Hugh Kerfuffle: Difference between revisions

    From Gallowpedia, the MediEvil Wiki. You'll be dying to read!
     
    (One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
    Line 16: Line 16:
    Hugh Kerfuffle's name was only changed in the French version.
    Hugh Kerfuffle's name was only changed in the French version.
    {{OtherLanguages
    {{OtherLanguages
    |fr = Jean Gisquand
    |fr = Jean Gisquand{{Note|name=genghiskhan|This name was likely chosen because it sounds like [[wikipedia:Genghis Khan|Genghis Khan]].}}
    |frM = Sounds like Genghis Khan
    }}
    }}


    ==Notes==
    {{Notelist}}
    ==Navigation==
    ==Navigation==
    {{MediEvil: Resurrection characters}}
    {{MediEvil: Resurrection characters}}

    Latest revision as of 12:15, 22 April 2024

    PLEASE NOTE: The subject of this article originates from MediEvil: Resurrection, which is considered apocryphal, i.e. to be outside of the accepted canon. See GP:CANON for more information.
    Hugh Kerfuffle
    No official depiction of the subject exists.
    Biographical information
    Gender Male
    Behind the scenes information
    Mentioned in
    "Thunderbolts? Where does she get THUNDERBOLTS? Not only is that not FAIR, it contravenes Ye Geneva Convention, for heaven's sake! Half my men are on fire - and the others will never need an eyebrow comb again, that's for sure. Oop! Look out - here comes ano-"
    ― Hugh Kerfuffle's final Battle Log entry.

    Hugh Kerfuffle was a barbarian chieftain who led an assault on Megwynne Stormbinder's village while all the menfolk were on a hunting trip. He was killed by Megwynne after the Gods added lightning bolts to her arsenal. His Battle Log providing a detailed account of the event would later be incorporated into the book HEROES FROM HISTORY: A Retrospective.

    Behind the scenes

    Name

    His name is a play on "huge kerfuffle," meaning a big commotion.

    In other languages

    Hugh Kerfuffle's name was only changed in the French version.

    Language Name
    French (France) Jean Gisquand[a]

    Notes

    1. This name was likely chosen because it sounds like Genghis Khan.

    Navigation