Salmonid
The Salmonids are a species of amphibious salmon and the main antagonists and enemies of the Salmon Run mode in Splatoon 2 and Splatoon 3. Their main ink color is dark green in Splatoon 2 and dark teal in Splatoon 3.
Biology and culture
Lesser Salmonids and Boss Salmonids are members of the same species. What appearance young Salmonids will reach in maturity is determined by the environment they are raised in. Those who are raised in a harsher environment become Boss Salmonids. Steelheads and Maws have bigger bodies, while Scrappers and Steel Eels have higher intelligence. Some Boss Salmonids, such as Flyfish and Fish Sticks, consist of Lesser Salmonids that have gone through specific training.
Salmonids regularly return in large numbers from their habitat to where they spawned,[1] with the young ones doing so in order to mature,[2] a behavior called a Salmon Run. For them, music signifies the start of such runs, and they play it to raise morale. The best performers from a tribe form a band of three to five members,[3] and bands that are perceived as the very best earn the title "Omega".[4] One such band, ω-3, is a notable Salmonid band whose music plays throughout runs. Additionally, the Smallfry comprising Fish Sticks sing an encouraging chant during runs.
Many Salmonids use cooking utensils as weapons during battle: Chums and Cohocks use frying pans, Smallfry use spoons, Grillers are charcoal grills, Stingers use a stack of cooking pots, Flyfish and Chinooks use beverage coolers, and Slammin' Lids use pot lids and soup ladles. Salmonids are an honorable clan; fighting for their clan's pride is seen as an important value. They take care to keep their weapons in great shape. Their frying pans, as well as other weapons they wield, are passed down from generation to generation.[5] Unlike Inklings, Salmonids do not have personal names; instead, individuals are referred to with titles based on what their tribes are known for.[3]
In a developer interview,[6] it was revealed that the Salmonids' choice of weapons is due to them trying to make themselves look "tasty". It was also explained that the Salmonids are not afraid of dying and regard their death to be a cycle of life of which all life is a part. Grillers are said to be the ultimate way of doing so by the Salmonids becoming the contents of the Griller. When the Salmonids fight to the death, they feel a sense of unity with themselves and the world. When they are eaten by other creatures, they see their death as a way of being one with the world. There are also floating food-based sculptures in the background of Salmon Run stages, which were built by the Salmonids to symbolize these beliefs.
The Salmonids and the Octarians have a trade agreement with each other, in which the Salmonids provide Power Eggs used as energy sources in exchange for Octarian weapons and machinery[6][7] such as Gushers and the vehicles of Slammin' Lids.[8] However, the Salmonids do not trade their Golden Eggs as they consider them too precious.[7]
In rare cases where young Smallfry are separated from their schools, their appetites increase drastically as they attempt to return to their original schools' waters.[2] In Splatoon 3's single-player mode Return of the Mammalians, the player character Agent 3 is accompanied by a particular Smallfry that is implied to have been separated from its school and has seemingly traveled alongside Agent 3 for some time, developing a friendly relationship with them.
Types of Salmonid
Lesser Salmonids
Boss Salmonids
- Steelhead
- Steel Eel
- Scrapper
- Stinger
- Maws
- Drizzler
- Flyfish
- Fish Stick
- Flipper-Flopper
- Slammin' Lid
- Big Shot
Known Occurrence-specific Salmonids
King Salmonids
Gallery
Lesser Salmonids
Boss Salmonids
Occurrence-specific Salmonids
Other
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Size comparison of every type of Salmonid (excluding Horrorboros and Megalodontia).
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Renders of every type of Salmonid in Splatoon 2.
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The first King Salmonid revealed, Cohozuna.
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The second King Salmonid revealed, Horrorboros.
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The third King Salmonid revealed, Megalodontia .
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Chums, one of the types of Salmonid.
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Official artwork of a crew of Inklings and Salmonids.
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A group of Salmonids together in Splatoon 2.
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Lesser Salmonids leaving the water.
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The Steelhead, Stinger, and Steel Eel in the Splatoon 2 relationship chart.
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The chart in Japanese.
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Merry Fishmas 2018.
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Artwork of two Chums for the Chaos vs. Order Splatfest.
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Artwork for New Year's Day 2020.
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Salmonid balloon locker decoration.
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Sunken Scroll 8 in Splatoon 3, showing the companion Smallfry.
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The companion Smallfry from Return of the Mammalians in Splatoon 3.
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Smallfry amiibo.
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Smallfry with Power Eggs.
