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This is the character sheet for the Digimon characters introduced in the movies that made up the dub compilation film Digimon: The Movie, divided by segment.

For characters introduced in Digimon Adventure, click here, for characters introduced in Digimon Adventure 02, click here, for characters introduced in Digimon Adventure tri., click here, and for characters introduced in Digimon Adventure: Last Evolution Kizuna, click here.

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Digimon Adventure Pilot

    Parrotmon 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/parrotmon_7.png
Voiced by: N/A (JP), David Lodge (EN), Rais David Báscones (Spain)
Debut: Pilot

Actually the first hostile Digimon that Tai, Kari and the future DigiDestined meet. He is an enormous parrot-like Digimon that emerges in Hikarigaoka (Highton View Terrace), where Tai and Kari lived before the start of the series, and attacks it. Koromon, in his big Agumon form, fights it but it's so powerful that has to digivolve to Greymon to finish him.

He debuted in the pilot episode of the series directed by Mamoru Hosoda as the main threat. Appears again in flashbacks in episode 29, when the children return to Japan and see a similar situation with Mammothmon attacking Hikarigaoka, remembering the already forgotten events, and in episode 45, when the mysterious entity tours the children about the origins of the Chosen Children.


  • Adaptational Villainy: Parrotmon as a species are actually pacifistic in nature, only attacking if angered, while the Parrotmon in the pilot rampages through Hikarigaoka without a second thought.
  • Big Bad: Of the Digimon Adventure pilot and the first segment of Digimon: The Movie.
  • Bird People: His design is more anthropomorphic than other bird Digimon the children have met before, except for Garudamon, with bird claws as hands instead of Feather Fingers.
  • Determinator: No matter how gruesome an injury he suffers, Parrotmon does not back down from his fight against Greymon. Even as he dies he can be seen trying to force his way through Greymon's blast instead of panicking.
  • Dub Personality Change: The original pilot version of Parrotmon has no dialogue and can be presumed to be a random feral Digimon that just stumbled into the real world. The dub version of him that exists in Digimon: The Movie however is actively malicious and seems to relish destruction and fighting for their own sake.
  • Giant Flyer: An enormous parrot Digimon the same size as other Ultimate level like Garudamon and Mammothmon.
  • Handicapped Badass: Greymon tears off Parrotmon's left wing, preventing him from flying, then breaks his beak with a horn attack. Parrotmon still manages to knock his opponent out.
  • Light Is Not Good: His type is Vaccine but he appeared to be very hostile.
  • Make Me Wanna Shout: Sonic Destroyer, his second attack in the PSP game.
  • No-Sell: When Agumon hits him with a first Pepper Flame, it hits Parrotmon point blank...and when the dust clears, we see that it has no effect on the bird whatsoever. The dub gives us this sinister little gem to lampshade it too.
    Parrotmon: (mockingly after a devious cackle) My turn...
  • Shock and Awe: The main attack he uses against Greymon is his Mjolnir Thunder, which charges through his two antennae like feathers above his eyes. The dub mistakes this attack with his secondary tecnique Sonic Destroyer, a supersonic wave attack.
  • Small Role, Big Impact: He exists only in the pilot and two episodes of the series. However, his fight with a Greymon in 1995 directly leads to the DigiDestined becoming, well, the DigiDestined.
  • Starter Villain: The first antagonist in the entire original Adventure continuity.
  • Suddenly Voiced: The dub gives him a voice, though not counting Calling Your Attacks, he only has one line.

Our War Game!

    Diaboromon (Diablomon
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/diaboromon.png
Voiced by:
English: Paul St. Peter (Keramon and above), Brianne Siddall (Kuramon)
Spanish: Francisco Andrés Valdivia (Spain)

A Y2K bug-inspired Digimon, and the antagonist of the film Our War Game. Spawned from a viral, internet-based Digi-Egg, Diaboromon came close to wiping out the DigiDestined and sparking World War III when he hacked into the Pentagon and launched the U.S.A.'s nuclear warhead ICBMs, though he was thankfully stopped Just in Time when WarGreymon and MetalGarurumon combined to form Omnimon.

Unfortunately, he just barely survived, and laid low until resurfacing years later in Revenge of Diaboromon. Creating millions of Kuramon out of bits of his data, he sent them to Earth through emails, and after being destroyed once again by Omnimon, resurrected himself on Earth by having the little blobs join together in Tokyo Harbor to form his alternate Mega - Armageddemon. Easily thrashing both Omnimon and Imperialdramon, it looked like Armageddemon would live up to his name and cause The End of the World as We Know It, only for his opponents to combine their power and fatally wound him. Armageddemon broke apart into a swarm of Kuramon, who were transported back online (where they were presumably deleted) by awed civilians' cellphones, made into gateways by the Digivices.

