Rayman



Rayman is a video game series created by Michel Ancel. Rayman is a strange, limbless individual of various origins, who fights to save the Glade of Dreams from a variety of antagonists.

The first game in the series, simply titled Rayman, is a 2D platformer, in which Rayman must defeat the evil Mr. Dark, a sinister individual who has stolen the Great Protoon. Along the way, Rayman must rescue the many Electoons, who have been held captive by Mr. Dark's minions.

The second game, Rayman 2: The Great Escape, is his first 3D title, and the most popular among fans. Darker and Edgier, although still wacky and cartoony, it features an evil group of sinister Robo-Pirates, lead by the Admiral Razorbeard, who enslave the people of the Glade of Dreams and split the Heart of the World - the planet's Primordial Core - into 1000 beads of light, the Yellow Lums. In order to defeat the pirates and restore the Heart of the World, Rayman must gather four legendary masks, which will summon Polokus, who created Rayman's world. This was followed by Rayman 2: Revolution, a Playstation 2 exclusive remake of Rayman 2, which made several significant changes to the level design and featured improved graphics.

The following game, Rayman M (Known as Rayman Arena in the US) was a multiplayer-focused game consisting of racing and battle segments. It introduced a few new characters but it didn't have a storyline.

The third game in the main series, Rayman 3: Hoodlum Havoc, was the first Rayman game without Michel Ancel, and featured a more detailed storyline involving Andre, a Black Lum, who seeks to use the power of the Heart of the World to spawn an army of Hoodlums, hooded Mooks shaped like potato sacks. This game was controversial for introducing a points system and a humorous (at times subversive) script. It also employed voices from well-known actors, including Jason Marsden, Billy West, and John Leguizamo.

There have also been several handheld adaptations and a Party Game spin-off series, Rayman Raving Rabbids, featuring Rayman's attempts to do battle in various Mini Games with a horde of bizarre rabbit-like creatures, which was very well received by the majority of critics. The Rabbids later spun off into their own franchise, breaking ties with Rayman and following its own agenda. A little-seen Rayman CGI TV Series was also made, but only lasted four episodes and was never finished due to lack of funding.

For a while it seemed like Rayman would be Ubisoft's answer to Nintendo's Mario, becoming its mascot. But recently, his status as the star was abandoned by the company, considering that 1.) Ancel moved away from the line-up after The Great Escape to work on other titles, such as Beyond Good and Evil, making the series lose its luster, 2.) the rabbids themselves stole Rayman's spotlight to the point that he's basically become a minor character, and 3.) the series was never popular enough to become a cash cow anyway.

However, after years of waiting for news on the state of the next 'proper' Rayman game, one was finally announced in the form of Rayman Origins. While originally intended to actually be a prequel of sorts to the series, it instead takes place sometime after Rayman 2 and combines plot and world elements from the first 2 games. The game follows Rayman and up to 3 friends (Globox and the Teensies) as they battle through a beautifully detailed 2D world in order to save the Glade of Dreams from the evil Darktoons who have invaded, in a throwback to the great 2D platformers of old. Oh, and the game was developed by series creator Michel Ancel in his return to the series after Rayman 2. Needless to say, the fandom rejoiced and so, in fact, did the critics, who gave the game rave reviews, with many calling it not only the best in the series, but one the best platformers of recent years. Even Yahtzee loved it.

If you were looking for the Rayman Raving Rabbids games that were originally a part of this series, see Raving Rabbids.


