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A list of characters featured in Tiny Toons Looniversity.

Note: Because of how different this series is from the original Tiny Toon Adventures series from 1990, see this page for tropes that best apply to the characters from that series. For tropes that apply to the faculty and staff of ACME Looniversity, see here.

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Main Characters

    Buster Bunny 
Voiced by: Eric Bauza

  • Adaptational Personality Change: Buster is notably wilder and goofier than his original series counterpart, and also much more prone to getting carried away with things, probably to compensate for Babs' less goofy personality.
  • Attractive Bent-Gender: In "Save the Loo Brew", his "Ruth Less" disguise leaves Montana Max smitten at first sight. Hamton considers it "gorgeous", while Plucky admits to finding the guise "shockingly attractive".
  • Costume Evolution: In the original series, Buster's basic attire consisted of a red sweater and a pair of White Gloves. In this series, he wears a red hoodie and he has lost his gloves.
  • Hates Being Alone: Buster does not do well on his own. In the first episode, while both he and Babs are distraught at not living in the same dorm, Buster takes it the worst... only to regain his spark when he gets Hamton and Plucky to interact with. Later, when going out on stage to show off his act, he's unable to do anything other than stand there and stutter... until Babs shows up and turns it into a double act, upon which Buster delivers a great performance. This neatly sets up one of his major traits in this series: he needs someone to interact with and bounce off of in order to function, whether it's a sister and partner-in-crime like Babs, a frenemy like Plucky, a confidant like Hamton, a mentor like Merlin, a team like the Tooneyball squad, or a nemesis like Montana Max. If he's forced to go solo for any length of time, he gets distraught and both his work and his comedy suffers for it... but when he does have that interaction he's on the top of his game.
  • Poor Communication Kills: In "The Show Must Hop On", he's absolutely sure he’ll get the role of Bugs because the director is his sister. When he’s cast as Elmer, he becomes a passive-aggressive prima donna, refusing to speak to Babs or turn up to rehearsals. Despite this, he shows up on the night of the performance, using a harness despite not knowing how the stunt works. As a result, he’s just as much at fault as Babs for the botched first act. After he was told why he was given the role, he gets his act together.
  • Related in the Adaptation: One of the most memorable running gags of the original 1990 series was he and Babs saying "No relation!" whenever they introduced each other, and the two were often depicted as a couple. In this series, they're fraternal twins.
  • Sibling Seniority Squabble: It is revealed in "Freshman Orien-toon-tion" that Buster is the older twin by one second.
  • Vitriolic Best Buds: With Plucky. They describe their relationship as being frenemies.

    Babs Bunny 
Voiced by: Ashleigh Crystal Hairston

  • Adaptational Dye-Job: In the original series, Babs' eyes were blue. In this series, they're pink.
  • Adaptational Personality Change: While still a confident smart-mouth, she has gone from a wacky anything-goes Class Clown who does imitations to a neat and organized straight-A student.
  • Adaptation Relationship Overhaul: In the original series, she and Sweetie didn't really interact that much. Here, the two are both roommates and best friends.
  • Costume Evolution: In the original series, Babs wore a pair of pink ribbons in her ears, a yellow blouse, and a purple skirt. She still wears all of these in this series, but she now wears a purple jacket over them.
  • Innocently Insensitive: In "Give Pizza a Chance", she organizes Sweetie's clothes, unaware that, due to being colorblind, Sweetie arranges them by smell and touch.
  • Obsessively Organized: She prefers everything to be neat and tidy. "Give Pizza a Chance" shows that she has multiple labelled boxes, each filled with individually labelled label-makers.
  • Prima Donna Director: It’s her dream to become one. She gradually becomes one in "The Show Must Hop On" when she's assigned to direct the Acme Looniversity production of Rabbit Season. Much of the cast is unhappy with the roles they've been assigned, but she doesn't want to hear their complaints, and keeps insisting Plucky say nothing and do nothing in his role as a cactus. It even gets to the point where Babs starts feuding with her own brother Buster for not letting him play Bugs, all the while claiming the cast's complaints are interfering with "her vision". It isn't until the first act of the performance goes horribly wrong that Babs realizes what she's done and refused to listen to the cast members. Once she directly talks to them about why she made those casting choices, the rest of the play goes smoothly.
  • Related in the Adaptation: One of the most memorable running gags of the original series was she and Buster saying "No relation!" whenever they introduced each other and they were often depicted as a couple. In this series, they're fraternal twins.

    Plucky Duck 
Voiced by: David Errigo Jr.

