In my schools, our rednecks were called "kickers" as in "shit-kickers." They didn't wear anything in particular, but their belt buckles and boots were often notable in some way. Being in a rural town, they looked down on most people not like them. . .except for the preps. Because they often came from families with livestock, their household incomes were presumably not that far from the prep families.
I have a coworker who came from a smaller town than me, and he told me they had people they called "c'boys." ("Cowboy" without the "ow"; pronounced "kuh-boys.") They were people who either appropriated redneck styles and leanings or spoiled kids from redneck families who didn't fully understand the ins and outs of the culture. (For example: Youngsters with big, expensive trucks that don't know how to hitch a trailer to it.)
I'm glad to see this game is finally out. I haven't played it yet, but I have messed with Super Smash Land and found it super neat. If nothing else, this has to be better than Brawlhalla (which is still in early access after, what, three years?). I've been disappointed every time I tried that game. (And there was some other Smash clone I played at PAX this year that didn't have short hopping. It was. . .yeah.)
I seem to remember a Pokémon comic which mentioned that all Pokémon were of the same species, with individual Pokémon (Pikachu, Meowth, etc.) being sub-species. That was from an English translation of an off-shoot series, though, so take it with a grain of salt.
@vinny Rosalina isn't a princess. She's the godmother of all Lumas (the star dudes from Galaxy), which makes her the caretaker of the universe because Lumas can become all sorts of celestial bodies. Her backstory is detailed in the first Galaxy game in a delightful story book.
Her backstory is also why Baby Rosalina cheeses me. We know what she was like as a child. Her baby form wearing the same clothes as her adult version makes no sense.
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