 * Adventure Couple - Rayman and Globox.
 * Arrow Cam - In Rayman 3, you've got the missile fist, and in Rayman Arena there's the Buzz Rocket weapon.
 * Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking:
 * According to The General in Rayman 2, the Grolgoth can kill, crush, destroy, torture, and pull ears.
 * In one area of Hoodlum Headquarters in Rayman 3, the lady's voice over the intercom warns the Hoodlums of the Leptys' sensitive nature, advising that they not drink in its presence and to avoid verifying the room temperature.
 * Auto Scrolling Level - A few, most notably in Blue Mountains.
 * Belated Backstory - Rayman's origin was treated as a mystery in Rayman 2's Omniscient, and is finally being explored in the aptly named Rayman Origins. From what was shown so far, it at least follows the revelation that Rayman was not a being Polukus dreamed up, and that Rayman is the only individual to receive powers from faries.
 * Benevolent Architecture - Floating rings and platforms that are uncannily useful, or objects/switches that coincidentally allow you to use them only with a specific power you happen to have acquired… yeah, this is in essentially every single game.
 * Bottomless Pits - In the original Rayman and Rayman 2. Averted in Rayman 3, in which falling off of a high ledge that looks like a bottomless pit tends to result in landing in an area that allows you in some way to make your way back to where you were. Heck, falling into a supposed bottomless pit is even required at one point in the game to avoid death.
 * Breaking the Fourth Wall - In Rayman 3.
 * Bubblegloop Swamp - There's at least one area like this in every game.
 * Camera Lock On: The 3D games.
 * Cloudcuckoolander: Globox. He's also quite stupid.
 * Collision Damage - Played straight in Rayman, and in Rayman 2 one type of Mook will charge towards you(surprisingly fast given their appearance) in order to squash you flat. Even more annoying in this game is that small creatures like ordinary-sized spiders and innocent-looking crabs will hurt you if you touch them. Luckily, they aren't encountered very often.
 * Color Coded for Your Convenience - Alternate skins in Rayman M when multiple players choose the same character, and of course the lums in almost every other game.
 * Convection Schmonvection - The fight with Mr. Skops in the first game. You can be hanging off a ledge with your feet dangling inches above the lava and not die. And there are entire levels in Rayman 2 and Rayman 3 that feature tons of lava and overall scorched settings... the only hint that there's heat rising at all is that in Rayman Revolution you're allowed to keep your flying power indefinitely as long as you're over lava, in which the rising heat could help you stay airborne.
 * Cool Clear Water - Starting in Rayman 2, Rayman is able to swim in clear, "clean" water, but ugly water kills or damages him.
 * Cowardly Sidekick - Globox.
 * Cranium Ride - In Rayman and Rayman 2, knocking a plum onto the heads of certain Mooks allowed you to jump onto their heads in order to reach otherwise unreachable areas and items.
 * Critical Existence Failure - Every single game. What's funny here is how crazy Rayman's deaths tend to be, ranging from him turning into Antitoons and flying away to him disappearing into glowing balls.
 * Down the Drain - Both Rayman 2 and Rayman 3 had underwater levels.
 * Defeat Means Friendship - In the original Rayman, Bzzit begins to cry after being defeated by Rayman. Rayman then consoles his opponent and befriends him, and proceeds to ride the mosquito right in the next stage. (No relation to Moskito, a Palette Swap of Bzzit who tries to kill Rayman a few stages later.)
 * Floating Platforms - They're everywhere, and in all sorts of different varieties.
 * Follow the Money - In the first game tings are almost always a dead giveaway to bonus powers and secret areas that feature the Magician's hat or hidden Electoon Cages; in general, if you see a ting, it means that you can find something good if you go to it. Lots of these even form paths or arrows, while some go as far to write out 'YES' or 'NO' in some levels to indicate whether you're going the right way or not. In the second and third games, Lums tend to be scattered around paths that you need to follow to progress in the level.
 * Four Episode Wonder - The series had a very little-known TV show that did not last long.
 * Fungus Humongous - A repeating element in the series.
 * Gang Plank Galleon
 * Grimy Water - Many levels in Rayman 2 and Rayman 3 have several variations of this. Pretty much all water encountered in the first Rayman qualifies, as well.
 * Hammerspace - Where else could Rayman stash all of those lums he's running around collecting? And don't forget tings in the first game. Oh, and how about Rayman 2's raindance mask and elixir of life? He pulls them out of nowhere; he doesn't even have a Bag of Holding for an excuse.
 * Helicopter Hair
 * Heli Critter - Rayman himself, using his hair.
 * Heterosexual Life Partners - Rayman and Globox, who, if what we can tell of Origins' plot, have pretty much been best buds forever.
 * Humongous Mecha - The Grolgoth in Rayman 2, Celoché in Rayman 3.
