Pa-Patch

From the Super Mario Wiki, the Mario encyclopedia
Revision as of 17:24, December 9, 2019 by 198.54.211.2 (talk)
Jump to navigationJump to search

It has been requested that this article be rewritten and expanded to include more information.

Pa-Patch
Pa-Patch's appearance
“When the sun rises, I wakey-wakey, and when it sets, I tuck in for snoozer-time! Perfect for a simple bloke like me, eh?”
Pa-Patch, Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door

Pa-Patch is a Bob-omb character that appears in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door. He is a large purple Bob-omb with an eyepatch, and his wind-up key resembles a set of bones. Pa-Patch's name is derived from his distinctive eyepatch and the style of his species name.

Description

Pa-Patch is one of the many sailors seen frequently in Rogueport's harbor.

In Chapter 5, Pa-Patch and several other sailors, along with Admiral Bobbery and their self-described leader Flavio, join Mario on his quest to Keelhaul Key. Arguments regularly break out between him and Flavio, so Pa-Patch takes a shining to Mario instead. After Mario defeats Cortez and Lord Crump, Pa-Patch decides to stay on Keelhaul Key with a few other sailors. Pa-Patch only made this decision after he was sure there were no ghosts left, as even he was afraid of them.

Mario and Mini-Yoshi inquiring Pa-Patch about General White in the Keelhaul Key town
Mario inquires Pa-Patch about General White

Quotes

  • "Ay, you wanna know what REALLY smells? Flavio's armpit! Oy, smells like low tide!"

Tattle information

  • (Before Chapter 5) "That's Pa-Patch the Bob-omb. He's a real salty sailor type. Totally active guy, huh? Yeah, he looks pretty burly, too. Gotta love strong go-getters, huh?"
  • (Chapter 5 and onwards) "That's Pa-Patch the Bob-omb. He's a salty old sailor, and a totally solid deckhand. I heard he built all these shanties by himself, too! ...Still, he's afraid of ghosts."

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning
Japanese コンポビー[1]
Konpobī
-

Italian Galerio
From Galera (Galley).
Spanish Bomberto
From bomba (bomb) and Berto, a masculine Spanish name

References

  1. ^ "Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door From Japanese to English". (June 1, 2014). The Mushroom Kingdom. Retrieved January 4, 2015.