  • Adaptational Backstory Change: In this series, Plucky seems to have come from a wealthy background.
  • Adaptational Badass: In the original series, Plucky was a Ridiculous Procrastinator who had a different scheme for completing his homework and frequently lost against Babs and Buster. In this series he plays fair and square. While he's still lazy at times in this series, choosing an elective that appeared “easy” at first, Buster openly considers him a rival and frenemy, with Plucky managing to earn the same number of trophies as he does, even managing to receive a C- grade with Babs during the elective, something Daffy mentioned as being the highest grade anyone had received in his class.
  • Adaptational Nice Guy: He is still the show's Butt-Monkey and just as egotistical as he was in the original show, if not moreso... but he's also markedly more amicable towards Buster and Babs than he was in the original show, outright admitting Buster is more or less his best friend and breaking down when it seemed like he would lose him.
  • Adaptational Personality Change: Plucky is more sophisticated and suave than his original series counterpart, with a passion for fine arts that he didn't have in the original show. He also doesn't have his original counterpart's Hero Worship of Daffy Duck.
  • Adaptational Wealth: While it's not directly spelled out, it's implied that this incarnation of Plucky comes from a wealthy or at least privileged background. He's a bit of a snob and used to luxury, he's well-educated and only ever attended "the best" schools (in one episode he fears his parents will refuse to let him to continue attending Acme Loo if it loses its "Number 1" rating), and he lives by the "Duck family code" which among other things states "Only filtered pool water." As a result, he spends far less time on moneygrubbing schemes than the original Plucky — in one episode he does rent out Hamton's bed in order to pay for some really expensive shoes, so he's clearly on some kind of budget at least while studying, but overall he doesn't seem to have any money troubles.
  • Calling Parents by Their Name: "Spring Break" reveals that he refers to his parents by their names, because as he puts it, everyone in his family are equals.
  • Cannot Spit It Out: In "Tooney Ball Lights", Plucky can’t bring himself to tell Babs that they should help each other, so he has to write it as he gags on his own words.
  • Competition Freak: Plucky turns everything into a competition for the purpose of winning it, best exemplified in the first scene of "Give Pizza a Chance", when he and Buster compete to see how many trophies each other has.
  • Costume Evolution: In the original series, Plucky wore a white tank top. In this series, he wears a black t-shirt.
  • Cultured Badass: An odd Butt-Monkey version of the trope. Plucky loves the fine arts, ballet, opera, theatre and high culture; he's got a lot of knowledge about art and highbrow culture and is a genuinely good ballet dancer and theatrical actor. His egoism and pretentiousness is played for laughs, but it's equally clear that his talent is genuine.
  • Everyone Has Standards: While he had no problem taking advantage of Hamton spilling everyone's secrets in his sleep during "Extra, So Extra", he is horrified when he is led to believe it will get Hamton expelled.
  • Honor Before Reason: In "Skulls & Sillybones," his final task to get himself inducted into the secret society is to humiliate his best friend. Plucky openly admits that he sees himself as his best friend, and goes on to make an absolute fool of himself in front of everybody.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: He may be a competitive egomaniac, but he still cares for his friends and admits he doesn't want to transfer universities because that will mean leaving his friends behind.
  • Lazy Bum: In "Tooney Ball Lights", he enrolls in Daffy Duck's anvil class, thinking it will be an easy experience. Unfortunately for him, the class turns out to be the most difficult there is.
  • Only Known by Their Nickname: In "Freshman Orien-toon-tion", his full name is Pluciferous Von Mallard Duck.
  • Poke the Poodle: Most of the pranks he comes up with in "Prank You Very Much" are extremely tame, such as switching the Aqua Loo students' glass cleaner with all-purpose cleaner, or giving them tickets to an amateur art show.
  • Too Spicy for Yog-Sothoth: In "Whatever Happened to Babsy Bunny?", Elmyra enjoys taking pictures of animals and refuses to let them leave. When Plucky comes into her photography studio to pose for pictures so Buster, Babs, Hamton, and Sweetie are free to explore the rest of ACME Acres, she is enthralled at first. Plucky's vision for just how he wants to be photographed eventually gets on her nerves and leads to her kicking him out.
  • Vitriolic Best Buds: With Buster. They describe their relationship as being frenemies.

    Hamton J. Pig 
Voiced by: David Errigo Jr.