 * Idle Animation - Each game has this to some extent. Besides Rayman in the first and second games, all characters in Rayman Arena have a unique animation if they're left idle. Globox has his own idle animations in Rayman 3 as well.
 * Laughably Evil - Pretty much every Mook in the series could be classified as this, though it is most notable in the first game.
 * Lava Pit - Tons of 'em...
 * Lethal Lava Land - If the names 'Sanctuary of Rock and Lava' or 'Sanctuary of Stone and Fire' aren't a dead giveaway, there's something wrong with you.
 * Also, the Hoodlum Headquarters in Rayman 3, combined with Eternal Engine. The voice over the intercom even states, in a rather sultry voice, "Interior temperature: 98.6 degrees and rising" - the Foundry itself is built entirely over a lava pool!
 * Levitating Lotus Position: Ly from Rayman 2 does the floating variation of the Lotus Position.
 * Life Meter - All of them.
 * Malevolent Architecture - Especially in Razoff's mansion in Rayman 3... and the Tower of Leptys. You know what, scratch that, there are tons of places with this everywhere.
 * Mercy Invincibility - Unmercifully short compared to other games, and in the first game it tends to push you into something that's going to kill you anyways.
 * Mind Screw - In Rayman: Raving Rabbids, if you wear the disco outfit, you can clearly see knees in the pants, even though Rayman has no legs. This hints that he might have limbs after all, but they're just invisible. But then again, if he does have invisible legs, then why did he need a
 * And then the US marketing for Rayman 3 hints toward him having a penis, especially the magazine ad.
 * Mini Game - In Rayman Revolution, collecting enough Familiar Spirits will unlock a multitude of mini-games, which will increase Rayman's health bar upon winning. In Rayman 3, miscellaneous assortments of short, single-player minigames are rewards for achieving higher scores. Rayman Raving Rabbids is completely comprised of mini games.
 * A cheat code in the original Rayman started a Breakout-style minigame.
 * Multiple Choice Past - Rayman has always lived in a valley populated by other limbless beings and creatures, and his lack of limbs is completely normal.
 * No, he was first found by fishermen, washed-up on the coast of the Sea of Lums.
 * No, he was woven by the nymphs from the magnificent moonbeams of the second summer solstice.
 * No, he was a 10-year old boy named Jimmy who was sucked into his computer. Wait... forget that one.
 * Our Fairies Are Different - Rayman's world has practically become the universal meeting place of every single freakin' type of fairy ever heard about.
 * Plot Coupon - Electoon cages in Rayman and the four masks of Polokus in Rayman 2.
 * Power Fist - Golden Fist in Rayman 1 and 2; Heavy Metal Fist in Rayman 3.
 * Raymanian Limbs - The Trope Namer.
 * Ribcage Ridge - The Cave of Bad Dreams in Rayman 2, and the Desert of the Knaaren in Rayman 3.
 * Rise to The Challenge - In Rayman, Rayman 2, and Rayman 3.
 * Rocket Punch - Well, it's Rayman's standard attack. It isn't used in Rayman 2 or Rayman Arena, but returns from the first game in Rayman 3.
 * Sentient Phlebotinum - The lums. They're glowing orbs of energy with enough intelligence to float towards you. The Backstory in Rayman 2 reveals that
 * Sliding Scale of Silliness Versus Seriousness - Overall it's closer to the silliness end, but it's also got elements of seriousness in it— especially in Rayman 2.
 * Slippy Slidey Ice World - One part of a Blue Mountains level in Rayman features slippery rocks slicked over with icy snow, part of 'The Sanctuary of Water and Ice' in Rayman 2, and The Summit Beyond the Clouds in Rayman 3 is completely covered by snow and ice.
 * Band Land from Rayman has slippy, slidey musical staff bars. Later on, Picture City features a few slippy, slidey erasers covered in ink.
 * Sound-Coded for Your Convenience - Especially important in the first game, where a very short, specific sound indicates that you triggered something to appear. It's also possible to recognize what kind of enemy is just off-screen with this, since some of them make specific sounds when they idle or initiate an attack, like the hunters and zooming antitoons. And in Rayman 3, different types of hoodlums have varying voice files that you can learn to instantly differentiate between the different types without looking at the hoodlum themselves too closely.
 * Sphere Eyes
 * Super Title 64 Advance: Rayman Advance (The original game on Game Boy Advance), Rayman DS (Rayman 2 for... well, you know.), and Rayman 3D (actually a second port of Rayman 2. Guess which console).
 * Temple of Doom - Several levels in all of the games have temple themed levels. Rayman 2 even focuses on this.
 * The Chosen One
 * The Wiki Rule - RayWiki, the Rayman wiki.
 * Utopia - When it's not under some sort of attack, Rayman's world is this.
 * This is explained in several ways, such as The Great Protoon causing balance and harmony to the world, and all evil dreams (part of the series' fictional mythology) being locked away in The Cave of Bad Dreams.
 * Wackyland - The series is full of this, especially the first game.


