Walleye

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Walleye
Walleye in Super Mario Party
Artwork of a Walleye from Super Mario Party
First appearance Super Mario 3D World (2013)
Latest appearance Super Mario 3D World + Bowser's Fury (2021)
Variant of Wallop
Comparable

Walleyes are Whomp-like enemies that first appear in the game Super Mario 3D World. They are similar to the Wallops in Super Mario 3D Land, with spikes on their sides and top. Their name comes from "wall", referring to them being moving walls, and possibly a pun on the term "wall-eyed", a condition that causes a person's eyes to drift apart from each other.

History

Super Mario 3D World / Super Mario 3D World + Bowser's Fury

Screenshot of Super Mario 3D World.
Mario encountering two Walleyes in Ty-Foo Flurries

Walleyes first appear in Super Mario 3D World as rare enemies. They move from side to side in an attempt to keep the player from walking past them. Contact with the spikes on their sides and top causes damage, but their fronts and backs are safe to touch. Walleyes can be temporarily dazed by a projectile or a claw attack, and can be destroyed by Lucky Cat Mario or White Tanooki Mario. They only appear in Ty-Foo Flurries, The Great Goal Pole, and Mystery House Marathon.

Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker

Walleyes return as somewhat uncommon enemies in Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker and its Nintendo Switch and Nintendo 3DS ports, serving the same purpose as in Super Mario 3D World. The only way to defeat them is by using an Invincibility Mushroom, and they provide the player 3 coins upon defeat.

Minecraft

In the premade world for the Super Mario Mash-up in Minecraft, small 3D pixel art resembling a Walleye appears in the snow area.

Super Mario Party

Walleyes appear in Super Mario Party as non-playable characters. They can appear in Follow the Money as obstacles, where they run back and forth constantly, and they can also be seen in Absent Minded.

Gallery

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning
Japanese キョロへい
Kyoro Hei
From「キョロキョロ」(kyorokyoro, onomatopoeia for glancing repeatedly) and Kabehei

Dutch Walleye
Same as English
German Guckiwummp
From guck (to look) and wummps (a heavy object falling on the ground)
Italian Wallokkio
From wall and occhio (eye)
Spanish (NOA) Don Estorbón
 
Spanish (NOE) Muroestorbón
From estorbar (to get in the way), muro (wall), and augmentative suffix -ón