like a complete psychopath.

    Nightmare 

    Dark Mind 

    Saul/0
  • Adaptational Heroism: Is probably the only known incarnation of 0 to be redeemed, if one doesn't count Void.
  • Adaptation Name Change: He's 02 in Kirby 64 proper, but he's named Saul here, after Saint Paul.
  • Eye Colour Change: After being baptized by Kirbo, his bloody red eye becomes white.
  • Fallen Angel: His resemblance to one gives Kirbo noticeable pause. In the end, he's cleansed of his sins and made a proper messenger of God.
  • Heel–Faith Turn: Kirbo and Jesus Christ convince him to change his ways.
  • No-Nonsense Nemesis: He's completely unphased by Kirbo's cross, and as Kirbo is checking the Bible for guidance, Zero2 proceeds to vaporize it after finally opening his eye to look at Kirbo. It took an intervention from Jesus to give him pause long enough for Kirbo to get back up and baptize him, thus completing his Heel–Faith Turn.

From Donkey Kong

    King K. Rool 

  • Curb-Stomp Battle: Double Subverted, as was the case in Donkey Kong Country, where he attempts to strike at Donkey Kong after faking being defeats by a single weak punch, which gets his mouth forced way too open and then tossed into the ocean for his troubles.
  • Edible Ammunition: Parodied. After his airship crashed, he's left sopping wet and is then ambushed by Diddy and Dixie Kong and tried to shoot them, where upon his fires a few fish that just land harmlessly in front of the two.
  • Evil Is Petty: The only reason to eat a banana in front of a caged Donkey Kong in a taunting manner is this trope.
  • Imperial Stormtrooper Marksmanship Academy: His use of the blunderbuss just ends up punching enough holes in his airship to cause it to crash, with the second and third shot not even landing against Diddy and Dixie Kong, even though they weren't moving.
  • Oh, Crap!: When Donkey Kong is freed in Donkey Kong Country 2, all he could do is beg Donkey Kong to not hurt him, to no avail.

From Metroid

    Ridley 

    Mother Brain 

    Space Pirates 
  • Clean Cut: When Samus test fires her Wave Beam, the stray shot slices through a Space Pirate into pieces.
  • Psycho Knife Nut: When Samus arrives at Tourian, a Space Pirate tries to stab her from behind with a knife, despite the fact that he is both carrying a knife with his pincer hand and also should be using said pincer to attack Samus instead of the knife. Unfortunately for him, the baby Metroid sucks him dry.
  • Team Rocket Wins: In the "Took Too Long" ending, a Space Pirate hijacks Samus's ship and leaves her stranded in the self-destructing Zebes. A single Mook accomplishes in killing their organization's greatest nemesis when neither Ridley nor Mother Brain could defeat her. However, with a little help from parallel universes, Samus pulls off one last speed boost to ascend and escape Zebes' destruction at the last second.
  • Tempting Fate: A Space Pirate claims that both Phantoon and Kraid will make quick work of Samus, which is the exact opposite of what happens to Phantoon and Kraid.
  • Those Two Guys: A pair of Space Pirates who observe Samus's movement and are horrified by Samus slaughtering their generals and her effortlessly collecting items.

From Castlevania

    Dracula 

From Sonic the Hedgehog

    Doctor Robotnik 
  • Butt-Monkey: Everywhere he goes, Sonic is either already there or on his way to ruin everything. By contrast, Sonic dodges every weapon Robotnik uses on him, bar the spring trap and Totino's pizza rolls.
  • Composite Character: For both his classic iteration and his Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog iteration. Rather fitting, as the classic version was originally supposed to be more like his animated versions before he went on to become Eggman. In the sequel, he even shouts the classic "I hate that hedgehog!" line.
  • Hoist by His Own Petard: In the sequel, Eggman falls victim to this in Aquatic Ruin. He attempts to summon stone poles with his hammer attachment to hinder Sonic, only for the blue blur to bait one of them into propelling the doctor sky-high.
  • Hostage For Macguffin: Eggman attempts to pull this by holding Tails hostage and daring Sonic to play "Eggman's Pinball Madness Mania" or forfeit the Chaos Emeralds to buy the kid's freedom. This backfires quickly, as Sonic rescues Tails immediately and runs off.
  • Improbable Weapon User: Uses Totino's pizza rolls to try and drown Sonic at one point.
  • Neck Snap: Is a victim of this courtesy of Sonic. His ship fixes him on this point; however, he's screaming in pain all the way to the next level. When this happens in the sequel, though, he's sent flying out of his ship upon crashing into a wall as a result.
  • Trrrilling Rrrs: Engages in this.
  • Unexplained Recovery: No matter what misfortune Eggman summons, he's somehow back at full health by the next zone/game.
  • Villain Protagonist: The episode shares his point of view with Sonic's, with Robotnik getting the spotlight in Green Hill, Marble Zone and the first half of Scrap Brain Zone.