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Sunken Scroll 16 from Splatoon 2, featuring an anti-Salmonid poster and a Grizzco Industries recruitment poster.
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Sunken Scroll 17 from Splatoon 2, featuring an illustration of two Inklings fleeing a horde of Salmonids. A doodle of a Stinger can be seen on the left side of the illustration.
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Sunken Scroll 18 from Splatoon 2, featuring a painting of Salmonids. A doodle of a Golden Egg can be seen.
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Sunken Scroll 19 from Splatoon 2, featuring a picture of a Salmonid admiring a wall of battle gear. A doodle of a Chum with a Power Egg can be seen.
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An exhibit in the Shellendorf Institute, featuring an ancient piece of art depicting Inklings venerating a Golden Egg.
Trivia
- Salmonids appear to take inspiration from North American Northwest Coast First Nations cultures, salmon being a staple and cultural food in those regions.[9]
- Many of the Salmonid illustrations (such as in the Salmon Run logo, on decals and banners in Grizzco's shop, and in Salmon Run stages) are based on the style of NWC traditional artistry, particularly formline art, using many visual motifs and techniques that distinguish it, such as limited, contrasted colors, thick pointed linework, ovoids, S & U forms, and specific characteristic ways of depicting eyes, teeth, and fins.[10][11]
- Traditionally, in NWC culture (and generally in many North American first nations cultures), hunted food, particularly salmon, are seen as giving themselves to be eaten in the cycle of life and death.[12][9][13] Salmonids, as stated in art books and other official media, share these beliefs, having a desire to be killed and eaten as part of a cycle of life, which is the reason for their common usage of kitchenware.
- The Salmonids' willingness to die may be based on how salmon partaking in the salmon run die after spawning. The dying salmon play an important role in providing nutrients to life surrounding it, which may also be what the Salmonids' belief of "becoming one with the world" is based on.
- This may also take inspiration from the Spartans, a warrior city-state that valued dying for Sparta in combat. The Salmonids' hair resembles a Spartan helmet.
- The Salmonids' appearance resembles that of a salmon when it is in its ocean phase, which differs from its spawning phase, where it turns a more vibrant red, adopting brown and gray colors instead of the silvery color, and has a more elongated jaw that hooks downwards with bigger teeth. Some species also get hunched backs.
- The Salmonids that use frying pans as their weapons, namely Chums, Cohocks, and Goldies, all have two variations of the frying pan they can wield. One variant of the frying pan has an emblem resembling a Salmonid, a metal handle, a smoother shape, and circular rings on the pan, while the other lacks these features and has a wooden handle.
- Smallfry respawns after being splatted in Return of the Mammalians with the same audio cue as when Inklings and Octolings respawn, but whether or not the Salmonids encountered during Salmon Run are also capable of doing so is unclear.
Etymology
"Salmonid" is the common name for the ray-finned fish family Salmonidae, which, among others, includes salmon and trout.
Names in other languages
Language | Name | Meaning |
---|---|---|
Japanese | シャケ Shake |
Salmon |
Dutch | Salmoniet | Salmonoid |
French | Salmonoïde | Salmonid |
German | Salmonide | Salmonid |
Italian | Salmonoide | Salmonoid |
Russian | Самонид Samonid |
Salmonoid |
Spanish | Salmónido | Salmonid |
Chinese | 鮭魚[14] Guīyú |
Salmon |
Korean | 연어 Yeon-eo |
Salmon |
Portuguese | Salmonídeo[Citation needed] | Salmonoid |
Internal | CoopEnemy[15] | In reference to Salmon Run being a co-op mode |
References
- ↑ Employee Handbook page 2
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Sunken Scroll 8 in Splatoon 3
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 HaikaraWalker translation
- ↑ ω-3 band profile on Splatoon Base
- ↑ Splatoon 2, Sunken Scroll 19 in Splatoon 2
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 3 March 2018 Famitsu interview with Splatoon 2 developers, English summary by Nimted on reddit, English translation of the Salmonid section by Twitter user @rassicas
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 The Art of Splatoon 2 page 182
- ↑ Salmonid Field Guide (Splatoon 3)
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 Coast Salish people and salmon – Wikipedia
- ↑ Northwest Coast art – Wikipedia
- ↑ https://ibb.co/ZYMMbTy
- ↑ Return to the water: First Nations relations with salmon
- ↑ We are all Salmon People – Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission
- ↑ 「Nintendo Switch 軟體陣容 2020」電子版現正公開!, page 25. Nintendo Retrieved 26 August 2020.
- ↑ Leanny on GitHub
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