Sugar baddie

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The sugar baddie is a culinary-inclined species of demon first seen in Dragon Quest Monsters: The Dark Prince. These monsters are the results of chefs who became so totally dedicated to baking decadent treats that they sold their souls to achieve even greater cake-baking capability. Rumored to occasionally include chocoslimes among their ingredients and with their confections possessing heinously high calorie totals, sugar baddies are the wide awake nightmare of sweets-based monsters and dieting women alike.

Appearances edit

Dragon Quest Monsters: The Dark Prince edit

Sugar baddie (スイーツまじん Suītsu majin)
Icon Family Max HP Max MP
    1,350 530
Max Attack Max Defence Max Agility Max Wisdom
610 340 420 570
Bestiary No. #378
Rank E
In-game description Former pâtisseries who sold their souls to become unrivalled in the art of cake-making. The fruits of their labour are undoubtedly first-rate, but their calorie counts are nothing short of criminal
Talents Sweet-Talker (lv. 1)
Attack Booster I (lv. 20)
Sleep Suppressor (lv. 40)
Guaranteed traits Evasive Impulse (lv. 1)
Strangely Alluring (lv. 20)
Miraculous Touch (lv. 40)
Large-size exclusive traits Tactical Genius (lv. 1)
Über Slimesbane (lv. 1)
Critical Mastermind (lv. 60)
Habitat Circle of Indulgence - Middle & Upper Echelon (   )
Battenburg
Items Magic water (Common)
Ring of wisdom (Rare)
Synthesis chart   X  
Notable synthesis
Fire Resistance * Water Resistance * Wind Resistance * Earth Resistance *
25% 50% 50% 0%
Explosion Resistance * Ice Resistance * Electricity Resistance * Light Resistance *
0% 25% -25% -25%
Dark Resistance * Antimagic Resistance * Bedazzlement Resistance * Confusion Resistance *
50% 0% 0% 50%
Debilitation Resistance* MP Absorption Resistance * Paralysis Resistance * Poison Resistance *
50% 50% -25% 0%
Sleep Resistance * Stun Resistance *
0% 0%
Instant Death Resistance *
25%

Etymology edit

  • The monster's name is a pun on sugar daddy, the term for a middle-aged or older man who spends lavishly on his lady-friends. More rarely, it is used as a humorous way to refer to a financial benefactor.