Shlurp

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Shlurp
A Shlurp
Artwork from Super Paper Mario
First appearance Super Paper Mario (2007)
Variants

Shlurps are purple leech-like enemies in the Wii game Super Paper Mario, living in Gloam Valley and in the Flipside Pit of 100 Trials in rooms 13 and 15. These enemies also have a stronger variant called a Shlorp.

These creatures are almost invincible thanks to their extremely hard skin. The only way to defeat these enemies is to get them to swallow the explosive Boomer, which may be inspired by the similarly armor-skinned Dodongos, a well-known Legend of Zelda species that is defeated by throwing bombs into their mouths; they most specifically resemble the Dodongo Snakes in appearance. Despite having lots of legs, they move very slowly, and keep going in the same direction even when they hit a wall.

Profiles and statistics[edit]

Super Paper Mario[edit]

Super Paper Mario enemy
Shlurp
Sprite of a Shlurp from Super Paper Mario. Max HP ?? (1 hit) Role Common Location(s) Gloam Valley (2-1), Merlee's Mansion (2-2), Merlee's Basement (2-4), Flipside Pit of 100 Trials (Rooms 13 and 15)
Attack 1 Card type Common
Defense ?? Items Card location(s) Card Shop; Catch Card/SP; Chapter 2-1: Found in an underground area under the Star Block via a 3D-accessible hole.
Score 300
Card description This hungry beast really sucks...stuff up! Bombs give it a bad case of heartburn.
  List of Catch Cards  
  108      109      110  
Tattle That bizarre creature is a Shlurp. It has tough skin and an appetite for everything... Max HP is ??, attack is 2, and Defense is ??. No attack will work... But Shlurps are just as fragile inside as they are tough on the outside... Maybe you should try feeding it something that would give it indigestion...

Gallery[edit]

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese バクー[?]
Bakū
From「バクバク」(bakubaku, onomatopoeia for devouring sound) and probably「食う」(kuu, to eat)
French Shlurp[?] -
German Schlurp[?] Deriving from "schlürfen" (to sip)
Italian Shlurp[?] -
Korean 덥석[?]
Deopseok
Onomatopoeia for snapping with mouth
Spanish Eslurp[?] From the English word "slurp"