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Rabite

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Artwork of a rabite from Children of Mana

Rabites are rabbit-like monsters that appear in nearly every game of the Mana series, since their debut in Final Fantasy Adventure. Rabites are very common enemies, and are a mascot of the Mana series.

Biology

The rabite resembles a small rabbit with no legs, large ears that curve upward and form a point at the tip, and a round, puffy tail. Its English name is a portmanteau of "rabbit" and "bite", a reference to both its appearance and primary means of attack. Movement by the rabites is achieved by hopping along the ground by pushing up with the muscles on its underside, allowing it to move forward while propelling its body through the air. Though many aspects of its physiology remain unrevealed by Square Enix, its body appears to contain little to no bone structure, as evidenced by the extreme pliability of its stomach and mouth, which it is able to open quite widely. This theory is troublesome, however, as in the more recent games, the rabite tends to spew forth several bones from its body upon defeat, often more so than could logically be housed inside its small frame. One possible explanation could be that the bones come from an animal the rabite has recently devoured, or it could simply be a recycled death graphic that should not be taken literally. In the earlier games, the rabite, upon defeat, explodes in a colorful splash.

Despite their docile appearance, rabites can and most often will attack unprovoked. Their primary attack consists of lunging at an opponent, mouth agape, and biting down on them with their single, large tooth. They can be quickly defeated from a single hit. According to some of its other traits found in Secret of Mana, in the event it becomes too wounded to fight or if it faces a threat too large for it to handle, it will attempt to flee. If it becomes surrounded it will then cover its face in a last bid for mercy. In any game featuring a day-night cycle, rabites can be seen sleeping when it becomes dark rather than moving around screen, which would make them diurnal.

Colors

Screenshot of the Heroine fighting yellow rabites in Sword of Mana.

While the most common rabites are depicted as yellow, several other types exist, each one being different from the other in terms of strength.

White: In Legend of Mana all non-boss monsters in the game can be domesticated by the player. Domesticated monsters have a different color palette than their wild counterparts. The wild rabite in this game is white, while the domesticated rabite is yellow. The white rabite's strength depends on when their habitat becomes available to the player, but the yellow domesticated version's strength depends on how much battle experience the player has exposed them to. Both versions tend to have the same attacks, such as biting and a special attack that makes their opponents fall for the rabite's cuteness, decreasing their special attack power.

Pink: Also known as a "rabilion" in Trials of Mana, or as a "silktail" in Secret of Mana. Silktails are a stronger version of a rabite enemy. Unlike yellow rabites, the pink rabites rely on their ability to both attack and heal, using their ability to conjure minor restorative magic (the silktails in Secret of Mana also possess a sleep spell). They are much more aggressive than regular rabites, using jumping and leaping attacks and pursuing foes well after dark.

Lilac: Known as "king rabites" in Trials of Mana, the lilac version remains the strongest normally-found rabite, having much better attack and defensive power than its predecessors. Something of a rarity, these rabites make their home in the fabled Mana Holyland, a sacred place that houses the Mana Tree. They can summon rabites and rabilions to their aid, and they have a potent attack which pummels a foe with many tiny rabites.

Black: The black rabite's elusiveness is matched only by its immense power, and a player would have to go far out of their way to find one. First appearing in Trials of Mana, the black rabite is an optional boss character that wields powerful magic and has a staggering amount of health. The origin of this beast is unknown, but it has somehow come into possession of powerful mana that allows it to cast nearly every spell in the game, as well as summon equal-level monsters to its aid. The Black Rabite is seen in a hidden path inside the Dragon's Hole in Trials of Mana, not too far from the entrance.

The black rabite appears again as a result of an easter egg in Sword of Mana by killing 1000 normal rabites, thus allowing the player to "upgrade" any rabites encountered thereafter into their black counterparts. Although much more powerful physically than normal rabites, these black rabites lack the magic abilities of the one found in Trials of Mana.

Characters

While the rabite is most often seen as an enemy character, there are rare instances of using rabites to assist the player in the Mana series.

In Legend of Mana, a yellow rabite is one of the possible pets that the player can raise and subsequently use as a battle partner. After hatching from a Monster Egg, the rabite can be used in battle and leveled up just like a normal character, having its power increased in the process. While never really becoming a strong fighter, the rabite had a special ability called "HP Recovery" which increases the natural rate at which a player recovers hit points. This idea is later carried over to Seiken Densetsu: Friends of Mana.

In Dawn of Mana, a rabite named Rabini is the pet of the female lead character Ritzia, who took him in after he was abandoned by his family.

In the manga

A rabite also appeared in the Legend of Mana manga by Shiro Amano, as a dangerous and cuddly comic relief character and emergency food ration for the main hero.

Other appearances

  • In Final Fantasy X-2 there is an accessory called the Rabite's Foot (despite Rabites not having any feet), which increases the Luck statistic by 100 points. Its name is a play on "rabbit's foot" and also references how rabbit feet are considered by some to be a good-luck charm.
  • Statues of rabites appear outside of a shrine in SaGa Frontier (the player can also beat one in combat in the hidden ending of the game -when all scenarios are completed-).
  • Rabites appear in a small quote in Final Fantasy Tactics Advance, in which it is also stated that they are sometimes referred to as "the lucky rabbit". The quote is included in a summary of the mission "Poachers".
  • The webcomic Rabite Season chronicles the lives of several video game rabbits, one of which is a Jewish Rabite named Shem (he is of the pink "Silktail" variety).
  • In the Adobe Flash webcomic Secret of Mana Theater, the main character, Seth, is deathly afraid of rabites, having had a bad experience with them at the beginning of the comic.