  • Adaptational Nationality: In the Latin American Spanish dub, Hamton goes from an American from Detroit, Michigan to a Mexican from Tampico, Tamaulipas, being the only character who undergoes this. Oddly enough, they didn't gave him a Northener accent, though.
  • Adaptational Personality Change: While Hamton remains the mild-mannered, polite Endearingly Dorky Nice Guy who's more likely to stand up for his friends than he is to stand up for himself, he's gone through a lot of changes. In the original series he was a Neat Freak and a Big Eater who never quite managed to stay with the times, while in this series, he's more of a nervous and overemotional ditherer with a low-key problem with Performance Anxiety. He also has ambitions of becoming a doctor rather than a comedian, enrolling at Acme Looniversity mainly at the behest of his "comedy legend" mother.
  • Adaptation Relationship Overhaul: In the original series, Hamton and Fifi were friends with an on-again/off-again romantic relationship. Here, the two interact far less, with no suggestion of an attraction between them.
  • Animal Species Accent: Being a pig, Hamton has been given a subtle southern accent in this series.
  • Costume Evolution: In the original series, Hamton wore blue overalls. In this series, he wears a green sweater, a dark blue vest, and khakis.
  • The Ditherer: Hamton has problems making up his mind about things and sometimes freaks out over having to make small decisions. It makes choosing an elective rather tough on him.
  • Extreme Doormat: Curiously enough, averted. He has the personality of an Extreme Doormat, so anxious to please people that he's setting himself up to be taken advantage of... but instead he becomes somewhat of a Morality Pet to the general population; he's just such a Nice Guy that nobody can bring themself to take advantage of him.
  • Loved by All: He's highly well-liked by everyone on campus, from students to professors. So much that they can confide in him any secret they have, knowing he won’t tell anyone.
  • Nice Guy: A little timid and indecisive, sure, but friendly and helpful to a fault.
  • Ocular Gushers: Several characters do this when crying, but with Hamton it's become somewhat of a trademark. In the first episode, he breaks down over not knowing how to be funny, crying so much he floods the entire auditorium.
  • Odd Friendship: The meek, nervous Hamton gets along well with the bold and brash Sweetie.
  • Porky Pig Pronunciation: Hamton has picked up a small tendency for this, which he didn't have in the original show. It's more of a "nervous stutter" and nowhere near as pronounced as the Trope Namer's Verbal Tic, as he only stutters on the occasional word, and even then it's fairly rare for him to swap out the words. It still happens on occasion, though, like when he serves as Sweetie's therapist in "Give Pizza a Chance":
    "I noticed you jumped to an angry response instead of calmly dealing with the root of the pr-pr-pr-pr-pr-pr... issue."
  • Why Did It Have to Be Snakes?: He absolutely hates being the center of attention and would rather be behind stage. Because his mother is a famous comedian, everyone has high expectations for him. This reaches a nadir in "The Show Must Hop On" when Babs casts him as Bugs, the main star.

    Sweetie Bird 
Voiced by: Tessa Netting

  • Adaptation Name Change: Sweetie's surname is changed from "Pie" in the original to "Bird", to better match her Looney Tunes counterpart. (Although she was sometimes called Sweetie Bird in the original, and Tweety is often called Tweety Pie anyway.)
  • Adaptational Backstory Change: In the original series, Sweetie was an orphan. In the reboot, she's revealed to have two mothers and is an only child.
  • Adaptational Nice Guy: Fiery temper aside, she's much more of a Nice Girl than her original counterpart who was a sadistic aggressor.
  • Adaptational Personality Change: In the original series, Sweetie was a deceptively cute Jerkass. In this series, she's an anger-prone Bruiser with a Soft Center and a punk girl aesthetic.
  • Adaptation Relationship Overhaul: In the original series, she and Babs didn't really interact that much. Here, the two are both roommates and best friends.
  • Ascended Extra: In the original series, Sweetie was a supporting character with one A Day in the Limelight episode, "How Sweetie it is". In this series, she's Babs' roommate and part of the central cast alongside Buster, Babs, Plucky, and Hamton.
  • Blood Knight: She gets excited at the thought of giving bad guys a good beating.
  • Color Blind Confusion: It is revealed in "Give Pizza a Chance" that Sweetie is colorblind. When she gets covered in pizza sauce, she says that she's covered in green glop, only for Babs to remind her that it's red.
  • Costume Evolution: In the original series, Sweetie wore a blue ribbon in her hair. In this series, she's given a more punk-girl aesthetic with a purple jacket and a purple dye-tipped ponytail.
  • "Metaphor" Is My Middle Name: In her debut scene, she notes that she doesn't actually have a middle name — but if she did, it would be "Thunder".
  • Odd Friendship: The bold and brash Sweetie gets along well with the meek, nervous Hamton.
  • Pint-Sized Powerhouse: The intro shows Sweetie lifting a "patriarchy" statue several times her size and throwing it into a distance where it explodes. Furthermore, when giving the relatively bigger Buster a bro chest bump, she's the one who knocks him flat with an indented chest, blaming the accident resulting from her chest press routine (which she shows it made her very muscular).
  • Promotion to Opening Titles: In the original series, Sweetie's name was not mentioned in the opening credits. In this series, she's one of the few characters to be mentioned in the opening along with Babs, Buster, Hamton, and Plucky.
  • Purple Is Powerful: She has purple feathers and is a Pint-Sized Powerhouse.