 * White Gloves - In Rayman's case, it may or may not actually be White Hands, seeing as he doesn't have any opening to get the gloves on or off... then again, some of the alternate costumes in Rayman Raving Rabbids features him with differently-colored gloves, and a few of the fingerless ones imply that he has skin underneath them. But try not to think about it too hard...
 * WTF Series
 * Womb Level - The Organic Cave in the GBA version of Rayman Raving Rabbids. The same location was planned to appear in Rayman 4...
 * And it has recently been announced that Rayman Origins will have a bonus level that takes place inside the stomach of a dragon.

Rayman provides examples of:
""You're doomed, Rayman...""
 * Abnormal Ammo - The hunter enemies shoot bullets at you—out of which a mechanical arm wielding a wooden mallet swings at Rayman's head as it passes by.
 * Advancing Wall of Doom - Mr. Stone, Mr. Sax, and Moskito (with a giant spiky fruit) all have this type of level.
 * All There in the Manual - the PC version of the game doesn't state anywhere that Moskito is not the same character as Bzzit. Considering Mr. Stone and Space Mama also appear in two different levels, the common assumption is that the two identical looking insects are in fact the same.
 * A Winner Is You - The ending to this game consists of . A wonderful reward considering how much bloodshed is involved in GETTING to the ending.
 * Band Land (the Trope Namer)
 * Bonus Stage - If you find the Magician in a level, you can pay him ten Tings to enter the bonus stage.
 * Boss Rush - The final boss fight consists of defeating three different fusions of previous bosses.
 * But then there's Picture City and Space Mama...
 * Book Ends: Y'know the mosquito that served as the first boss?, yeah, he's the final segment of the final boss rush.
 * Canon Dis Continuity - This game seems to have little if anything to do with the other games. In particular, most of the characters from this game (in fact, all of them apart from Rayman) never show up again. Even the Electoons and the Great Protoon are never seen or even mentioned in any game but this one. Anti-Toons and Bzzit appear a few times in Rayman 2, but it's more of a Mythology Gag than anything.
 * Broad Strokes: Rayman Origins is a prequel, but there are a few differences in backstory and character designs.
 * As of Rayman Origins Moskito, Betilla the Fairy, and Mr. Dark not only appear again but Moskito even has own levels!
 * Card-Carrying Villain: - Mr. Dark.
 * Defeat Means Friendship - The level after you beat Bzzit requires you to cooperate with him.
 * Difficulty Spike: The Dream Forest is very generous with its powerups, and not Everything Is Trying to Kill You. As noted below, however, Band Land starts with the Bongo Hills, a six-part level with some freakishly Malevolent Architecture (most notably tons and tons of barbed musical notes).
 * And again when you hit Picture City.
 * Doomy Dooms of Doom: Mr Dark's one and only line;


