Kirby/YMMV


 * Alas, Poor Villain:
 * After you defeat masked Dedede in Kirby Super Star Ultra, you get a surprisingly depressing scene of King Dedede sulking off into the sunset as somber music plays. Thankfully, it makes a transition into heart-warming since King Dedede's Waddle Dees slowly go and follow him, showing that no matter how many times he's defeated, they will never abandon their king.
 * While they're among the most loathsome villains in the series due to the sheer scale of their crimes, both Queen Sectonia from Triple Deluxe and President Haltmann from Planet Robobot are very pitiable figures once you learn more about them: both were benevolent authority figures twisted into insane, sociopathic monsters by corruptive outside influences (and in Haltmann's case, grief over ). With the former's death being treated as a Mercy Kill and the latter's ultimate fate being genuinely nightmarish, they have plenty of sympathy from the fanbase.
 * Alternate Character Interpretation: Kirby is quite a cocky Jerkass in Kirby's Avalanche (even though the game is not technically canon).
 * More famously: Kirby is notable for being a much less straightforward hero then most of them, notably eating definitely sentient beings alive, releasing eldritch abominations on a daily basis, and sometimes, going on quests and slaughtering people for rather... ambiguous reasons (in Squeak Squad: cake.) This led to many alternative interpretations of Kirby.
 * Brawl in the Family plays with this; for instance, Meta Knight once says to Dedede: "Like it or not, you and Kirby aren't that different, but where he has childlike optimism, you have untempered malice."
 * There Will Be Brawl plays with it too, and how.
 * Sonic for Hire plays this as well in this episode. He.
 * It should be noted that Dedede has a LOT more friends than Kirby in the games. Pretty much his only in-game friends outside of Kirby 64 are all created by him somehow. Pretty much everybody else has tried to kill him at least once.
 * Actually, three of his friends in that game have tried to kill him too. (Adeleine was a victim of two Demonic Possessions, though.) But he's been shown to spend time with his friends there and with the Dreamland 2 and 3 friends.
 * And the Fandom Rejoiced: After about 6 years of delays and hiatus, the Kirby 64: The Crystal Shards Wii follow-up was finally been confirmed for a release, and plans to feature, after Kirby's Epic Yarn, the return of Kirby's Mega Manning, as well as brand new abilities and Final Smash-like moves. Needless to say, fans exploded with Tears of Joy. They did so even more when it was revealed Meta Knight, King Dedede, and the bandana Waddle Dee were playable characters in Kirby's Return to Dream Land.
 * There's more: Kirby's Adventure is confirmed as a 3D Classic for Nintendo 3DS.
 * Anticlimax Boss: Waddle Dee. In Revenge of the King, he is the last boss before King Dedede. He's laughably easy.
 * It's the same Waddle Dee that appears in the Arena in Kirby Super Star Ultra.
 * Awesome Music: There are a massive list of songs from the series that are just plain amazing to hear, a list can be found here.
 * Complete Monster:.
 * Necrodeus seems to be one, given that it split Kirby into ten and quickly killed off each individual form, and he only survived because the last Kirby made a miraculous escape. mainly because of how cruel it is to murder nine different sentient beings while it was only necessary to kill Kirby once.
 * Nightmare from Kirby: Right Back at Ya! is the franchise's biggest example, compared to the Generic Doomsday Villain he was in Kirby's Adventure.
 * Let's not forget Hyness.
 * Crazy Awesome: King Dedede. He's the king of Dreamland, wears a pimp coat, and fights with a hammer. Also? He is a blue penguin. Masked Dedede takes this Up to Eleven. Case in point: the first ever fight against him in the series takes place in an electrified cage, and his hammer doubles as a flamethrower and a rocket launcher.
 * Crowning Moment of Awesome: The series has its moments, but above them all stands the Kirby Super Star segment "Revenge Of Meta Knight" in its entirety. Storming the Castle turned Up to Eleven, reaching HSQ levels. Seriously. And you get to hear the bad guys becoming progressively more and more afraid of you, as if you were the goshdang Batman, while you singlehandedly destroy a frickin' airship! Hell yeah.
 * The whole "storm the castle while your enemies panic" bit is repeated in the final level of "Revenge of the King" in Super Star Ultra.
 * Meta-Knight wishes to have released the strongest warrior in the galaxy, locked away for fear of his power, for the sole purpose of kicking said warrior's ass. Which he proceeds to do Why? For training purposes. Or fun. Or just to prove he could.
