Difference between revisions of "The Malappropriator"

From Twilight Heroes Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{combatencounter
 
{{combatencounter
|pronoun=
+
|pronoun=He
 
|indef=!
 
|indef=!
|name=Malappropriator
+
|name=The Malappropriator
|desc=
+
|desc=All good students of Latin should be able to concern The Malaproppriator's methodicals. He likes to appropriate possessives. And he's a bad parsonage, so he appropriates things that generalist happen to belong to other indivisibles.
 
|image=Malappropriator.jpg
 
|image=Malappropriator.jpg
 +
|hit1=He punches you in the jaw. You hope the large confusion that knots up on your jaw doesn't cause an abbess to form on one of your teeth.
 +
|hit2=He wrenches your arm painfully. You hope your shoulder hasn't been relocated.
 +
|hit3=The Malappropriator uses a knife to cut several decisions across your epidural. Your skin burns something fierce.
 +
|miss2=His intention is to illiterate you, to destroy you completely, but you remain quite literate.
 
|miss3=The Malappropriator attempts to apprehensive you, but you squirm away like a Nile allegory and remain free.
 
|miss3=The Malappropriator attempts to apprehensive you, but you squirm away like a Nile allegory and remain free.
 
|xp=(8*Level, cap 400)
 
|xp=(8*Level, cap 400)
 +
|res={{res|none}}
 
|item1=Malappropriator hat placeholder
 
|item1=Malappropriator hat placeholder
 
|image1=Noimage2.gif
 
|image1=Noimage2.gif
Line 16: Line 21:
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
* {{wikipedia|Malapropism}} is the substitution of a word for a word with a similar sound, in which the resulting phrase makes no sense.
 
* {{wikipedia|Malapropism}} is the substitution of a word for a word with a similar sound, in which the resulting phrase makes no sense.
* The first miss message refers to a well known Malapropism from Richard Brinsley Sheridan's play {{wikipedia|The Rivals}}: "...she's as headstrong as an allegory on the banks of Nile." The quote is of the character Mrs. Malaprop, who is the source of the term Malapropism.
+
* The last miss message refers to a well known Malapropism from Richard Brinsley Sheridan's play {{wikipedia|The Rivals}}: "...she's as headstrong as an allegory on the banks of Nile." The quote is of the character Mrs. Malaprop, who is the source of the term Malapropism.
 
[[Category:Scaling Enemies]]
 
[[Category:Scaling Enemies]]

Revision as of 00:55, 13 November 2009

Malappropriator.jpg
The Malappropriator

You are fighting The Malappropriator.

All good students of Latin should be able to concern The Malaproppriator's methodicals. He likes to appropriate possessives. And he's a bad parsonage, so he appropriates things that generalist happen to belong to other indivisibles.
Your opponent attacks ...

Hit messages:

  • He punches you in the jaw. You hope the large confusion that knots up on your jaw doesn't cause an abbess to form on one of your teeth.
  • He wrenches your arm painfully. You hope your shoulder hasn't been relocated.
  • The Malappropriator uses a knife to cut several decisions across your epidural. Your skin burns something fierce.



He hits you for X damage.

Critical hit message:

Your opponent has a critical hit! He hits you for X damage.



Miss messages:
Unspecified Message

  • His intention is to illiterate you, to destroy you completely, but you remain quite literate.
  • The Malappropriator attempts to apprehensive you, but you squirm away like a Nile allegory and remain free.



Fumble messages:

Your foe fumbles! He takes X damage.


Victory! You beat up your foe and win the combat!

Unspecified chip drop

You gain (8*Level, cap 400) experience.

You got an item: Malappropriator hat placeholder Noimage2.gif (Guaranteed Drop)







Known resistances/weaknesses

Unspecified
Former resistances were Verified to have no resistances or weaknesses., remember to remove this information from the page when resistances are spaded.

Locations

Notes

  • Encountered in ?.

References

  • Malapropism is the substitution of a word for a word with a similar sound, in which the resulting phrase makes no sense.
  • The last miss message refers to a well known Malapropism from Richard Brinsley Sheridan's play The Rivals: "...she's as headstrong as an allegory on the banks of Nile." The quote is of the character Mrs. Malaprop, who is the source of the term Malapropism.