Supporting Characters

    Granny 
Voiced by: Candi Milo

  • Adaptational Badass: Her muscles are extremely ripped and she's into extreme sports. No wonder she's the dean of the Looniversity in this series.
  • Ascended Extra: As the dean of Acme Looniversity, Granny is probably the most prominent of the old Looney Tunes in this show. She appears in most of the episodes and is directly involved in the most plots.
  • Cool Old Lady: As has become the staple of her character in later years, Granny is one tough old lady with various interests such as motorbiking and extreme sports. At one point she's actually disappointed that Buster and Plucky didn't throw an illegal wild party on their dorm room (they actually did do exactly that, but managed to hide it from her).
  • Reasonable Authority Figure: For the most part. She can occasionally be harsh and callous if that's funnier, but overall she's pretty understanding of the students and tolerant of their antics.

    Dizzy Devil 
Voiced by: Betsy Sodaro

  • Adaptational Gender Identity: While not directly confirmed at this point in time, Dizzy Devil (voiced by a woman) is heavily implied to be non-binary in the series. There are a few instances where they are referred to with they/them pronouns. In the original, Dizzy was a male.
  • Adaptational Intelligence: The original Dizzy Devil wasn't too much removed from the Tazmanian Devil himself — fairly easy to stupefy, never too quick on the uptake, and easy enough to exploit his character and unique abilities for the benefit of others. Despite their appearance and lack of complex grammar, this version is much more intelligent than they let on. Dizzy proves to be grand mastermind behind a fake prank war between two looniversities without anyone ever finding out, knowing how they can be a hinderance to others when they get kicked out of their house, and being quite efficient as a bouncer for the Loo Bru by not falling for tricks.
  • Cannot Keep a Secret: Downplayed, but still present. Apparently Dizzy was once a member of Acme Loo's secret society "Skulls & Sillybones," but was kicked out for telling too many of their secrets to non-members.
  • Costume Evolution: In the original series, Dizzy wore a propeller beanie. In this series, it is now a propeller cap.
  • Does Not Like Spam: Despite being an Extreme Omnivore otherwise, Dizzy dislikes the taste of cilantro.
  • Faux Horrific: In "Tears of a Clone", even Dizzy finds the muffin fight thrown by Buster's evil clone distasteful and is brought to tears by it.
    Dizzy: You make Dizzy NOT enjoy a food fight! Now me question everything!
  • Third-Person Person: As in the original series, Dizzy often, but not always, refers to themselves in third-person.
  • Trash of the Titans: Dizzy is so messy that Sweetie looks like Babs in comparison. In "Save the Loo Bru", when they're kicked out of their apartment and are taken in by Sweetie and Babs, Dizzy brings a bag of garbage with them — and when Sweetie and Babs tell them the dumpster is out back, Dizzy simply says this is their suitcase. Near the end of the episode, when Monty's plan is foiled, Dizzy returns to their apartment, which is a total mess. Babs believes that Monty trashed it, but Dizzy tells her that the apartment was like that before they left.
  • You No Take Candle: Dizzy speaks without complex grammar, but is quite intelligent otherwise.