When it was released in English as a part of Digimon: The Movie, Our War Game and the unrelated Hurricane Touchdown/Supreme Evolution! The Golden Digimentals were connected by having Willis be the one who created Diaboromon's egg. They also had the viral entity that corrupted Willis's partner Kokomon be the same one that was responsible for Diaboromon.

His Digivolutions are as follows:

  • Fresh: Kuramon, a grayish-blue blob with a single red eye.
  • In-Training: Tsumemon; still a cyclops blob, except now with antennae and claws.
  • Rookie: Keramon, a maniacal insect-squid with flimsy hands, and lots of tentacles.
  • Champion: Chrysalimon, a cocoon shaped form with spiked tentacles (never directly seen, but officially stated to be the adult stage for this line and individual)
  • Ultimate: Infermon, an arachnid with retractable limbs, and an impenetrable shell.
  • Mega: Diaboromon (Diablomon), his main form.
  • Alternate Mega: Armageddemon, a Kaiju-sized, vaguely reptilian and multi-legged abomination.

  • Adaptational Backstory Change: Japanese Diablomon is basically the Digimon universe equivalent of the Y2K bug. Diaboromon on the other hand was a digi-egg programmed by Wallace that was infected by a computer virus. To complicate things further, in the videogames Diablomon was a creation of Millenniumon, designed to lure Ryo (yes, that Ryo) back into the Digital World.
  • Adaptive Ability: In Revenge of Diablomon, there's a very brief moment where Diablomon actually plays Omegamon very neatly, sacrificing a chunk of his Kuramon to detonate the Garuru Cannonfire from a distance, leaving him safe and unharmed. Then as his main body is defeated, his Kuramon swarm out and evolve into a much, more dangerous form capable of defeating Omegamon easily. It's made very clear that he remembers Omegamon kicking his ass the first time around and devised a strategy against that.
  • Alliterative Name: All his attacks; Bug Blaster, Spider Shooter, Cable Crusher, Web Wrecker, Destiny Destroyer.
  • Back from the Dead: The last installment of tri mentions that the Digital World's Reboot revived him along with every other Digimon. Nothing ends up coming of it however.
  • Barely-Changed Dub Name: Officially spelled "Diablomon" in the Japanese version, but the English version transliterates the kana directly to "Diaboromon". It's an unusual case of changing a name (likely to remove the Spanish word for "devil") by translating it very literally.
  • Beam Spam: His strategy to counter the kids' interference was to multiply himself and shower their Digimon with projectiles.
  • Big Creepy-Crawlies: His Baby and Child forms resemble larvas, while the Perfect and Ultimate evolutions are arachnid in appearance. While not seen in the Adventure continuity, his Adult stage resembles a chrysalis.
  • Big Eater: "I'm hungry!" he says before he begins eating the Internet.
  • Breath Weapon: Keramon's Bug Blaster, Infermon's Spider Shooter, and Armageddemon's Destiny Destroyer.
  • Catchphrase: In the English Dub, Infermon and Diaboromon continuiously tell the DigiDestined, "Don't interfere!" as he hunts for his programmer.
  • Chest Blaster: Diaboromon's Web Wrecker is fired from the hole on his chest.
  • Combat Pragmatist: In both versions, he's one of the few villains in the entire series to gun for the Digimon while they're Digivolving. In Our War Game it's because Diablomon is crazed and has an "Attack! Attack! Attack!" mentality. In the dub, it's because Diaboromon's cunning enough to take advantage of his opponent being open for so long.
  • The Cracker: Especially as Infermon, who war-dials the entire country of Japan. In the dub, he's doing this to search for Willis, and tying up the children is a happy accident.
  • Creating Life Is Bad: Dub only. The English version of the movie has Willis state that he created a Digimon that got infected by a computer virus and eventually become this thing.
  • Cut Phone Lines: "Look at the address! He's at the telephone company taking over all the phone lines! If we lose our phone connection, we're finished! It's the only way we have access to the internet!"
  • Cyclops: Kuramon and Tsumemon are both small digimon that have only one large eye on their faces.
  • Do Not Adjust Your Set: Infermon appears on screens and monitors all over Japan.
  • Doppelgänger Attack: Over 16,000 (over a million in the English dub) Diablomon are produced when the original one sets his plan to exterminate the Chosen Children in motion.
  • Doppelmerger: In Revenge of Diaboramon, Diaboramon creates multiple clones of himself in the form of his baby stage Kuramon and sends them out into the human world. When Omnimon, Angemon and Angewomon destroy Diaboromon in the internet, the Kuramon in the human world fuse into Armageddemon, an alternate, more powerful mega form of the Diaboromon line.
  • Dub Personality Change: Diablomon is a seemingly-nonsapient bug with a One-Word Vocabulary. Diaboromon is a cunning and actively malicious cracker who takes an almost sadistic delight in tormenting the DigiDestined, cackling all the way.
  • Dueling Hackers: Our War Game is essentially this between him and Izzy, with the former trying to find a way to keep the children and their Digimon away from the internet, while the latter is searching for a way to delete the villain.
