

In this dialogue, Papyrus explicitly states that Frisk feels like “YOU’RE AN OLD FRIEND.” This occurs if Frisk has spared Papyrus in a previous timeline. Interestingly enough, Frisk does not need to date or hang out with him to trigger this dialogue – it can be seen by reloading to the previous save point and having Papyrus meet Frisk a second time.Īs of version 1.05, Papyrus has an alternate pre-battle dialogue (which previously existed as unused text). It nags at him enough that he mentions it to Sans a second time in the room with the electric puzzle. When Papyrus sees Frisk, he gets a nagging feeling that they look familiar. It is because of this feeling that Toriel is able to accurately guess Frisk’s flavor preference from before. If Frisk confirms that their preference is still the same as previously chosen, Toriel mentions this strange feeling of familiarity with humans who fall into the Ruins. While Toriel seems to be the most common example of this, there are four other characters who seem to vaguely remember Frisk between reload/reset. The feeling appears to be akin to déjà vu a feeling that something has happened before, but with no clear memory of it.

For having such a pivotal role in the events that lead up to Undertale, buttercups are very discreet!ĭepending on when the Player resets or reloads, it’s possible that the characters encountered in Undertale will mention that Frisk seems familiar to them, but they won’t know why. Furthermore buttercups are only mentioned once, by Asriel when referring to the pie accident.

Interestingly enough, there is no sprite art for buttercups in Undertale, or the very least, none of the flower sprites are called buttercups. What happens when something without a SOUL gains the will to live? The first golden flower, that grew before all the others. In the center of his garden, there’s something special. I haven’t told ASGORE yet, because I want to surprise him with it… Alphys even states the flower came from the “outside world,” and appeared in the garden before Toriel left Asgore, which matches the timeline of Asriel and Chara’s death. » Read more: The sad tale of Asriel and Charaįlowey is confirmed to be a golden flower and not a buttercup in the True Lab entries. This is supported in the True Lab entries that say “the seeds just stick to you, and won’t let go…” The seeds of the flowers likely transferred to Chara’s body, and were brought to the Underground when Asriel returned and died in the castle garden. This is partly what prompts Asriel/Chara to bring Chara’s body to the village.ĪSRIEL reached the center of the village. If they were referring to buttercups, this request would not have required leaving the Underground. It’s clarified that golden flowers are not buttercups when Chara requests to see the flowers from their village.

sinensis var.Yes, you are correct on both accounts! Golden flowers were introduced into the underground when Chara and Asriel died, making them different from the buttercups they accidentally poisoned Asgore with (despite both being yellow). It is related to and closely resembles bald cypress ( Taxodium) and redwood ( Sequoia). Dawn redwood is a deciduous, coniferous tree that grows in a conical shape to 100’ tall. Seedlings grown therefrom were planted in front of the Lehmann Building at MBG in 1952 where they have now developed into large mature trees (70’+ tall). Seeds collected from the original site were made available to the Missouri Botanical Garden in 1947. However, it was not until 1941 that dawn redwood was first discovered growing in the wild near the town of Modaoqi China by Chinese forester, T. Its branches are well-attached and make excellent climbing.Ĭare: sun in moist to moist well-drained, slightly acid soilĪwards: Royal Botanic Garden Award of Garden Merit, Yew Dell Botanical Gardens’ Theodore Klein Plant Awards & Pennsylvania Horticultural Society Goldįrom fossil records, dawn redwood is known to have existed as many as 50,000,000 years ago. Feathery, fern-like, soft foliage emerges light green in spring, and turns red-bronze in fall before dropping. The orange to brown trunk base tapers and thickens with up to a dozen large buttress-like root flares extending several feet up the trunk. Fast-growing, pyramidal-shaped deciduous conifer.
