Badboon
| Dragon Quest monster | |
|---|---|
| Badboon | |
![]() Art by Akira Toriyama | |
| Japanese | マンドリル |
| Romaji | Mandoriru |
| Translation | Mandrill |
| First appearance | Dragon Quest II |
| Dragon Warrior naming | Baboon |
| Variants | Big badboon |
| Brainy badboon | |
The Badboon is a recurring monster in the Dragon Quest series, first appearing in Dragon Quest II. The large brown-furred primate and its cousins are among the earliest examples of the Beast family of monsters.
Characteristics[edit | edit source]
Badboons are based on mandrills, Old World monkeys that are native to western Africa in the real world. They are large, brown bulky primates with colourful faces and posteriors. Bulkier than real life mandrills, their stature resembles orangutans and gorillas. The primates made a reappearance in the series in IX after a 22 year absence.
Appearances[edit | edit source]
Dragon Quest II: Luminaries of the Legendary Line[edit | edit source]
Dragon Quest IX: Sentinels of the Starry Skies[edit | edit source]
Dragon Quest: The Adventure of Dai[edit | edit source]
A badboon makes an appearance at the beginning of the story as one of the friendly monsters living alongside Dai and Brass on Dermline Island. However, in the 2020 anime series, it is nowhere to be found.
Dragon Quest Monsters 2: Iru and Luca's Marvelous Mysterious Key[edit | edit source]
Making its first appearance in a Monsters game, Badboon appears as a D-rank monster of the Beast family exclusive to the smartphone version.
Dragon Quest Builders 2[edit | edit source]
Badboons first appear on the island of Furrowfield, where three of them are shown attacking Rosie.
Large[edit | edit source]
Dragon Quest Treasures[edit | edit source]
A statue of a badboon is Treasure No. 515 in the Monster Statues category. Its base value is 180,000 gold.

