Jawbus | |||
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Sprite from Super Paper Mario | |||
First appearance | Super Paper Mario (2007) | ||
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A Jawbus is an enemy found in the game Super Paper Mario. Jawbuses first appear to be rolling, rhombus-shaped creatures with smiling face and a sphere for a tail. When the player gets closer, they reveal their dragon-like form and will try to bite them. In this form, a Jawbus has a long spiky neck and a spiky sphere-shaped body.
When attacking a Jawbus, their weak spot is their tail. In addition, their necks stretch out, so jumping over them would normally be very difficult. They also keep going in the same direction unless they hit a wall or are hit on their tail. There are several ways to beat them, most of which involve the use of Pixls for help, such as manually detonating Boomer to blow up the tail. Flipping to 3D and getting around them works too.
Profiles and statisticsEdit
Super Paper MarioEdit
Super Paper Mario enemy | |||||||||
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Jawbus | |||||||||
Max HP | 5 | Role | Common | Location(s) | Yold Desert (1-3), Gloam Valley (2-1), Flipside Pit of 100 Trials (Room 72) | ||||
Attack | 1 | Card type | Common | ||||||
Defense | 0 | Items | Card location(s) | Card Shop; Catch Card/SP | |||||
Score | 400 | ||||||||
Card description | Count on a Jawbus to stick its neck out for you. Or at you. | ||||||||
List of Catch Cards 71 72 73 |
Tattle | This dragonlike monster is a Jawbus. They tend to bite anything near them... Max HP is 5 and Attack is 1. Its only weakness is the glowing spot on its back... It won't look behind, so try flipping 3-D and sneaking behind it... |
GalleryEdit
A Jawbus in Gloam Valley
Names in other languagesEdit
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | ジャマドン[?] Jamadon |
From「邪魔」(jama, hindrance) and "-don" (a common suffix for dinosaur names) | |
French | Bleurex[?] | From "bleu" (blue) and "Tyrannosaurus Rex" | |
German | Purpudon[?] | From "purpur" (purple) and "-don" (a suffix for dinosaur names) | |
Italian | Mandibus[?] | From "mandibola" (jaw) with the suffix "-bus" | |
Korean | 목가용[?] Mokgayong |
From "목" (mok, neck), "못 가" (mot ga, cannot pass), and "용" (yong, dragon) | |
Spanish | Mandibús[?] | From "mandíbula" (jaw) with the suffix "-bus" |