    Fifi La Fume 

  • Adaptational Modesty: She wears a black sweater instead of just sporting a bow. She wore clothing in the original show, but it was only on special occasions.
  • Adaptational Nationality: She’s from Canada in this version. Judging by her tearful reaction to seeing a newspaper reveal this, she’s ashamed about it.
  • Adaptational Personality Change: She's more grounded and less boy crazed than she was in the original show. Not only that, but it’s implied that she comes from a wealthy background, as she has enough money to live on campus, as opposed to living in a Cadillac. She also wears highly expensive clothes. Despite all this, she averts the Rich Bitch stereotype.
  • Adaptation Relationship Overhaul: In the original series, Fifi and Hamton were friends with an on-again/off-again romantic relationship. Here, the two interact far less, with no suggestion of an attraction between them (though Fifi does become slightly enamored with Hamton after he achieves Internet fame in "Twin-Con").
  • Cloudcuckoolander: She once made a broissant: a blend between a beret and a croissant…because she wanted a buttery, crumbly hat.
  • Faux Horrific:
    • She’s disgusted at being cast as Granny in "The Show Must Hop On" because Granny wears “neutrals”.
    • She also acts like Buster's evil clone has committed a mortal sin when she’s tricked into putting hair dye on her tail.
  • The Knights Who Say "Squee!": Celebrities seem to have this effect on her. After she hands a fresh bubble tea to a temporarily famous Hamton, his fingers brush hers and she bursts into joyful tears over it.
  • Not So Above It All: Despite her luxurious lifestyle and feminine demeanour, she still cheers on Buster and Plucky when they race on a river of pizza sauce at a Wild Teen Party and is a member of the Tooneyball team. She also gets obsessed with internet fads, including Popcorn Accountant.
  • Really Gets Around: She declines to go to a Bunnies II Rabbits concert with Buster because she dated two of the band members.
  • Smelly Skunk: Subverted. She seems to lack the odor of her original counterpart so far (probably since nowadays skunks are known to spray rather than just stink). Granted, she was good at controlling her odor in the original series.
  • Unwitting Instigator of Doom: Her comments about how nobody will ever get an 80s-era shirt like hers, because they’re out of style, are the catalyst for Babs and Sweetie to use a newly acquired Time Machine to retrieve long outdated fashions from different time periods. She inadvertently makes the situation worse by asking if Babs and Sweetie are willing to sell the clothes.

    Shirley McLoon 
Voiced by: Natalie Palamide

A female avian toon of indeterminate species, though her surname suggests that she's a loon despite her duck-like appearance. She is the Resident Advisor of Merry Melodies dorm.


  • Adaptational Personality Change: She no longer has a Valley Girl accent.
  • Costume Evolution: In the original series, Shirley wore a pink sweater and a pink hairbow. In this series, she wears pink glasses and sports a green top with crystal earrings.
  • Granola Girl: She is into new-age practices.
  • New-Age Retro Hippie: Shirley has a number of beliefs associated with the New Age movement.
  • Psychic Powers: Has psychic/mystical powers which include astral projection.
  • Shout-Out: To actress Shirley MacLaine who become notorious for her professed beliefs in reincarnation at the time of the original series.

    Furrball 
Voiced by: Natalie Palamide

  • Cats Hate Water: In "Tears of a Clone", he reacts in fear when Buster's evil clone attempts to hose him.
  • Costume Evolution: In the original series, Furrball wore a bandage on his tail. In this series, he keeps the bandage on his tail, but also wears a torn yellow t-shirt.
  • Flat Character: So far, there is little to him other than being another student at Acme Looniversity. His main traits from the original show (being homeless, not talking, trying to catch Sweetie, and being a massive Butt-Monkey) are all absent here.
  • Suddenly Speaking: In the original series, Furrball spoke in full sentences in a few episodes before the writers decided that he worked better as a normal cat who just meows. In this series, he speaks in full sentences.
  • Visual Pun: He makes a surprisingly snarky comment about Fifi complaining that she looks like a “common cat” with hair dye covering the stripe on her tail. You could say he’s being catty.

    Montana Max 
Voiced by: Candi Milo

The primary male antagonist.


