Haley
K&TAM Haley.png
Artwork of Haley from Kirby & The Amazing Mirror.
Details
First game Kirby & The Amazing Mirror (2004)
Copy Ability None
 This box: view  talk  edit 

KatAMHaley.png Haley is an enemy exclusive to Kirby & The Amazing Mirror. It resembles a porcupine or hedgehog with peach-colored skin, blue eyes and a coat of blue spines trailing behind it like fire. It possesses no visible mouth or limbs.

Throughout the game, Haleys are primarily encountered at high altitudes. To attack, these simple opponents do nothing but fly leftwards or rightwards in a straight line, depending on Kirby's position in relation to their own at the moment they appear on the screen; once in Kirby's view, they cannot turn around anymore. Colliding with a Haley causes Kirby to lose health and knocks the enemy back a little, but does not keep it from proceeding on its path. Despite its primary role as an aerial creature, Haley is also capable of surviving underwater.

While Haleys are vulnerable to any attack, inhaling and swallowing them does not grant Kirby a Copy Ability. Its name appears to be based after Halley's Comet; a fitting name given its comet-like appearance and its common sightings in outer-space regions.

LocationsEdit

 
Haley appears in the sky in Rainbow Route.

In Kirby & The Amazing Mirror, Haley can be found in the following rooms:

Haley locations in Kirby & The Amazing Mirror  
Rainbow Route Moonlight Mansion Cabbage Cavern Mustard Mountain Carrot Castle Olive Ocean Peppermint Palace Radish Ruins Candy Constellation The Mirror
 
 
 

TriviaEdit

  • Haley is also probably a reference to Sonic from the Sonic the Hedgehog series, having a pointy face and blue spiky spines that bear a close resemblance to Sonic's own physical features.

GalleryEdit

Names in other languagesEdit

Language Name Meaning
Japanese ハリー
Harī
Derivation of「ハリネズミ」(harinezumi, hedgehog)
French Picdur From "picot" (spike) and "dur" (hard)
German Pieksi A clipped form of "pieksen" (to sting)
Italian Alonda Pun of "all'onda" (lit. "at the wave")
Spanish Erina Possibly a diminutive of "erizo" (hedgehog)