Hanukkimbo Dreidl: Difference between revisions
From A KoL Wiki
imported>Vireyar m Cleaned up both the references and clarified both the songs. |
imported>Vireyar m Forgot to add both the proper wikipedia links. |
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==References== | ==References== | ||
*The name of this familiar is a play on a Hannuka Driedl, a traditional Jewish spinning top related to the Holiday of Hannuka. Anyone Jewish will find the haiku, name, and combat messages hilarious. Trust me. The last line of the haiku is also a reference to the line "joy to you and me" from the song [[wikipedia:Joy to the World|Joy to the World]] (the [[wikipedia:Three Dog Night|Three Dog Night]] version, not the popular Christmas version). | *The name of this familiar is a play on a Hannuka Driedl, a traditional Jewish spinning top related to the Holiday of Hannuka. Anyone Jewish will find the haiku, name, and combat messages hilarious. Trust me. The last line of the haiku is also a reference to the line "joy to you and me" from the song [[wikipedia:Joy to the World (Hoyt Axton)|Joy to the World]] (the [[wikipedia:Three Dog Night|Three Dog Night]] version, not the popular Christmas version). | ||
[[Category:Familiars]] | [[Category:Familiars]] |
Revision as of 04:34, 30 September 2005
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The Hermit humbly requests that this page be rewritten or expanded.
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Made of magic clay
Ancient toy, random rewards
Oy to you and me.
Hatchling: Hanukkimbo dreidl
The Cake-Shaped Arena weakness: (none)
Combat Messages
- Regular messages:
- <name> Spins and gives different results:
- Shin = Attacks monster in shins (2x damage, one for each shin).
- Heh = Tells jokes and with each "heh" you laugh you gain mana points.
- Nun = Turns you into a nun and the monster no longer wants to attack you.
- Gimmel = "Gimmels" you some meat.
- With lucky Tam O'Shanter equipped:
- <name> takes an extra spin and lands on Gimmel. It gimmels you an extra stack o' meat.
- With miniature gravy-covered maypole equipped:
- <name> dances a little Hava Nagila around the maypole.
- With wax lips equipped:
- <name> spins again and lands with the wax lips facing up in a very kosher smile.
References
- The name of this familiar is a play on a Hannuka Driedl, a traditional Jewish spinning top related to the Holiday of Hannuka. Anyone Jewish will find the haiku, name, and combat messages hilarious. Trust me. The last line of the haiku is also a reference to the line "joy to you and me" from the song Joy to the World (the Three Dog Night version, not the popular Christmas version).