  • Adaptational Late Appearance: In the original series, Monty's first appearance was in "The Looney Beginning", the first episode. In this series, he doesn't appear until "Save the Loo Bru", the fifth episode.
  • Amazon Chaser: In "Save the Loo Bru", he falls in love with Buster's female persona Ruth Less, a very tall business woman who is just as cruel and greedy as he is
  • Ambiguously Bi: In "Save the Loo Bru" when he fell in love with a tough lady named Ruth Less, who is actually Buster in drag. Though Max finds out the truth later, he seems to have mixed feelings about Buster by the end of the episode as he bought a ticket to watch the drag show Buster is participating in.
    Montana Max: "My love! I mean- MY ENEMY!"
  • Alliterative Name: Both parts of his name begin with the letter M.
  • The Cameo: He makes a brief appearance in the Spring Break special.
  • Entitled Bastard: Believes that the amount of money he can throw around makes him better than anyone else and deserving of whatever he wants, and says as much whenever he faces the slightest resistance to his objectives.
  • Humans Are Bastards: He's one of the few human characters on the show and is a complete jerk.
  • Jerkass: Max picks on just about anyone, for no real reason other than to get a kick out of it.
  • Karmic Butt-Monkey: His mean-spiritedness comes back to bite him in very big ways, like in "Save the Loo Bru".
  • The Klutz: He claims to be a star athlete, which is quickly exposed as a lie, as he's shown to be clumsy and uncoordinated.
  • Spoiled Brat: He is whiny, entitled and does everything he can to get his way.
  • Token Rich Student: The only rich kid at Acme Loo.
  • Trumplica: Technically a Trumplica Jr. in terms of his color scheme, he is a wealthy spoiled brat who fabricated facts about himself to make himself look good and has a lawyer who is a Rudy Giuliani as an opossum.
  • Villain: Exit, Stage Left: When he’s exposed of enrolling at Acme Loo under fraudulent claims, he instantly bails. Considering the fact he doesn’t show up in the following episodes, he was likely expelled. That probably won’t stop him coming back, though.

    Elmyra Duff 
Voiced by: Cree Summer

  • Adaptation Personality Change: Elmyra's been rather toned down compared to her original counterpart. She still has her love for cute animals and penchant for Baby Talk, but where the original Elmyra was Lethally Stupid and never understood that she was hurting the animals with her exaggerated affections, this Elmyra is far smarter and more self-aware, and even has a fair bit of cunning. In a way she harkens back to the first produced Elmyra episode, "Hare Today, Gone Tomorrow" also had a notably less stupid Elmyra with a clear manipulative streak.
  • Adaptational Intelligence: On the original series, Elmyra's character was defined by 1) her overbearing love of cute animals, and 2) being dumber than a sack of hammers. While the former stays in place here, she's become much more cunning, easily exploiting Babs's sadness about not having any pictures of herself to get photos of both her and her friends.
  • Adaptational Late Appearance: In the original series, Elmyra's first appearance was in "The Looney Beginning", the first episode. In this episode, she doesn't appear until "Whatever Happened to Babsy Bunny?", the Season 2 premiere.
  • Adaptational Nice Guy: A downplayed example. Unlike the original series, Elmyra doesn't force herself upon the cast and hold them captive by locking them up in cages and the like. Here however, she's not above using emotional manipulation in order to get what she wants. (Namely; photographs of cute animals.) And she has her limits here in regards to the characters, as Plucky's egotism proves too much even for HER.
  • Adaptation Relationship Overhaul:
    • In the original series, Elmyra went to school with the other characters and was part of their extended social circle (albeit with some reluctance on their part). Here she's not attending the Looniversity at all; she's working as an animal photographer in Acme Acres and her first episode makes it clear it's the first time she meets any of the others.
    • Downplayed example: According to the original series bible, Elmyra thought Hamton was one of the few animals who wasn't cute and cuddly, and was a dirty pig in need of a bath (which was ironic since Hamton was obsessed with cleanliness) —- though in the actual show this Depended Heavily On The Writer and there were a number of episodes where she would be just as overly affectionate towards him as the other animals. In this series, she definitely views Hamton as just as cute as the other animals, even squeeing about his adorable curly tail.
  • Baby Talk: Just like in the original series, Elmyra talks almost "excwusivewy wike" this (complete with her original voice actress). It's commented on by some of the characters during the hunt for Babs:
    Carmela: Yeah, a little girl, real clingy, talks like a witch cursed her to sound like a baby.
    Construction pigeon: She was with this redhead who squawks like a haunted doll.
  • Costume Evolution: In the original series, Elmyra wore a blue hair bow with a gerbil skull in it, a blue blouse, a white skirt, white socks, and black Mary Jane shoes. While she still retains her hair bow, socks and shoes in Looniversity, she now wears a black long-sleeved shirt and purple jeans.
  • Everyone Has Standards: The end of her first appearance has her becoming so infuriated with Plucky's demands with how his photograph should turn out that she kicks him out.
  • Manipulative Bastard: In her first appearance, she manipulates Babs into modeling for her calendar pictures and when Babs has had enough, Elmyra decides to throw away the memory card and lie to Babs about losing it to emotionally coerce her into staying longer.

    B'Shara 
Voiced by: Kari Wahlgren
The mother of Buster and Babs
  • Canon Foreigner: As Babs and Buster are now Related in the Adaptation, B'Shara was created as an original character to be their mother. Additionally, most of the other rabbit siblings to Babs and Buster weren't in the source material either.

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