Scavenging Snagret

From Pikmin Fanon
Scavenging Snagret
Enemy
Family Snavian

The Scavenging Snagret is a species of snavian that eats or collects corpses and pellets.

In fanon games

Below this point is where users place their version of the Scavenging Snagret.

In Pikmin: Elemental Speciation

Pikmin: Elemental Speciation
This article or section presents information pertaining to Pikmin: Elemental Speciation, a fanon game created by FrostFlame.
Scavenging Snagret The icon used to represent this enemy.
Scientific name Shiropedes furocorvus
Family Snavian
Caves Nebulous Nest, Kleptomaniac Cave, Chambers of Chaos
Carry weight 10
Max. carriers 20
Seed worth 15
Poko value P2 Poko icon.png × 10
Attacks Eats Pikmin

The Scavenging Snagret is a species of snagret appearing in Pikmin: Elemental Speciation. It has a pink, featherless head with a curved beak. It has a black body that shines blue when in the sunlight, similar to some types of real-world birds. It behaves similarly to the Thieving Snagpie, but burrows up from under enemy corpses rather than treasures, preferring to target the bodies of the more-recently deceased. Its hole resembles that of the Thieving Snagpie but has small black feathers jutting out instead of pieces of straw. When its hole is struck by Pikmin, the Scavenging Snagret within will emerge, now hostile, and may use a unique attack wherein it emerges with its open mouth to eat any Pikmin near its head, making it tough to deal with. Luckily, it is much easier to get enemy corpses than it is to get treasures.

Notes

Olimar's notes

This strange variation of the snagret sports dull black feather-scales and a featherless head. Despite its larger size, it is not hostile unless defending its den. It instead opts to snatch corpses away from hunters by burrowing from beneath them and escaping before the predator can attack. It has powerful vibration-sensitive patches that can alert it to hunting predators.

Louie's notes

Depending on what creatures it ate, its meat has a very different taste. Make sure to taste test every specimen to determine its taste profile. A good way to do this is to remove a small portion around the leg before refrigerating and dice into small pieces. Then fry in a buttered pan with simple spices only, if you must spice it.

Shacho's notes

This creature has a very good sense of what goes on above ground without seeing it at all. I wonder if we could use it in the opposite way to probe the ground for valuable minerals?