 * Eleventh Hour Superpower - it's easy to miss, but in the final fight you retain your golden fist even when you die.
 * Everything Trying to Kill You - Giant mosquitoes and crickets? Check. Pointy shards of rock with eyes that fly towards Rayman if he crosses their line of vision? Check. Music notes and giant drumsticks? Thumbtacks and pencils? The game is full of this.
 * Evil Counterpart - The Antitoons to the Electoons, and possibly also Bad/Dark Rayman to Rayman himself.
 * Frickin' Laser Beams - Space Mama and her dreaded rolling pin the second time you fight her. Also one of the parts in the Final Boss Rush, which is even worse since it's a Dual Boss.
 * Gimmick Level
 * Heal Thyself - The red 'Powers.'
 * Hit Points - Defaulted as three, but can be temporarily increased to five with power-up that lasts until you die.
 * In the D Si edition (not sure of Rayman Advance), the default is six and can be increased to ten. You'll need it.
 * Hundred Percent Completion - Required in order to enter the final level.
 * Incredibly Lame Pun/Punny Name - The "Electoons" that orbit the Great "Protoon" and whose evil counterparts are called "Antitoons". Okay, that last one is less obvious (it's most likely a reference to anti-matter, though "anti-electrons" are more commonly called positrons), but still...
 * Interface Screw - Halfway through the final level, Mr. Dark reverses Rayman's controls, and then forces him to run constantly.
 * Instant Win Condition - Reaching a sign and initiating the victory jingle will stop incoming attacks or hazards like rising water or lava, enemies or bosses chasing you, or airborne attacks of any variety. And if you grab the last ting in a bonus stage, you'll win even if you jumped off a cliff to get it.
 * Large Ham - "The Electoons, who used to gravitate around it, lose their NAT-ural stability and scatter ALL OVER THE WORRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRLD!! "
 * Troublesome, isn't it?
 * And untidy, too.
 * Last Lousy Point - in order to reach the last level, you need to find every single cage in each level. Frequently you'll have only two or three after passing the level for the first time, and only five after a thorough search. Time for an even more thorough search.
 * Law of One Hundred - Tings.
 * Level Ate - Candy Chateau.
 * Marathon Boss - the final boss.
 * Marathon Level - Nearly all of the levels have multiple segments of varying lengths, but some of them are notorious for being extremely difficult and long compared to the the others. Eat At Joe's and Bongo Hills are infamous for this.
 * Meaningless Lives - Surprisingly averted, even though the game uses both saving and extra lives. Playing from a saved game won't reset the lives scattered around the levels; the ones you've taken aren't respawned. The only way to get more lives if you've already picked up all the physical 1Ups is to collect 100 tings in a row without dying. Oh, and you only get 5 continues per game. When you use them up, you can't get them back, period. Given the overall difficulty of the game, it's easily possible for a player to use up every life and continue they have in some levels, most commonly at "Bongo Hills" or "Eat At Joe's."
 * Mirror Match - Dark Rayman in the last level, though you don't have to fight him. He copies everything you do, and touching him causes both of you to die instantly. The only way to win is to
 * Misguided Missile - An interesting form of this is used in the fight against Mr. Skops.
 * Muzzle Flashlight - The first stage of the level "Eat At Joe's" involves using a magical firefly attached to your fist to light up a small area around wherever Rayman's fist happens to be at the time. Since Rayman shoots out his fist as a projectile to attack, it's quite possible to throw a punch and learn more about the surrounding area by watching its path. Note that since the light follows the fist, however, you won't be able to see Rayman himself until the fist returns to him a moment later—which can cause a lot of accidental deaths if you're not paying attention.
 * New Powers As the Plot Demands - In one level, you are given a magic seed that lets you grow plants to use as platforms. Also featured is magic potion that lets you fly indefinitely, only seen for four level segments in the entire game. And the first part of the dreaded "Eat at Joe's" gives you a magic firefly.
 * New World Tease - Twilight Gulch, if you don't have the grabbing power yet.
 * Nintendo Hard - Just try to play through the entire game without ever using up a continue or getting a game over. Even with dozens of one-ups all over the place.
 * Hell even the easiest version of the game, the Game Boy Advance, port of the game is still plenty hard, it still doesn't feel as if there was a drop in difficulty even in that version.
 * One Up - In the form of Rayman-shaped trophies... and by collecting 100 tings.
 * Palette Swap - In some versions of the game, Moskito and Bzzit look identical other than their colors. But in other versions they look completely identical. Naturally, this has led to some confusion and some players have believed them to be the same character. They're not.
 * Pixel Hunt - Just TRY to find all of the Electoon cages by yourself.
 * Especially nerve wracking since half the time they appear out of thin air.
 * Rise to The Challenge - There are at least two levels where you have to go up and up to avoid rapidly rising water, and the first part of the Mr. Skops boss battle does a rather similar thing with lava.
 * Selective Gravity - Tings and miscellaneous power-up items found in the game are a perfect example of this. Also, the floating rings.
 * Actually, many of those rings have small wings keeping them afloat.....Though some flap them and some don't......
 * Super Drowning Skills - Falling into water—heck, even touching the surface of any body of water—instantly causes Rayman to sink under the surface and drown.
 * Temporary Platform - A variety of them, including rocks, plants, pencil sharpeners, and clouds.
 * The Unfought -

Rayman M provides examples of:

 * Go Karting With Bowser
 * Leitmotif - Each character has their own theme.
 * Market-Based Title - The US version is known as Rayman Arena and the Play Station version as Rayman Rush.
 * Variable Mix - In the race modes, the music playing changes depending on who is in the lead. It is generally in your interests to stay in first as long as possible, since the songs get continually better as they go on.
 * Viewers are Morons - The title was changed to Rayman Arena in the US because they were afraid people would mistake the M for the Mature rating...even though the game has an Everyone rating.

