Green Pixie
From A KoL Wiki
Green Pixie |
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Fighting, dancing sprite Dinnae try tae cross his path Ye'll get yer heid broke. |
Ability: Acts as a Fairy, attacks and drops up to five tiny bottles of absinthe a day.
Hatchling: bottled green pixie
Familiar-Specific Equipment: green pixie spog
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Ultimate Cage Match | Scavenger Hunt | Obstacle Course | Hide and Seek |
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Combat Messages
- Regular Messages:
- During combat:
- <name> shouts "Dinnae fash yersel' about this schemie, I can handle it!" and headbutts your opponent for X damage.
- <name> shouts "Oh, waily waily waily! You'll ne'er win this fight wi'oot me helpin' ye!" and pummels your enemy for X damage.
- <name> shouts "Oi, ye bunch o' jobbies! How's aboot a face full of heid, ye scunner!" and headbutts your enemy for X damage.
- After combat:
- <name> does a high-stepping highland dance. You avert your eyes as his kilt comes dangerously close to his waist level.
- <name> throws his arms over his head and does a little tip-toe ballet. You'd laugh, but you like having all your bones intact.
- <name> does some combination of a jig and a reel. He looks mainly like a guy in an invisible mosh pit.
- <name> looks at you, horrified. "Crivens, mate!" he says. "You're no' tryin' to battle completely sober, are ye? Have a heidfull o' this!" He tosses you a bottle of absinthe.
You acquire an item: tiny bottle of absinthe
- During combat:
- With lucky Tam O'Shanter equipped:
- <name> winks at you from under the Tam O'Shanter, pleased that it's the same tartan as his kilt.
- With miniature gravy-covered maypole equipped:
- <name> does a little riverdance around the maypole, periodically head-butting it for good measure.
- With wax lips equipped:
- <name> says "Crivens! I can barely breathe wi' these thingies on!" from under the wax lips.
Arena Messages
- When entered in an Obstacle Course:
- The general green pixie approach to an obstacle is to headbutt it until it ceases to become an obstacle, which isn't an optimal strategy here.
Notes
- The bottles of absinthe drop a maximum of five times a day.
- The Green Pixie doesn't drop absinthe if you're already under the Absinthe-Minded effect.
- According to information collected at http://jick-nerfed.us/forums/viewtopic.php?t=3944 the drop rate for the bottles is:
- First bottle: 20%
- Second bottle: 15%
- Third bottle: 10%
- Fourth bottle: 7.5%
- Fifth bottle: 5%
- Or, restated in terms of the expected number of eligible combats (i.e. not under the Absinthe-Minded effect) for a given number of bottles to drop:
- One bottle: 5
- Two bottles: 12
- Three bottles: 22
- Four bottles: 35
- Five bottles: 55
- This familiar will attack 1/3 of the time, regardless of the weight. It does int(X/2) to X in damage (regardless of the message seen) where X is the familiar's weight. The three attack messages are equally likely.
References
- The familiar, including its image filename (pictsie.gif), is a reference to the Nac Mac Feegle, a type of fairy found in the Discworld series by Terry Pratchett.
- The name of the familiar and the absinthe ability are references to another name for absinthe, La Fée Verte, French for "The Green Fairy".
- The haiku and the familiar's speech reflect a heavy highland Scottish brogue or accent, which is consistent with Pratchett's Nac Mac Feegle. Dinnae = do not, Heid = head, Fash = worry, etc.
- Jigs and reels are both popular Scottish and Irish folk dances.
- A tartan is a pattern of plaid, historically used especially in Scotland and other Celtic countries to indicate clan and family.
- Riverdance, noted for helping to popularize Irish culture especially in the mid-'90s, is a theatrical show composed largely of rapid-movement Irish step dances.
- "Crivens" is a mild Scottish oath popularized by Oor Wullie, a comic book character central to Scottish culture since 1937.
- The "schemie" referred to in the first quote is an insult prevalent in the Edinburgh area to denote those of a lower class or intellectual level, who usually live in a Council Housing Scheme, known for being poor or rough areas.
- The attack message about averting your eyes as the pixie's kilt gets higher refers to the legend that Scottish warriors wouldn't wear any underwear, apparently to terrify their opponents (if they could cope with cold wind blowing up their kilt then they could cope with pain in battle).