OkayILikeIt the Pabassa

122 of 204
OkayILikeIt
90% Happy
Owner
daisycat
Stolen
9 Nov 2022
Hatched
8 Oct 2023
Immortal
22 Jan 2024
7,433 +1
Views
896 +1
Clicks
1,143
Feeds
Recent Feeders
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𝙤𝙠𝙖𝙮   𝙞   𝙡𝙞𝙠𝙚    𝙞𝙩
🎨 ₱ ₳ B ₳ $ $ ₳ 🎨
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Okay I Like It, Picasso refers to a viral video where a man walks by two people decorating a car and asks "what's this?" to which one responds "it's an art project," the man answering, "okay I like it, Picasso. Yeah, that way." The video was uploaded to TikTok in January 2022 and went viral alongside its original sound, which became popular in lip dubs.


tiktok.com/@itsreefa/video/7052366362907266310
youtube.com/shorts/EyKF_cOuwno

About Pabassa Eggs

A monster fish, this egg can harm predators without having to disturb its slumber. Its scales are covered in a slime that is poisonous. And while its dorsal fin may look wavy and smooth like kelp, it actually hides a spine that will inject a paralyzing venom into any creature that touches it. It keeps this needle throughout its entire life. The small eyes, however, do not yet see anything. In the hatchling stage, this fish grows false eyes to keep from becoming blind as an adult. It can slowly grow these false eyes back, so long as they have not hatched.

About the Pabassa Creature

Once hatched, Pabassa eyes no longer grow back, and more eyes have grown in. This dangerous creature also has a new sensor on its forehead. This heart-shaped "nose" glows and helps the fish to not only navigate the darker, deep waters, but it is also an attractant for bait fish to be lured into its captivating mouth. Some of these fish even spear several bait fish on their spikey teeth to show their future mate how skilled they are at catching food. Having two flowing, venom-spiked tails, help it to stay alive during this creature's mid-life.

Near the end of their life-cycle Pabassas drop both spikes but keep the suave dorsal fin to show how long they have been alive.