Rayman 3: Hoodlum Havoc provides examples of:
"" This manual just blows my mind. It explains that switches trigger mechanisms. Duh. Oh Geez, who's responsible for this garbage?""
 * Abhorrent Admirer - Begoniax the witch is one to Razoff.
 * Ambiguously Gay - Globox. He is attracted to the other sex, though (demonstrated in "The Hoodlums get organized", where he wants to meet whoever's behind the intercom.), and he does have 650 children.
 * All There in the Manual - Referenced in-game near the beginning, where Murfy actually takes out a manual to the game and reads from it in order to tell Rayman what to do next. (Yet the real manual for the game doesn't actually say anything that Murfy read.)
 * Book Ends - The game begins with Rayman and Globox taking a nap as black lums swarm over the land. The game ends with Rayman and Globox settling down for a nap, during which Rayman's hands wander off to scare a red lum into becoming Andre.
 * Bottomless Pit Rescue Service - The Teensie Highways, in which a Teensie in a helicopter is shown to be carrying Globox, who catches Rayman and drops him off at a checkpoint if he falls off. Also, in one particular boss fight, falling off of one of the narrow pathways results in one of the long-necked creatures trapped in the dungeon down below lifting Rayman up and placing him back onto the path.
 * Breaking the Fourth Wall - Most of the characters stick to the script, but Murfy completely avoids it, and Globox is guilty of it on the occasion too. Examples: "It's only a video game, it's only a video game..." "You were nicer in Rayman 2." "We're gonna be rated PG-13!" "Quit it, the manual says you're my best friend!" "Just 'cause you're on TV doesn't mean you have to show off!"
 * The manual breaks the fourth wall too, both by being there in the first place and by what it says.
 * Murfy also says "See you in Rayman 4!" which may also classify as a What Could Have Been
 * Bunny Ears Lawyer - All of the doctors.
 * Chasing Your Tail - The fight with the witch around the cauldron in the Bog of Murk.
 * Colossus Climb - The final boss fight does this in one phase.
 * Color Coded for Your Convenience - In trailer cinematics and box art, using the power-ups only changes the appearance of Rayman's fists in a way that would be reasonable for the power-up itself (spikes, missile launcher, lockjaw, etc). In-game, however, picking up any power-up will also give Rayman a differently-colored appearance to more easily show to the player which power-up they're currently using. This is Lampshaded when Globox scolds Rayman for 'dressing up in silly costumes' in several parts throughout the game.
 * Create Your Own Villain -.
 * Crosshair Aware - Some parts of the fight with Razoff have you looking through Razoff's crosshair while he's trying to shoot at Rayman.
 * Deadpan Snarker: Murphy plays this role in the first level.
 * Deadpan Snarker: Murphy plays this role in the first level.


