This includes the Eggplant Wizard.
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But here’s the weird part: There’s kind of a history of Nintendo featuring evil eggplants. I’m not the only one to notice the weird preponderance of eggplants in video games. The website Sydlexia actually features a whole history of the eggplant on the Nintendo Entertainment System. That list begins with Ice Climber, a vertically scrolling title where your Eskimo heroes can collect various produce items for bonus points, Pac-Man-style.
It’s in Wrecking Crew, released six months after Ice Climber, that the eggplants turn evil. In this quasi-Mario Bros. spinoff, Mario has to contend with three headaches: ambulatory wrenches, a burly, Bluto-esque foreman, and the Eggplant Men.
As far as Nintendo-produced games go, Sydlexia’s list ends with Kid Icarus, which came out in 1986. A handful of third party games feature eggplants too, however, sometimes in a negative context — the very Mario-like Adventure Island games feature it as an anti-power-up that saps your strength and slows the music down — and sometimes in a positive one — the princess in Kickle Cubicle has a guard of eggplant retainers. I’ll leave it up to you how to assess the eggplants in Princess Tomato in Salad Kingdom, which are a sexy anthropomorphic barmaid and a Fidel Castro parody, respectively. But after sorting through the extensive files my brain keeps on useless video game knowledge, I can think of two more recent, but less-than-pleasant Nintendo eggplants.
In Wario Land 4, the first boss is a doll-toting toddler eggplant that gets a lot less cute once you’ve roughed her up a few times.
In one of the Mario baseball games, Waluigi — who himself is eggplant-colored, even if it’s Wario who’s eggplant-shaped — has a power-up called the Whiskered Eggplant. It’s an eggplant with a mustache, and yes, “eggplant with a moustache” could essentially be a description for Waluigi himself.
And then there’s Smash Bros. Brawl, where the story mode features an army of little foot soldiers that, to me, looked so much like the Eggplant Men from Wrecking Crew that I just assumed they were. Apparently they’re not, but you have to admit, the resemblance is really strong, associated purple clouds and all.
And truly, what could be more harrowing than facing down an army of eggplants bent on world domination?
A better question: What gives?
Well, it’s possible I just forgot all the positive depictions of eggplants I’ve ever seen in a video game, and I’m twisting Nintendo’s gallery of products to reflect my own anti-eggplant agenda. (It’s possible. I don’t actually care for eggplant.) Or I could have just not played the majority of pro-eggplant games out there. However, it’s also possible that the eggplant might be more commonplace in Japan than it is here in the U.S., and that fact’s being reflected in the games that Japan makes. But if that’s the case, maybe the eggplant carries certain connotations in Japan that are inspiring video game designers to make it evil. I looked. I found next to nothing, aside from an old wives’ tale about eggplants causing infertility in newly married woman.
Maybe it’s just that someone at Nintendo regards eggplants the same way I do — purple and gross?
FWIW the eggplants in the Harvest Moon games are not evil that I have seen.
ReplyDeleteThis has saved me much research time. Thanks.
DeleteI normally don't mind eating purple things, but I draw the line at eggplant. It's got a really nasty texture. But yeah, in video games it's a thing of beauty. I wish we saw more of it.
ReplyDeleteFor me it's not the color or taste so much as the texture.
DeleteWhat about purple Pikmin? They're morally neutral at worst.
ReplyDeleteThis is a point I hadn't considered. And now I want to go play Pikmin. And then think of something else from a Nintendo game that's purple but not evil.
DeleteYet another weird Nintendo thing that I've wondered about since the 80s, but have no answer for. Thanks for this blog post! If nothing else, it prompted me to find and read this article from the journal Chronica Horticulturae: "History and Iconography of the Eggplant" (spoiler: nothing too specific about the Japanese take on eggplants or why Nintendo would find them villainous, but there are some nice ancient classical paintings and drawings of eggplants from Asia and Europe)
ReplyDeleteThose were, indeed, some lovely eggplant paintings.
DeleteGlad you liked by eggplant-related brain drivel. I'll have more probably!
this makes me realize that i have a deeper appreciation for eggplants, thank you!
DeleteFrom a Nintendo World Report article on the rather turbulent development that Kid Icarus underwent:
ReplyDeleteFor instance, the Eggplant Wizard was inspired partly by Osawa's “passion for eggplants,” and the eggplant masks found in Wrecking Crew, but Osawa also says he drew it in celebration of having received his summer bonus. Needless to say, the rest of the team didn't consider an eggplant-wielding wizard strange at all.
So there was an actual connection between the Wreching Crew eggplants and the Eggplant Wizard.
There's some Japanese tradition, I can't remember what it's called, but it's the first Dream of the new year. And it is considered to be great luck to dream of Mount Fuji, a hawk, or an eggplant, or a combination of their of. So there's no cultural indifference towards eggplant, it's actually a representation of luck apparently. I was thinking I might find some Japanese folklore about evil eggplants, but to my dismay, there wasn't, LOL
ReplyDelete