Ghosts (Pac-Man)

Ghosts
'Pac-Man' characters

Pac-Man title screen featuring the ghosts and their names. Below is their appearance when they are edible.
First game Pac-Man (1980)
Created by Namco

The Ghosts are the recurring antagonists in the Pac-Man franchise.

History

The enemies in Pac-Man are known variously as "ghosts," "goblins," and "monsters".[1][2][3] Despite the seemingly random nature of the enemies, their movements are strictly deterministic, which players have used to their advantage. In an interview, creator Toru Iwatani stated that he had designed each enemy with its own distinct personality in order to keep the game from becoming impossibly difficult or boring to play.[4] More recently, Iwatani described the enemy behaviors in more detail at the 2011 Game Developers Conference. He stated that the red enemy chases Pac-Man, and the pink and blue enemies try to position themselves in front of Pac-Man's mouth.[5] Although he claimed that the orange enemy's behavior is random, a careful analysis of the game's code reveals that it actually chases Pac-Man most of the time, but also moves toward the lower-left corner of the maze when it gets too close to Pac-Man.

Cartoons

In the Pac-Man cartoon, with the male Ghost Monsters wearing various styles of hats and partnered with Sue (who wore earrings), the Ghost Monsters work for Mezmaron who assigns them the job of finding the Power Pellet Forest. Just as Pac-Man could "chomp" the Ghost Monsters to devour their "suits" after gulping down a power pellet and thusly turning the Ghost Monsters blue — with their disembodied "eyes" floating back to Mezmaron's lair — the Ghost Monsters themselves, whenever Pac-Man hadn't been able to consume a power pellet for a time, could likewise "chomp" Pac-Man to defeat him. The episodes "Chomp-Out at the O.K. Corral" and "The Greatest Show in Pacland" featured the Ghost Monsters' 3-year-old cousin named Dinky who was bratty, which greatly annoyed all the male ghost monsters.

In the 2013 TV series Pac-Man and the Ghostly Adventures, the four Ghosts come from the Netherworld. Though they are ruled by Lord Betrayus, they are actually good-natured spirits and often supply Pac-Man with information about Lord Betrayus' plots, while ensuring Betrayus doesn't catch them in the act. It is also suggested that they could be reunited with their bodies and brought back to life, though their 'living' forms are unknown. There were also some Ghosts that were exclusive to the TV series like Cyclops Ghosts (a race of heavyset, horned Ghosts with one eye), Fire Ghosts (a race of orange Ghosts who can emit fire from their body), Tentacle Ghosts (a race of 4-eyed purple-black Ghosts who look similar to jellyfish), Guardian Ghosts (a race of large Ghosts who guard the Netherworld), and Aqua Ghosts (a race of light blue Ghosts with fins on their head).

Known Ghosts

Below is the description of each Ghost.[6]

Enemy Color Original Puck Man[7] American Pac-Man
Character (Personality) Translation Nickname Translation Alternate
Character
Alternate
Nickname
Character (Personality) Nickname
Red Oikake (追いかけ) Chaser Akabei (赤ベイ) Red guy Urchin Macky Shadow Blinky
Pink Machibuse (待ち伏せ) Ambusher Pinky (ピンキー) Pink guy Romp Micky Speedy Pinky
Cyan Kimagure (気まぐれ) Fickle Aosuke (青助) Blue guy Stylist Mucky Bashful Inky
Orange Otoboke (お惚け) Feigning Ignorance Guzuta (愚図た) Slow guy Crybaby Mocky Pokey Clyde

Blinky

Blinky is a Red Ghost that is Bad-Tempered and Bossy. In the Pac-Man World games, this ghost is instead Clyde.

In the Pac-Man cartoon, Blinky (voiced by Chuck McCann) is slow-witted and cowardly with grammar problems.

In Pac-Man and the Ghostly Adventures, Blinky (voiced by Ian James Corlett in the TV series and by Lucien Dodge in the video game) is the default leader of the Ghost Gang Family and tends to help the winning side.

Blinky receives a speed boost after a number of pac-pellets have been cleared. This mode has been informally referred to as "Cruise Elroy".[6][8]

Inky

Inky is a Cyan Ghost that is Goofy, Shy, and Unpredictable.

In the Pac-Man cartoon, Inky (voiced by Barry Gordon) is depicted as dim and loony.

In Pac-Man and the Ghostly Adventures, Inky (voiced by Lee Tockar in the TV series and by Bryce Papenbrook in the video game) is the youngest member. Though the smartest, he lacks focus most of the time.