From Mega Man X

    Vile 

    Sigma 
  • Background Boss: His "final form".
    X: Oh no, you're a WALL NOW!!
    Sigma: That's right, X!
  • Laughing Mad: Casually breaks out into insane laughter after being decapitated the first time.
  • Losing Your Head: Sigma's able to survive with just his head. To defeat him, X teleports to the Moon after tearing his head off of his final form and sets him there.
  • Thinking Up Portals: Storm Eagle's Revenge reveals he's gotten ahold of a Chaos Emerald and is using it to create Genesis Portals.
  • Unexplained Recovery: As is tradition for Sigma. The post-credits scene in Storm Eagle's Revenge shows him back from the moon without an explanation, though the fact he shows off his Chaos Emerald's portal-creating abilities is a good hint.

    Serges 
  • The Dragon: To Sigma. Though considering the implication in the X series that Serges is a "reincarnation" of Dr. Wily, the creator of the Maverick Virus that Sigma would integrate himself with, this may be reversed.
  • Face Framed in Shadow: His whole body is shown in shadow when encountering the broken Storm Eagle and during The Stinger.
  • Mad Scientist: Like his canon counterpart, he's clever enough to rebuild robots and is an ally of Sigma, being a Maverick by choice.

    Storm Eagle 
  • Antagonist Title: He gets an entire episode where he's in the subtitle.
  • Cool Airship: He rides into the city containing the Maverick Hunters' headquarters on an upgraded Death Rogumer.
  • Musical Assassin: He controls his Death Rogumer using a keytar, and uses said keytar as a weapon against X when he confronts Eagle on his ship.
  • Mythology Gag: His Storm Eagle L form originally debuted in the Rockman X Mega Mission Cardass series. However, Dr. Doppler was the one to revive Storm Eagle in that series.
  • Razor Wind: One of his abilities in his upgraded form is a series of massive Storm Tornadoes that tears through half of X's Powered Armor.
  • Spirited Competitor: Storm Eagle L honestly seems more interested in conducting a Battle of the Bands with Megaman X than he is actually winning
    • When X succeeds in keeping up with him during their first bout to the cheers of the audience, daring L to Bring It, L responds with a smile.
    • L then decides to Bring It, launching innumerable drones that forces X to launch missiles against him. As his drone army explodes and missiles fly around him, he pays no heed to his losses or the danger he is in - he simply grins as he ups his music.
    • After the horde of drones overwhelms X, leaving a crater, L seems downright offended that X couldn't handle it. The reveal that X is fine is only momentarily met with shock, before he grins one more, spreads his mechanical wings majestically, and gets right back to it.
    • X's Powered Armor gets a momentary Oh, Crap! from him. When it falls apart under L's assault, he's right back to having the time of his life.
    • Several direct hits from X's Keyboard makes only succeeds in making L grimace while he's being impacted - he gets right back to grinning during his rebuttal, and keeps the grin right up until he believes X is down for good.
  • We Can Rebuild Him: Serges upgrades him after his defeat in Something About Mega Man X.

From Monster Hunter

    Bird Up 
The Kulu-Ya-Ku from the Monster Hunter: World and Final Fantasy XIV crossover event that steals an Aetheryte Crystal and obtains supernatural power from it.
  • Adaptational Badass: The in-game crystal thief Kulu-Ya-Ku is effectively a normal Kulu that just gets bigger and stronger over the course of the hunt and is immune to traps. The moment Bird Up touches the crystal, it starts breaking down reality around itself and traps Bill and Bogues in "the Bird Dimension". In later appearances, it no longer even needs the crystal to achieve similar feats.
  • The Dreaded: It is the only antagonistic force in the Something Series that has never been defeated, and whenever or wherever it shows up, those bloodthirsty and unstoppable heroes that make the parody series so unique? They run. Even Geno, whose Geno Blast easily took down the Speed Demon as soon as he had a clear shot, seems unnerved by footage of it.
  • Rage Against the Author: Bursts into the intro of the Season 4 compilation using a Scuttlebug and attacks Jeremy himself.

