Talk:Beezley

Merge Bee (Wario Land II) here
While both of these enemies have different Japanese and English names, both look nearly the same, are in the same series, and act nearly the same, (not to mention bee's English name is generic). This just seems to be the same enemy being renamed and receiving slight tweaks to its design.

Proposer: Deadline: October 1, 2020, 23:59 GMT

Support

 * 1) Per proposal.
 * 2) Per proposal. Beezleys and Wario Land II bees are identical in everything but name.
 * 3) – https://i.imgur.com/R1V9N4x.png Per proposal. Unlike the other examples Don gave (and I don't associate the giant bee at all), this enemy has an identical design even though it has been carried over to the next console. It functions the same, its attack has the same transformation effect on the player, and we can reasonably assume that it was intended to be the same enemy.

Oppose

 * 1) Sure, and while we're at it, let's merge Bucket Head with Yukimaru, Watch with Bird, Cook with Doughnuteer, Ukiwani with Tobawani, Big Mouth with Utsuboankō, Bōtsu with Lava Bubble, Togemaru with Togemen, and Kobatto with Minicula! What I'm saying is there's a lot of "suspiciously similar substitution" in this series, and treating things as the same based on behavior and subjectively appearance alone (particularly when the only even remotely high-resolution version of the former looks significantly different) is ill-advised at best. Additionally, no other enemy in the game returns from a previous game (aside from potentially Denki, which is an obstacle), making this seem even more speculative (if not outright fanon).
 * 2) Per Doc.
 * 3) Per Doc.
 * 4) Changing my vote per the opposition's arguments.

Comments
You're absolutely certain this isn't the same case as Goomba and Goombo? 16:56, September 17, 2020 (EDT)
 * Yes. First, bee's English name is generic, which is not the case for Goombos. Second, Goombos' design are more different from Goombas than bees are different from Beezlies. Finally, Nintendo Power apparently refered to Goombos as relatives of Goombas. I don't know if this is the case for bees. 17:01, September 17, 2020 (EDT)

@Doc von Schmeltwick: The enemy pairs you mention have a few quirks that differentiate between them, such as Big Mouth being stunnable unlike Utsuboankō, or Bōtsu being indestructible while Lava Bubbles are vulnerable to certain attacks. Even non-functional character design changes can be enough to make a distinction between two species, such as Cook and Doughnuteer, Goomba and Goombo, or Neek and Sneek. 20:25, September 17, 2020 (EDT)
 * Lava Bubble had only been destroyable through Super Stars when Botsu appeared. Regardless, that doesn't change the fact that in the case of the bees, the former's boss-version sprite and the latter's artwork show significantly more difference than the small, non-detailed sprites, and the distinct lack of any other returning enemies makes this seem WAY too big of a "what if" for comfort. Doc von Schmeltwick (talk) 20:42, September 17, 2020 (EDT)
 * The Lava Bubble's vulnerability to Super Stars and appearance are enough to make them separate from Botsu. To address the bee conundrum, I'm not sure what the giant bee boss has to do with all this; it's easily distinguishable from the "minion" bees in both appearance, attack pattern, and the number of hits it takes to destroy. The Wario Land 4 beezleys, on the other hand, are pretty much identical; the only different features of "both" species are their names and the fact that one drops a coin when defeated, which is a trait that was removed in all condition-inducing enemies in Wario Land 4 including Beezleys. Think how Goombas do drop coins in some games while in others they only award points. 21:00, September 17, 2020 (EDT)
 * The Bee boss has to do with the fact that nothing suggests it is anything but a giant, stronger version of the normal bees (akin to the Giant Spear Man), and as such is more telling of the design than a 16x32 pixel sprite. As for Botsu, it looks just like the many eyeless depictions of Lava Bubble (which continued after WL), and I'm pretty sure the stars and it are not even found in the same area. Regardless, given the fact that the Botsu article's current state is the result of me hastily rewriting it due to it previously covering the wrong subject, it may very well be vulnerable to that. Doc von Schmeltwick (talk) 21:14, September 17, 2020 (EDT)
 * Sprite size and general enemy recurrence are irrelevant to this discussion, the giant bee boss itself even more so since it's a largely different beast altogether. The design and attack pattern of Beezleys are too similar to their Wario Land II counterparts not to suggest the enemy was simply carried over to Wario Land 4. 21:40, September 17, 2020 (EDT)
 * My point is there's no detail to it so saying they look identical to Beezley is misleading...besides, said attack pattern is also shared with Pneumo/Jellybob, which is obviously different. Doc von Schmeltwick (talk) 21:43, September 17, 2020 (EDT)
 * The sprites of both bees and Beezleys have enough detail in them to allow us to invoke similarities between them--upright postures with a sting at the bottom, cockatiel-like beaks, flat feet, neutral and angry expressions told by eyes with roughly the same shape. The Jellybobs from Wario Land 3 act as a functional replacement to the bees from Wario Land II, in the same vein Kobbles replace Klomps in DKC3. If Klomps were to reappear in DKCR as "Klompzleys" but retaining their appearance from DKC2, there would be no doubt they were the same enemy. This scenario happened with Beezleys, who were simply tossed away in favour of a similar enemy in one game but brought back in a later installment of the same series. 21:57, September 17, 2020 (EDT)
 * It's still speculation, though. Unless any specific instance of a guide saying this enemy appeared before is found or one of the JP guides we currently source turns out to be unlicensed, it seems to me more like at most an amusingly lazy replacement. (On a related note, I'd be less skeptical if the JP names were reversed, since the WL2 JP name is more descriptive while the WL4 one is lazier). Doc von Schmeltwick (talk) 22:07, September 17, 2020 (EDT)
 * Actually, the JP name may have actual meaning: the article says that in one area, they transform from spiked balls. Perhaps they are hatching? That's still something Bubble Bee couldn't do. Doc von Schmeltwick (talk) 12:30, September 18, 2020 (EDT)