 * Crowning Moment of Funny: Kirby Super Star again. When you start "Milky Way Wishes", the tutorial tells you that . Cue Kirby's obvious, hilarious Oh Crap.
 * Have fun with the rest.
 * Cult Classic: Air Ride has been getting more and more popular each year since its release.
 * Draco in Leather Pants: Many Kirby fans think Zero is a lonely, sad being that just wants some friends - though this does have some basis in canon, as it's stated that it can't feel positive emotions and wants to destroy the world out of jealousy. The awesome battle music probably helps (especially the Zero 2 music mentioned above.)
 * Ear Worm: Pick a song, ANY song from the games. Case in point: the Invincibility jingle. It doesn't help that the games have a habit of endlessly recycling/remixing music used from previous games.
 * Ensemble Darkhorse:''
 * Galacta Knight of Kirby Super Star Ultra. At that point, he had only showed up for one battle and didn't even get a single line of dialogue, yet already fans are spinning Fan Wank about his origins and clamouring for him to appear in another game.
 * Meta Knight. To the point where he gets to be a playable character in Air Ride, Nightmare in Dreamland, and Super Star Ultra, and now Return to Dreamland. His Face Ship, the Halberd, is a major plot point in the Subspace Emissary and the only original Kirby stage in the game.
 * Adeleine from Kirby 64. For being a minor character in one (or two?) games, she has quite a fanbase - possibly helped by Brawl in the Family, where she's a prominent character.
 * Arguably Nightmare, despite only appearing in the second game, its remake, and the anime, fans remember him and want him to make a comeback. He's not as popular as Marx, but more or less, Nightmare's memorable.
 * Ribbon. Kirby's first love interest, ? Hell yeah.
 * Bandana Dee, a Waddle Dee with a bandana seems to be rapidly gaining popularity, especially after the announcement he was playable in Kirby's Return to Dream Land. Lampshaded by his pause screen description in the game, which calls him "everyone's favorite idol".
 * Magolor seems to be quickly becoming this. It probably helps that he has one of the best character designs in the whole Kirby series, and that when he pricks his ears down, his cuteness rivals Kirby's. He still has quite a bit of popularity regardless, especially owing to his appearances in Kirby Super Clash and Kirby: Star Allies.
 * Even Better Sequel: The original Kirby game was a fairly standard side-scroller that was pretty enjoyable for what it was, but was laughably short and easy (although the latter is compensated by the unlockable Hard Mode--and it lives up to its name, all right) and didn't even allow you to copy abilities! Kirby's Adventure then came out on the NES and blew the original out of the water by offering more levels, the series-trademark copy abilities, and a save feature! Kirby's Dreamland 2, while not quite as good as Adventure, at least brought these improvements down to a portable level.
 * Evil Is Cool: Kirby villains as a whole tend to be very popular. While a lot of them are Generic Doomsday Villains such as Nightmare, Dark Matter, Zero, 02, and Necrodeus, they make up for their lack of personality with their awesomely creepy designs and memorable encounters. Meanwhile, better-fleshed out villains like, , Queen Sectonia, Taranza, Susie, and President Haltmann are strongly characterized, go through genuine development, and - in the case of Haltmann and Sectonia - are ridiculously tragic in spite of their appalling villainy. Then you've got King Dedede's more malicious outings where he's your typical hammy and fun Nintendo villain, as well as Epileptic Woodsman Void Termina with the crazy implications its existence has for multiple villains and heroes in the series. Uniting them all is amazingly fun boss fights, great boss music, and intriguing lore, which results in one of Nintendo's strongest rogues galleries yet.
 * Fandom Berserk Button: While "evil/sociopathic Kirby" jokes were once popular (see Alternate Character Interpretation above), they've worn out their welcome a long time ago. Nowadays, fans get annoyed at best, and downright pissed at worse when people seriously try to insinuate that the lovable pink puff is evil despite being a textbook friendly good-hearted hero (albeit with a bit of a brutal streak).
 * Fridge Brilliance: Why are the Big Bads of the games usually so nightmarish? Because it's Dreamland - it's only fitting.
 * Fridge Horror: Jim Sterling gives a lecture on the Fridge Horror of the Kirby franchise in this episode of the Jimquisition.
 * Game Breaker: You can destroy The Arena (and later The True Arena) in any game with Hammer and Plasma/Spark: the former has Hammer Flip, which has one of the highest damage outputs of a non one-time-use ability in the game, and the latter provides an extra shield when fully charged. This makes them both Awesome Yet Practical.