    Shara Ishvalda 
The Old Everwyrm, Earth Singing Dragon, and cause of the events of Iceborne.
  • Adaptational Badass: In canon, Ruiner Nergigante is a far stronger variant of Nergigante that must be defeated on Origin Isle before Shara Ishvalda will emerge, then gets back up to finish off Shara after the final battle. In Something About, Shara unceremoniously drags Ruiner Nergigante under the earth before it can even fight, and it is not seen again, implying its death.
  • Adaptational Wimp: At the same time, Shara required a massive beatdown in canon and still faked its death, getting back up to attempt a surprise attack, and could tank several falling boulders in succession. Here, a single broken rock pillar squashes it flat.
  • Death from Above: The hunters are unable to defeat it in direct combat, and it is crushed by a boulder.
  • Draconic Abomination: Even moreso than in canon. Its abnormal wings that vaguely resemble arms are instead actual gigantic human arms covered in tattoos and bling, with which it throws hand signs and sonic blasts all while rapping nonstop.
  • Dreadful Musician: In canon, its "singing" is actually it sending seismic waves through its vibration-producing wing-finger-tendril things that shake the ground and make sounds vaguely resembling a voice. In Something About, it is rapping "Ga$ Money", which is portrayed as so horrible it drives monsters insane and makes Bill and Bogues' ears bleed.

From Pac-Man

    The Ghosts 
  • Adaptational Badass: They went from looking like your typical Bedsheet Ghost to being full on Eldritch Abominations.
  • Adaptational Villainy: In their home series they're goofy-looking and, in games that better display their personalities, tend to act wacky. Not so much here, where they're essentially Hard Light necromorphs.
  • Fusion Dance: The effects of the Power Pellet seemingly cause the four of them to fuse into a singular ghost.
  • Knight of Cerebus: They're Survival Horror enemies and, unlike the rest of the series, lack comedic traits.
  • Light Is Not Good: All four of them are glowing monstrosities.
  • Nigh-Invulnerable: PAC-MAN's gun can't even scratch them unless they're under the effects of a Power Pellet, and even then that just brings them down from this trope to Made of Iron.
  • Shown Their Work: Each of them displays elements of their AI from the actual game in how they first appear:
    • Blinky's AI is set to simply chase down Pac-Man relentlessly, and he is always the first to leave the ghosts' spawn point. He is the first of the ghosts to show up, and when all of them chase the Engineer to the Power Pellet, Blinky, despite being the last to show up, pushes the other three aside to take the lead.
    • Clyde's AI is initially as simple as Blinky's, but he also has a tendency to just start wandering around and doing his own thing. The Engineer finds Clyde standing around and minding his own business before the chase begins.
    • Inky's AI is unique in that he uses the other ghosts to determine where he'll go, and he ambushes the Engineer in between Clyde and Pinky without giving him a break.
    • Pinky's AI has her try to ambush Pac-Man from the front, which is what she does to the Engineer after fleeing from Inky.

From The Legend of Zelda

    Ganondorf 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/maxresdefault_1_29.jpg
  • Adaptational Nationality: The Gerudo were originally a Middle-Eastern culture. This Ganondorf speaks in only Spanish, so maybe he's Hispanic or Latino (with big question marks). It's very unclear.
  • Berserk Button: As seen in the Tears of the Kingdom ANIMATED SPEEDRUN, do NOT turn off the radio playing Suavemente for him. The moment Link did this, Ganondorf immediately transformed into the Demon Dragon to wreak havoc.
  • Dance Battler: His phantom busts a move while also kicking Link's ass.
  • Expendable Clone: He sends a Spanish text-to-speaking Phantom Ganon to fight against Link in part 2 of "Something About The Legend Of Zelda, Ocarina Of Time". Ganondorf doesn't seem to mind when Link destroys Phantom Ganon.
  • Laughably Evil: Unlike his canon portrayal as a Knight of Cerebus, this Ganondorf feels even more like a shitpost than the rest of the characters.
  • Leitmotif: Elvis Crispo's cover of Suavemente. It's recently been a meme associated with all Ganon portrayals, especially in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate.
  • Ninja Prop: Upon transforming into Cucuí King Ganondorf, he grabs his own comically long health bar and wields it as a martial staff.
  • Sinister Schnoz: More exaggerated in it being his only feature to stick out... apart from his green skin.
  • Troll: If Phantom Ganon is anything to go by, he just wants to tick Link off and take cheap shots.

From Undertale

    Flowey 

From Street Fighter

    M. Bison 
    Bonus Stage Car 

From Pokémon

    Volo 
  • Ain't Too Proud to Beg: After losing to Dawn and also witnessing her defeat Giratina, he's quick to ask if there are no hard feelings. Dawn immediately has Abra warp him off to fall to his death.
  • Death by Adaptation: While originally he escapes after the final battle, here, Dawn has Abra teleport him off the Coronet Highlands to fall to a Disney Villain Death, with Cynthia's time paradox-induced vanishing in The Stinger heavily implying he didn't survive.
  • No-Nonsense Nemesis: Manages to give Dawn one of the roughest fights in the series, with their battle coming down to Rocket-Tag Gameplay with both trainer and wielder's Pokemon landing a One-Hit KO on the other as they come out. And even then, he has Giratina attack after losing when Dawn's left with her Abra, forcing her to spam all her healing items, and even then only her Cleffa and Abra survive the battle.

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