Skellokey
Animated idle of a Skellokey
Sprite from Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time
First appearance Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time (2005)
Variant of Pokey
Comparable

Skellokeys (a portmanteau of "skeleton" and Pokey) are skeletal Pokeys found in Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time. They are found in Toad Town and in the Star Shrine. Like other Pokeys in the game, Skellokeys start out with one head segment but gain more body segments when their turn comes. Skellokeys can only be battled by Baby Mario and Baby Luigi.

In battle, a Skellokey has a few attacks. It can eat its own body segments and spit them at its enemies. It rolls toward the one it was meaning to attack before it attacks. However, if the Skellokey does a flip before spitting its segments, it spits them at the opposite baby brother. This attack can be blocked with the Hammer. However, if the body segments are not deflected, they rejoin with the Skellokey head. Skellokeys can also spit fireballs at enemies which can cause the Burn status ailment. This projectile attack can be jumped over. A Skellokey may also launch its body segments at an attacker. The individual body segment spins towards the Baby. it wants to attack. The body segments can be jumped over.

In Toad Town they have three segments, and in the Star Shrine they have four.

Unlike Pokeys, Skellokeys have spikes on top of their heads instead of flowers, meaning jumps are ineffective against them. Thus, each body segment must be eliminated if the head is to be attacked.

Toothy from Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story is similar to Skellokey, as both are bony variants of Pokeys.

StatisticsEdit

Mario & Luigi: Partners in TimeEdit

Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time enemy
Skellokey
  HP 84 (90) POW 74 (75) Defense 77 (81)
Experience 100 (105) Coins 10 (15) Speed 100 (102)
Location(s) Toad Town, Star Shrine Role Common Item drop Red Shell – 15%
None – 0%
Level 21 (22) Battled by Baby Mario & Baby Luigi
Notice: Stats in parentheses are from the Japanese and European versions (if they differ from the original American release).

Names in other languagesEdit

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese ホネサンボ
Hone Sanbo
Bone Pokey
French Pokeyrex A mixture between "Pokey" and "Skelerex" (Dry Bones)
German Skellopokey -
Italian Marghischeletro Portmanteau of "Marghibruco" (Pokey) and "scheletro" (skeleton)
Korean 뼈닥선인
Ppyeodak Seonin
Derivation of "뼈다귀" (ppyeodagwi, bone) + "선인" (Seon'in, Pokey)
Spanish Esquelopokey From "esqueleto" (skeleton) and "Pokey"