 * If you master the quick charge trick, the aforementioned Plasma power from Kirby Super Star becomes the most broken power the series has ever seen. Due to this, it was slightly Nerfed in the DS version, requiring more charge-up time.
 * There's also Tornado, which has the amazing ability to kill almost every boss in the series. In fact, every boss in Squeak Squad can be killed very easily with it, including the final boss. It's an even better choice for the final boss than the Eleventh-Hour Superpower! Cranked Up to Eleven in Kirby's Return to Dream Land, where stronger moves were made available. Heck, you can annihilate pretty easily with Tornado. Yep, an Infinity-1 Sword in comparison to Super Abilities.
 * Also Hi-Jump, at least in Kirby's Adventure, which not only does high damage to bosses, but makes you invincible while doing so and sending you out of harm's way. Not always useful outside bosses, however.
 * The Copy Helper, TAC, in Kirby Super Star and Kirby Super Star Ultra. Normally, it allows the helper to copy abilities like Kirby himself. But if there's no power to copy (mostly on bosses), it just does massive damage! And it's spammable! See for yourself, especially 2:52. TAC completely heals every time you copy a power, and when they guard, you become immune to all damage as well.
 * In Dreamland 2, Coo + Parasol can rip apart everything including the angry Propeller Bombs. The whole thing got a well-deserved nerf in 3.
 * Chu Chu's Clean power trivializes pretty much any midair segment (short of those that require quick movement).
 * From Return to Dreamland onward, Water and its sister ability Poison are hilariously overpowered thanks to the crazy amounts of invincibility frames their attacks provide, as well as their safe ranged attacks and Poison's Damage Over Time mechanics.
 * Gannon Banned: Some parts of the Kirby fandom don't seem to accept any other variations of the name "Meta Knight".
 * Goddamned Bats: The Bronto Burts and Pteran placement in the later levels of Dreamland 3 rival that of the Medusa heads in the early Castlevania games. And yes, also bats.
 * Hell Is That Noise: Combining this with Most Annoying Sound gives you the final phase of "Revenge Of Meta Knight".
 * The music for Ripple Star's second level. The cute Sugar Bowl of the first level is quickly cut off when you reach the second and are welcomed with the ruined fairy castle and hear that damn Scare Chord dirge.
 * That... bloodcurling... SCREAM!
 * Hilarious in Hindsight: One look at this commercial for Kirby's Adventure and suddenly the concept of Kirby's Epic Yarn becomes all the more hilarious.
 * Also, Marx's mouth laser attack. Imma Firin Ma Lazah!
 * Rick the Hamster. With the Stone ability, he can roll.
 * It's Easy So It Sucks: The games may be easy, but this is generally averted - they were actually designed to be very easy yet nobody seems to have any problem. This becomes quite weird when you hear this trope being invoked elsewhere, since how many other games allow you to fly over most of the stage without even having to find a power-up?
 * Jerkass Woobie: Some sources on the English side claim that Zero wants to have a friend, but it cannot. Who could love or be friends with a giant eyeball? Zero is also an entity that feels only negative emotions and is unable to feel happiness or any positive emotion. It attacks Dreamland because it thinks that if it cannot be happy, then neither can anyone else. Sad, isn't it?
 * Magnificent Bastard: Without a doubt, Meta Knight. In fact, even leaning more towards being a Guile Hero in Kirby Right Back At Ya.
 * Memetic Badass: During the Boss Rush in Super Star, you will have to fight a Waddle Dee with five times the health of a normal Waddle Dee. It's still a Curb Stomp Battle Breather Boss (he doesn't move, and you can still inhale him.) A video on the internet portrayed him as an unstoppable god of destruction (via a player who thought it would be hilarious) and the fandom's pumped him up ever since.
 * Kirby himself is this. There are Nintendo fans who firmly believe the pink puff's badassery is only rivaled by Captain Falcon.
 * Memetic Mutation: Gourmet Race has become one of the most remixed songs on Youtube. Sand Canyon and Candy Mountain/Skyhigh are hot on its tail. Stupid Statement Dance Mixes of Lucky Star voice clips to the tune of various Kirby Super Star tracks are also quite popular.
 * Recently, there was a Youtube fad involving Dedede screaming random things after getting beaten at the end of Spring Breeze.
 * INVINCIBLE CANDY! (A running gag on Something Awful Let's Play of any Kirby game, second only to...)
 * DELICIOUS! (Whenever any food item is eaten, but especially Maximum Tomatoes.)
 * The "Kirby ASCII Dance": (> ")> <(" <) (^ ")^ (v ")v
 * Kirbys Epic Yarn brings us Kirby's arrival in Patch Land and his observation that the grass feels like... pants.