 * Disney Acid Sequence - The interactive transitions between worlds: you skate on colorful beams of light, surrounded by '70s LSD imagery.
 * The Dragon - Reflux.
 * Elaborate Underground Base - The Hoodlum factory area.
 * Every Ten Thousand Points - Unlocks bonus Mini Games.
 * Evil Tower of Ominousness - The Tower of Leptys.
 * Fate Worse Than Death - What happens to those that reject Begoniax' love.
 * Gainax Ending
 * Getting Crap Past the Radar - There are some very...suggestive...jokes in this game, it's quite surprising that this got an Everyone rating instead of a Teen rating. Also, plum juice acts as alcohol, as mentioned below.
 * Hunting the Most Dangerous Game - Razoff's Mansion in the Bog of Murk.
 * Hover Board - In the Teensie Highways.
 * I Can't Believe It's Not Heroin! - Plum juice and Globox's reactions to it. Also counts as Getting Crap Past the Radar, since he clearly gets drunk off it.
 * Invincible Minor Minion - The Knaaren.
 * Killed Off for Real: In the final boss fight, likely Reflux.
 * Knight of Cerebus: Reflux can give off this vibe, being perhaps the only character to have no humorous quirks.
 * Lava Is Boiling Kool Aid
 * Level Up Fill Up - Whenever you fill up a medallion for freeing the Teensies found in six different cages, Rayman's health bar is increased and fully replenished.
 * Lighter and Softer - The environments and atmosphere still resemble Rayman 2, but more comedic, and there are still the Zombie Chickens...
 * Mascot Mook: The Hoodmongers, medium-sized hoodlums with large hats and large guns.
 * Mister Seahorse - It doesn't actually happen, but Globox dreams it. "It was great! I craved strawberries!"
 * My Dad Can Beat Up Your Dad - One of several rather entertaining arguments Knaaren can be heard having.
 * New Age Retro Hippie - Roméo Patti, the second Teensie Doctor.
 * Off-Model - Rayman is horribly off-model in the USA commercial. His torso looks like a flippin' DRESS the way it's shaped, and his eyes look different, especially when he squints his eyes. (Here is a link to an HD upload of it if you want to see the torso better)
 * The magazine ad (which also involved a pee joke, because Ubisoft's US marketing team seemed to have been obsessed with pee) has a better-looking model, in which only the face is off-model. Other than that, everything else seems to be on-model.
 * One-Winged Angel: Reflux during the final boss fight.
 * Only Idiots May Pass - Defeating an enemy with a $ symbol over its head causes a reusable power-up to appear somewhere in the general area. Sometimes, however, it is instead a smaller version of one of Rayman's shoes obscured by the power-up's typical glow; unless you'd already gone through the whole thing before, chances are you'd just take it for granted that it's a power-up and run into it. This ends up in a rather interesting, off-to-the-side surprise gameplay sequence, which upon completing will provide you with a real power-up. Thing is, if you are paranoid or clever enough to spot the difference without double-checking, you'll still have to fall for it in order to get the real power-up item, which is typically required in order to move on.
 * Rewarding Vandalism - You can break random wooden piggy banks around the levels to find gems or lums. Why someone would leave hundreds of wooden piggy banks filled with their precious belongings lying around in plain sight is another thing entirely...
 * Sequel Snark: Murfy leaves saying that he'll see us in Rayman 4. As of this writing, there has not been a game titled Rayman 4, or, indeed, any true sequel to Rayman 3.
 * Shout Out - While attempting to open the doors, Globox can be heard calling out "Klaatu barada nikto!"
 * He spouts off quite a few others if you stick around and listen for long enough. "Mirror, mirror, on the wall... nah, that won't work." "Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious!" and "Bibbidi bobbidi boo!" are particularly noteworthy.
 * Another of Globox's lines is 'Cthulhu alech fhtagn!', which has some serious mythological implications for Rayman's world...
 * And how about the countless references to Spider-Man, Star Wars, and other popular franchises courtesy of Murfy and Globox?
 * Razoff, the person that hunts you in his mansion, is Zaroff with the R and Z switched.
 * Super Not-Drowning Skills - Which is kind of a funny progression if you think about it: Rayman had Super Drowning Skills, Rayman 2 gave him the ability to swim but the Oxygen Meter still made it possible for him to drown, and now in Rayman 3 he doesn't drown at all (in normal water, anyway).
 * Suspicious Videogame Generosity - If André's constant conversations to Reflux at the end of the Tower of Leptys wasn't enough of a giveaway, the oodles of Red Lums broken out of piggy banks on the way up the staircase ought to have been some kind of indication that Rayman was about to encounter something likely to inflict large amounts of pain.
 * The Power of Rock - The doctors use this to 'cure' Globox (since André can't stand music).
 * Things Man Was Not Meant to Know - Weaponized. Andre somehow learned something that utterly corrupted him. He captures others and whispers it to them, then lets them whisper it to others, like an intellectual Zombie Apocalypse. It'd be horrific if the entire game weren't Played for Laughs.
 * Too Dumb to Live - Globox falls into a trap in Hoodlum Headquarters because he mistakes a badly-drawn cardboard cutout of a female Glute in a bikini to be the real thing.
 * Tripod Terror - Céloche, the mechanical tripod boss in the Land of the Livid Dead.
 * Tuxedo and Martini - Parodied in one of the "Wanna Kick Rayman" videos.
 * Twist Ending -  Holy shit!
 * Not
 * Underwater Boss Battle - Céloche in the Land of the Livid Dead.
 * Video Game Cruelty Potential - You can punch Globox when he's following you around. This results in some rather entertaining otherwise-unheard quotes by both him and André (while he's inside of Globox).
 * There are also turtles in the first level of the game that you can kick around, to which they protest loudly. They reappear in the Land of the Livid Dead, except this time you can pick them up and throw them too.
 * Villain Opening Scene
 * Yellow Snow - The USA commercial is all about this. However, it leaves one to wonder exactly how Rayman's bladder was able to store such a large amount of urine inside it...