  • Evil Laugh: Diaboromon only ever laughed in the Japanese dub, and he still gets a few evil chuckles in English.
  • Evil Phone:
  • Evil Sounds Deep: Diaboromon and Armageddemon have a much deeper pitch than Infermon.
  • Facial Horror: Was impaled through the face by Omnimon's Transcendent Sword. It happens to him again in Revenge of Diaboromon. Twice.
  • Four-Legged Insect: The arachnid-based Infermon has only six legs.
  • From Nobody to Nightmare: While the circumstances of Kuramon's birth are actually quite notable, Kuramon itself is generally harmless. Then it jumps to its In-Training level and the havoc starts.
  • Genius Bruiser: Appearances are deciving; despite being a shambling, horrible abomination with immense power that doesn't even so say a single thing (in the original movie), Diablomon is infamously tricky in combat. Not only he's a Mega-level capable of unleashing the apocalypse, he also warp evolves into his Ultimate form and attack Tai and Izzy's Digimon before they can evolve into their Ultimate forms, and manages to stall Omnimon to a fraction of a second before nukes start annihilating the world even when being slowed. Very few villains in a Digimon anime are this virulent.
  • Giant Spider: Infermon is made of a giant main body and six spidery legs.
  • "Get Back Here!" Boss: After Omegamon obliterates all of his clones, leaving just him, he starts jumping around the arena at high speed, hoping to stall long enough for the nuclear missile to reach its target.
  • Giggling Villain: The only sound he makes in the Japanese version is a high-pitched chuckle.
  • Hoist by Their Own Petard:
    • He used Izzy's satellite phone connection to get to America.
      Tai: He didn't even need a green card.
    • His ability to use the internet (to boost his speed) and send emails (to communicate with the humans) are turned against him when Izzy sets up a mail forwarding spirit to his email address, sending him thousands of emails and slowing him down.
  • Horned Humanoid: Diaboromon, fitting with his Satan theme.
  • I Just Want to Be Normal: It's implied in the dub that at least some part of Diaboromon wants to reverse his viral corruption and become the Digimon that Willis initially was cultivating.
    Diaboromon: (menacingly chuckles) Go back to the beginning...
  • It Can Think: Despite being born from a pile of bugs and doesn't even say anything (in the original dub), Diablomon is probably the most savvy enemy in the original series. He tricks Kabuterimon and Greymon by skipping his adult form while evolving, breaks WarGreymon's weapons at the start of their fight and doesn't even attempt to attack Omegamon, as he knows he can win simply by stalling long enough for a nuclear missile to destroy Taichi's neighborhood. In the second movie, one of the first things he does was to play pranks using Matt and Tai's name and spread embarrassing pictures of them all over the internet, indicating that he remembers who defeated him very well.
  • Kaiju: Armageddemon, which is massive even by Digimon standards and would have actually wreaked havoc on Tokyo if it weren't for the heroes.
  • Lean and Mean: All of his forms are skinny with spindly limbs and pure evil.
  • Lightning Bruiser: Every stage of Diaboromon's digivolutions is tough and fast. Out of all of his forms, Infermon is the one who takes the best advantage of the line's shared blistering speed due to his heavy armor.
    • He can even digivolve quicker than the heroes; being able to digivolve from Infermon into Dioboromon faster than Patamon can digivolve to Angemon so he can prevent the potential threat of Angemon or even MagnaAngemon.
  • Madness Mantra: "Don't interfere!" Spoken by thousands of Diaboromon.
  • Millennium Bug: The entire joke behind his character. He is the Digimon world's equivalent to this real life glitch.
  • Mix-and-Match Critters: Armageddemon looks kind of like a combination of an insect and a crocodile.
  • Mobile Menace: It takes him only a few seconds to use the web to travel from Japan to America. Fittingly, this high processing speed means he's also terrifyingly fast in combat.
  • Monster Progenitor: The millions of Kuramon, made from a miniscule amount of his data, in Revenge of Diaboromon.
  • Motive Decay: Dub only. In Revenge of Diaboromon, he seems to have lost interest in finding Willis, with his only remaining motivation being revenge against the DigiDestined.
  • My Death Is Just the Beginning: Diaboromon's destruction in Revenge of Diaboromon activated the Kuramon's true objective - forming Armageddemon in the Real World.
  • Names to Run Away from Really Fast: "Diaboromon" is a romanization of "Diablomon" ("diablo" is Spanish for "devil"). His other forms include "Armageddemon" (as in, "Armageddon") and "Infermon" (as in, "infernal").
  • No-Nonsense Nemesis: Diaboromon in all his forms takes no chances with his opponents. Immediately skipping the champion level straight into ultimate, attacking the heroes mid-transformation, taking advantage of the internet to slow down his opponents....etc. And, that's just the first movie.
  • Not Quite Dead: The original Diaboromon makes a return in the fourth movie, the aptly titled Revenge of Diaboromon.