In Pac-Man, Inky likes to appear in front of Pac-Man's face.

Pinky

Pinky is a Pink Ghost that is Mischievous, Persistent, and Tricky.

In the Pac-Man cartoon, Pinky (voiced by Chuck McCann) is depicted as male dimwitted shape shifter.

In recent games, and Pac-Man and the Ghostly Adventures, Pinky (voiced by Ashleigh Ball in the TV series and by Julie Kliewer in the video game) is depicted as a female with a crush on Pac-Man, which often puts her at odds with Cylindria.

Also, in a video game 'PAC-MAN PARTY', Pinky seems to have eyelashes which means she is a girl, unlike the cartoon series.

Clyde

Clyde is an Orange Ghost that is Ignorant and Goofy. In Ms. Pac-Man, this ghost is named Sue, and in Jr. Pac-Man, this ghost is named Tim.

In the animated series, Clyde (voiced by Neil Ross) is the leader of the group.

In recent games and Pac-Man and the Ghostly Adventures, Clyde (voiced by Brian Drummond in the TV series and by Orion Acaba in the video game) is depicted as a large ghost who is simple, but not unintelligent and has an appetite equal to Pac-Man's. He lacks the devious natures of his brothers and sister and is considerate towards others.

In the Pac-Man World games, Clyde and Blinky's roles are reversed.

Other Ghosts

With the release of further Pac-Man games, more ghosts have been added.

Kinky

Kinky is a yellow Ghost that only appeared in Pac-Man Arrangement. He is also called Kinzo. Kinky is the scientist of the Ghosts who has the ability to combine with other Ghosts. When he combines with Clyde (note: in Pac-Man Arrangement, Clyde was the red ghost and Blinky was orange), Kinky becomes a bull-like ghost named Urchin that can charge after Pac-Man. When he combines with Inky, Kinky's glasses appear on Inky's body and grant this new combined ghost (named Stylist) the ability to split in two. Stylist's reflection will mirror Stylist's movements on the other half of the map (about the vertical axis). When Kinky combines with Pinky, the resulting ghost is rabbit-like and named Romp. Romp can hop to any part of the map, usually very close to Pac-Man's position. The combination of Kinky and Blinky (who is orange in Pac-Man Arrangement) results in Crybaby, a chubbier version of Blinky who adds 20-point Pac-Dots to the maze.

Orson

Orson is a greenish-gray intellectual Ghost who has reformed and is now an ally of Pac-Man.

Spooky

Spooky is a dark gray Ghost in gray armor that is the King of the Ghosts in ancient times until he was sealed under Pac-Ville's largest tree by Sir Pac-A-Lot.

Funky

Funky is a jumping green Ghost that debuted in Pac-Mania. He has an interest in Sue.

Spunky

A jumping iron gray Ghost that debuted in Pac-Mania. She is a counterpart of Funky.

Sue

Sue is a female Ghost who assumes Clyde's role as the orange ghost in Ms. Pac-Man. In later Pac-Man games, Sue is a violet Ghost.

In the Pac-Man series, Sue (voiced by Susan Silo) is featured as Clyde's second-in-command.

Tim

Tim is an orange Ghost that appeared exclusively as Clyde's replacement in Jr. Pac-Man.

Yum-Yum

Yum-Yum is a female red Ghost that debuted in Jr. Pac-Man. She is a relative of Blinky and has a romantic relationship with Jr. Pac-Man. Yum-Yum appears exclusively in Jr. Pac-Man's cutscenes.

In other media

References

  1. Pac-Man, The Arcade Flyer Archive, 1980, retrieved May 23, 2012
  2. "What is Pacman?". Pacman.com. Namco. Archived from the original on 2010-11-28. Retrieved July 14, 2010.
  3. Martijn Müller (June 3, 2010). "Pac-Man wereldrecord beklonken en het hele verhaal" (in Dutch). NG-Gamer.
  4. Mateas, Michael (2003). "Expressive AI: Games and Artificial Intelligence" (PDF). Proceedings of Level Up: Digital Games Research Conference, Utrecht, Netherlands.
  5. "News Headlines". Cnbc.com. March 3, 2011. Retrieved 2012-05-22.
  6. 6.0 6.1 Ashley Davis. "Blinky, Inky, Pinky, and Clyde: A small onomastic study". Destructoid.
  7. DeMaria, Rusel & Wilson, Johnny L. (December 18, 2003). High Score!: The Illustrated History of Electronic Games (2nd ed.). McGraw-Hill Osborne Media. ISBN 0-07-222428-2.
  8. "Monster Characters".