Difference between revisions of "Waluigi"

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Waluigi has appeared primarily in sports games and other Mario spin-offs.
 
Waluigi has appeared primarily in sports games and other Mario spin-offs.
 
  
 
[[image:Waluigi.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Waluigi as a captain in ''[[Super Mario Strikers]]'']]
 
[[image:Waluigi.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Waluigi as a captain in ''[[Super Mario Strikers]]'']]

Revision as of 21:36, 13 June 2018

Waluigi2.jpg
Waluigi in Mario Party 7.
Waluigi
Species Human
Relatives Wario (possible brother)
Voiced by Charles Martinet
Debut Mario Tennis

Waluigi is an antagonistic character from the Mario series who was introduced in Mario Tennis 64 and has solely appeared within Mario sports titles and related spin-offs. He is Wario's partner and acts as a rival to Luigi in the same way that Wario does to Mario. He is easily the tallest of all the characters, despite being an extremely wiry fellow. Unlike Wario, he speaks in a whiny, nasally voice.

Personality

As Wario is to Mario, Waluigi takes on many of Luigi's attributes. From what is known of Luigi and Wario, it is possible to discern parts of Waluigi's personality.

From Wario, Waluigi can be expected to be greedy, selfish, and have generally bad hygiene. The intros of the various sports games often characterize Wario and Waluigi as being jealous of the other players, which drives them to attempt to sabotage the other players and win through underhanded tactics. Waluigi also shows rivalry (as well as possible jealousy and hatred) towards Luigi as well, as shown in his Mario Power Tennis description where he is said to train day and night in order to defeat Luigi.

From Luigi, he can be expected to have considerable skills in jumping and technology, but to be a bit clumsy. And while Luigi is constantly portrayed as an unknown character, it is quite likely in the Mushroom Kingdom that Waluigi is a good deal less famous than Wario.

Background

Within the sports games, Wario and Waluigi commonly appear in cutscenes where they scheme against the other players. In Mario Tennis 64, they watched the others start their tournament and barged in on a match between Mario and Luigi so they could settle their rivalries. However, they were then interrupted by Bowser's sudden arrival, who surprisingly eased their tension as he just wanted to play.

Mario Party 3 featured Waluigi (and Daisy) as new characters to the series. In Story Mode, Waluigi stole the Mischief Star Stamp from the Millennium Star and offered to return it only if he were to be named the Superstar. After defeating Bowser in a fistfight, he then competed with three other players for the stamp on Waluigi's Island, an otherwise pleasant island that was overrun by Piranha Plants and filled with explosive traps. After losing, Waluigi fled while the winner received the Star Stamp.

In the intro to Toadstool Tour, they spied on the Mario Bros. during their match with Princess Peach and Daisy. They then attempt to show them up in a competition with Yoshi and a Koopan Troopa, only to wind up fleeing from an angry Bowser after their ball accidentally gave him a black eye, which ended in the three getting caught in a Bob-omb explosion.

The two brothers made their an expansive appearance in the Power Tennis intro, where they were chased by police robots after being caught vandalizing images of Mario and Luigi on a scoreboard as retaliation for having lost to them in the first round of the tennis tournament. They wound up stumbling into Bowser's secret training facility, but instead of attacking them, he forced them to train hard. Afterwards, they took Donkey Kong and Daisy's place in the last round of the tournament against the Mario Bros., and instead of actually playing, they launched Bob-ombs from a tennis ball launcher-like device while Bowser aided them from his miniature airship. The scheme fell apart when the Mario Bros. and later all of the players in the audience deflected the Bob-ombs with their tennis rackets, and all three wound up being caught in an explosion again.

In Dance Dance Revolution: Mario Mix, Waluigi acted as the main antagonist. He broke into Truffle Towers and scattered the Music Keys, while keeping the blue key for himself. While he had planned to wait for the rhythm of the Mushroom Kingdom to fade and then make himself a dancing star, he was beaten in a dance contest and grudgingly surrendered the key to Mario. At the end of the game, he became the final boss when he stole all the Music Keys from Mario. Mario challenged him to once last dance-off, and Waluigi lost once more.

In the Mario Superstar Baseball intro, Waluigi was on Wario's team with Donkey Kong playing against Mario's team, and despite a strong showing they ultimately lose. In the Challenge Mode of Mario Super Sluggers, Waluigi was found on a rooftop in Wario City guarding a treasure chest that he claimed on his own. If spoken to with Wario, he would challenge this claim and after losing a baseball match he would be recruited into the baseball team. Wario and Waluigi also had a role in the ending movie where they, in the manner of the previous intro movies, attempted to sabotage the fireworks ceremony by replacing one of the bob-ombs Mario was supposed to knock into the sky with his bat with a Bullet Bill (which presumably his bat was too weak to deflect), but Bowser leaped in at the last minute to send it back to the brothers. Instead of being hit by the bullet, Wario and Waluigi were caught on its arms, which carried them into the sky before exploding and dropping them.

Sports Appearances

Waluigi has appeared primarily in sports games and other Mario spin-offs.

Waluigi as a captain in Super Mario Strikers

Waluigi also appears in the Mario Party games as a playable character, starting in Mario Party 3. In Mario Party 3, he was originally only playable in Party Mode and appeared as an opponent in Story Mode. Waluigi went on to make fully playable appearances in all following Mario Party games, in addition to appearing as a playable character in the similarly-themed crossover titles Itadaki Street DS and Fortune Street.

Other Appearances

Video Games

  • Waluigi appears as an Assist Trophy in Super Smash Bros. Brawl, Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS/Wii U and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. He attacks by stomping characters into the ground and then giving one a mighty kick or a slap with his tennis racket. In addition to that, his colors also appear as alternate colors for Luigi throughout the series. A trophy for Waluigi had appeared in Super Smash Bros. Melee, and all of Waluigi's appearances as an The Assist Trophy are accompanied by a normal Waluigi trophy for each respective game. His Brawl trophy description states that he spent a long time working quietly in the shadows of the Mario Bros. until he finally became strong enough to compete with them in Mario Tennis. In Brawl, there are also two Waluigi stickers from Super Mario Strikers and Mario Superstar Baseball.
  • In Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door, equipping both an L and W Emblem at the same time will give Mario a Waluigi color scheme.
  • In Game & Watch Gallery 4, he appears in the Modern Version of Boxing as Luigi's third and last opponent before the game loops back to the first opponent.
  • In Super Mario Makers, an 8-bit version of Waluigi's likeness is available as an unlockable Mystery Mushroom costume for Mario.
  • A Waluigi skin is available for the Nintendo releases of Minecraft as part of the Super Mario Mash-Up Pack.
  • In Mario + Rabbids: Kingdom Battle, a Rabbid version of Waluigi named Bwaluigi appears.
  • A Waluigi costume can be unlocked for Mario in Super Mario Odyssey.

Trivia

  • In Japanese, the word 'warui' means bad. In Japan, 'L' and 'R' are interchangeable, making 'waruigi' and 'warui' rather similar..
  • His voice actor, Charles Martinet, has stated that while voicing Waluigi, he sees "self-pity" as his cornerstone emotion.