  • Not So Above It All: One of the first things he does in his second attack is to spread embarrassing pictures of Tai as a kid and Matt dating Sora all over the internet and replace product labels and people's names in documents with their name just to take a jab at them.
  • Nuke 'em: He tries to kill off the DigiDestined by hacking into the Pentagon and firing a nuclear missile to strike Japan.
  • One to Million to One: Upon being spilled into the real world, the millions of Kuramon combine into a giant egg from which Armageddemon emerges. Upon getting defeated, Armageddemon reverts back to the Kuramon swarm.
  • One-Word Vocabulary: In the Japanese version, he only ever says "hello hello hello hello hello hello hello hello hello..."
  • Overclocking Attack: On the receiving end of one that involves Izzy spamming him with thousands of emails to slow him down for Omnimon.
  • Post-Final Boss: For both Adventure and 02. He is the main antagonist in both OVAs that take place after the main series conclude.
  • Psychopathic Manchild: Despite its ruthlessness and power, Diablomon never actually moves beyond the mentality of a child, even framing the nuclear missile in terms of a counting game.
  • Race Against the Clock: Complete with an actual clock, which Diaboromon pulls out just to mess with the heroes. When he's finally killed via head-impaling his head melts away to reveal the clock was also stabbed, with Omnimon's sword stopping the second hand from hitting zero.
  • Retractable Appendages: Infermon's legs and head can retract into his body.
  • Rubber Man: Diaboromon's Cable Crusher, which stretches his arms out to attack.
  • Rule of Symbolism: The very final battle of the original series takes place against Armageddemon.
  • Satanic Archetype: Diaboromon is a romanization of Diablomon, and his other names like Infermon and Armageddemon are all dead giveaways that he's basically supposed to be Digimon Satan.
  • Self-Duplication: He can make copies of himself.
  • Shell Game: In the final act, Diaboromon started multiplying itself exponentially, that by the time WarGreymon and MetalGarurumon catch up, has there are now thousands of Diaboromons. Unfortunately, only one of those copies holds the timer to the misile strike.
  • Shoulders of Doom: Diaboromon. See those hatches in his shoulder plates? Each of those actually deploys a hidden arm for a total of six (so, really, Diaboromon has eight arms). You can see him using all of them in Tag Tamers.
  • Slasher Smile: Keramon almost constantly wears a wicked smile.
  • Sphere of Power: Resides in one in Revenge of Diaboromon.
  • The Swarm: Once he launches the nukes, Diaboromon starts replicating himself at an accelerated rate until there's, according to the dub, well over a million (16,000 and increasing in the original Japamese version) of him crawling all over the network like a demented hive of Mega-level bugs. Conservation of Ninjutsu is not in effect either, at least until Omnimon makes his debut, as they're all just as powerful as their template.
  • Television Portal: The Kuramon use computers and cellphones in Revenge of Diaboromon to travel into the real world.
  • Tragic Villain: In the dub. Diaboromon was once a normal, if artificial, Digi-Egg created by a young boy named Willis that got infected with a computer virus and mutated. The resulting Digimon, Kuramon, is then immediately struck with a hunger for computer data that never goes away no matter how much he eats. He then spends his entire time alive hunting down Willis, seemingly wanting to kill the boy for his part in creating him only for his last words to imply that his original intention before his madness took hold was to ask his creator for help.
  • Transformation Is a Free Action: He is actually the only villain in the entire franchise to subvert this, attacking his enemies before they can complete their digivolutions. This upsets Tai as he claims that's cheating.
  • Villain Cred: "The evil Dark Masters were cupcakes compared to this guy!"
  • Villainous Glutton: He is the villain of the second film, where his main objective is literally to devour the internet.
  • The Voiceless: In the original version, he never says anything and only communicates through text and eerie chuckles.
  • Walking Techbane: Due to being based on the Millennium bug, Diablomon's presence causes technology everywhere to go on the fritz.
  • Wave of Babies: He surrounds himself with an army of his baby form, Kuramon, in Revenge of Diaboromon. They end up being integral to his main objective of evolving past his Ultimate form.
  • Weaksauce Weakness: One that only becomes apparent in the final battle, his Super-Speed relies on his internet connection. Usually since he's connected directly to the net his speed is unaffected, but Izzy ends up forwarding thousands of emails his way in a sort of DDoS attack to vastly slow his processing speed to a crawl as it handles the sudden influx of data and allow Omnimon to strike the killing blow.
  • The Worm That Walks: Armageddemon is a Kaiju made up of millions of Kuramon.
  • Wrecked Weapon: Destroys WarGreymon's Dramon Killers, reducing his attack power.
  • X-Ray Sparks: Keramon being electrocuted by Tentomon's Super Shocker.