 * Moral Event Horizon:
 * Queen Sectonia introduces herself by, establishing just how wicked and twisted of a creature she is.
 * Hyness in Star Allies pulls an even worse one:.
 * Never Live It Down:
 * In Kirby: Squeak Squad, Kirby went on a rampage over a piece of cake. In every other platform game, his goals are more noble, although some fans hang on to this one instance and insist Kirby is a Sociopathic Hero.
 * Some fans also hang onto the few times he's accidentally helped further a bad guy's goals as more evidence that he's a sociopath, never mind that it's only happened four times out of his many adventures, and three times out of four he had no reason to suspect that what he was doing was bad (especially since two of those times had a silver-tongued schemer manipulating him).
 * Nightmare Fuel: The series is placed in Dream Land, so it's obvious that the enemies are related to nightmares. And you WILL have them.
 * Periphery Demographic: Though the games were mostly geared for children just beginning to play video games, a good chunk of the fanbase are experienced gamers who grew up playing them and who gleefully return to each new installment, no matter how short or easy it is. From Super Star Ultra onward, the developers seemed to recognize this and would put in genuinely difficult secret game modes to challenge older veterans, as well as greatly expand on the series' lore in ways that make beloved older characters relevant once more.
 * Rule 34: Not even Kirby is immune to it. And once conventionally attractive female characters like Susie and Queen Sectonia were introduced, Kirby's porn scene exploded.
 * Scenery Porn - Kirby games, which are often produced late into a system's lifespan, will try to use the color palette at its greatest, resulting some truly impressive-looking backgrounds.
 * Self-Imposed Challenge: Doing a single ability run of any game's Boss Rush is popular among fans. Doing one on Squeak Squad Boss Rush is a tad harder - the game actually forces the Eleventh-Hour Superpower on you for the Final Boss, though you can willingly discard your ability, which starts bouncing around the screen as an inhalable star. If you discard your power, inhale the star, and hold it in Kirby's mouth instead of swallowing it, it'll still be in his mouth after you grab the Triple Star, at which point you can swallow your old power and get it back.
 * Squick: In Super Star (and a few other games with co-op). A player can share the effects of a recently consumed food item by walking up to their ally at which point the two get face to face for a second. There's really no other way to interpret this animation as anything but player 1 spitting up what they had just eaten into player 2's mouth...
 * ...until later games outright confirmed that they share the health gain with a kiss. There's a distinct smacking sound when you do it. Note that some of Kirby's helpers and all of his Return to Dream Land partners are male, and in Meta Knightmare Ultra, Meta Knight does this with his helper as well.
 * Wait - he does this through his mask?
 * Tastes Like Diabetes: The entire series, until Mood Whiplash kicks in and you fight the final boss.
 * Tear Jerker: The ending of Revenge of the King in Super Star Ultra. Poor Dedede.
 * They Changed It, Now It Sucks / It's Easy, So It Sucks: Nightmare in Dream Land is markedly easier than the game it's a remake of, Kirby's Adventure... and it removed the rotating tower segments from Butter Building for no apparent reason. Fans were not pleased.
 * Too Dumb to Live: Kirby. Kirby. Think for a second... Why would freakin' Meta Knight steal a chest containing cake!? Meta Knight counts too, mostly for deciding to fight Kirby instead of bothering to let him know that the chest contained the Monster of the Week. Kirby at least has the excuse of being childlike in his impulsiveness.
 * That goes for Dedede and Meta Knight in Kirby's Adventure - neither tells Kirby of the fact that taking the Star Rod will unleash Nightmare from his prison, though Meta Knight is implied to be preparing Kirby for the fight with Nightmare.
 * Wild Mass Guessing: We've got a whole page for it here.
 * Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds: Zero can't feel positive emotions and is jealous of Dreamland's happiness, reasoning that if it can't be happy, nothing will be. Due to this, some of the Kirby fandom sees Zero as a Draco in Leather Pants.
 * That goes for Dedede and Meta Knight in Kirby's Adventure - neither tells Kirby of the fact that taking the Star Rod will unleash Nightmare from his prison, though Meta Knight is implied to be preparing Kirby for the fight with Nightmare.
 * Wild Mass Guessing: We've got a whole page for it here.
 * Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds: Zero can't feel positive emotions and is jealous of Dreamland's happiness, reasoning that if it can't be happy, nothing will be. Due to this, some of the Kirby fandom sees Zero as a Draco in Leather Pants.