Sabre-toothed goat: Difference between revisions

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imported>Baltar
Adding more miss messages and reference
imported>Yiab
m meat drop
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[[image:meat.gif]] You gain 59 Meat.
{{meatdrop|2|amount=44-71|avg=55.7|stdev=5.0}}


{{acquire|3|image=Goatbeard.gif|item=goat beard|num=2.9% chance}}
{{acquire|3|image=Goatbeard.gif|item=goat beard|num=2.9% chance}}

Revision as of 03:33, 20 May 2006

Template:Battletop

He bites you with his sabre teeth. You feel the urge to visit the theatre, and maybe see a spectre. Oof! Ouch!

He gores you with his sharp horns and his sabre-teeth simultaneously. It's like being attacked by some minotaur-vampire hybrid. Ugh! Ugh! Eek! Oof! Ouch!

He gnashes his sabre teeth at you and butts you in the head. And heads you in the butt. Ugh! Ow! Ooh!


He tries to bite you with his sabre teeth, but gets his lower lip instead.

He gnashes his sabre teeth at you. You give him a toothbrush and some toothpaste, which you didn't know you had and is now gone.

He tries to sabre-dance on you, but it's hard to dance on one's teeth.

He tries to gore you with his horns, but gets a tooth trapped in the ground and trips. He should really be careful of those trip-traps.


Template:Meatdrop

You acquire 2.9% chance goat beards
You acquire 4.9% chance sets of sabre teeth

You gain 13 <substat>.


Occurs in The Goatlet.

References

  • The bit about "tomato juice" is probably a reference to the lyrics of "I've Got a Fang", by They Might Be Giants: "Glistening white triangular tooth / Open up a can of tomato juice"
  • The reference to "visit the theatre" and "see a spectre" is probably a complaint about differences between American English (saber, specter, theater) and international English (sabre, spectre, theatre).
  • The bit about the "toothbrush and some toothpaste" may be a reference to "My Father's Dragon" in which the main character gives a rhino a toothbrush and toothpaste to avoid being gored.
  • "Trip-trap" is a reference to the traditional fairy tale Three Billy Goats Gruff, in which the bridge makes the sound "trip-trap" as the goats' hooves cross it.