Digimon Hurricane Touchdown!! / Supreme Evolution!! The Gold Digimentals

    Willis 

Willis (Wallace)

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/willis_9135.jpg

The protagonist of the movie Touchdown Hurricane.

Voiced by: Nami Miyahara (JP), Bob Glouberman (EN), Gádor Martín (Spain), Luis Daniel Ramírez (Latin America)

  • Adaptational Early Appearance: When Hurricane Touchdown was absorbed into Digimon: The Movie, Willis ended up absorbing the Info Dump from two of Izzy's foreign friends. He also managed to create the Digimon that became Diaboromon when its egg was infected by a virus.
  • Adaptational Intelligence: In the English dub, as part of the change that he was responsible for creating Diaboromon, he is mentioned by Izzy to be a Child Prodigy and is said to be taking classes at Colorado State despite being in elementary school.
  • Adaptation Origin Connection: He was responsible for creating Diaboromon in Digimon: The Movie but not in the Japanese version.
  • The All-American Boy: His physical design has shades of this, especially when he wears his overalls as a child.
  • Canon Immigrant: His initial appearances were restricted to a thought to be Non-Serial Movie and a Drama CD, with no mention of him in the series proper (save for the dub), leading many to see him and his partners as canon foreigners. However, Digimon Adventure: Last Evolution Kizuna, the canon movie that serves as the Grand Finale for Adventure, would have them appear as contacts on Izzy's list of Digidestined kidnapped by Menoa, and appear in person as a cameo towards the end walking along the beach with his partners. They also make a cameo in Digimon Adventure 02: The Beginning.
  • Create Your Own Villain: In the dub, it's stated that he was the one who created Diaboromon, and the virus that infected Diaboromon's egg also infected his Kokomon. Infermon at one point even tells the Digidestined "I'm looking for the programmer! Don't interfere!", and one of the missiles Diaboromon fires is aimed at Colorado, right where Willis is, all but saying Diaboromon was aiming to kill Willis. His last word after Omnimon impales him even being "Willis".
  • Crossdressing Voices: True in Japan and Spain, averted in the dub.
  • Dub Name Change: From Wallace to Willis, mystifyingly, as Wallace is already an English name and he's from America.
  • Early-Bird Cameo: He's one of the major opponent tamers in Digimon Adventure 02: D-1 Tamers, which occurs before the series proper. In the movie, he expresses ignorance of the Digital World. Presumably this means that D1 Tamers is in an alternate continuity or that his cameo wasn't meant to be taken as his actual canon debut.
  • Free-Range Children: The boy hitch-hikes from New York to Colorado, which is how he meets Davis, Yolei, and Cody. He somehow evades his mother's suspicion with the odd phone call "from camp".
  • Friendless Background: Out of fear that Kokomon would attack anyone too close to him, he distances himself from other people. By the start of the film, it seems that Terriermon is the only friend he has left.
  • Informed Attribute: The dub made him a Child Prodigy so that the added connection of him creating Diaboromon would seem more plausible. However, when he appears in person, he doesn't appear to be exceptionally intelligent.
  • I Work Alone: In the beginning, he refuses to let the other chosen children help him with his problem, as he believes befriending anyone will turn them into a target for Chocomon's wrath.
  • KidAnova: He kisses Miyako and Hikari at the end of the movie and mentioned having a Japanese girlfriend. In Natsu e no Tobira, he flirts with Mimi and is stunned that Nacchan is more interested in Daisuke than him.
  • Locked Out of the Loop: Apparently he isn't aware of the Digital World's existence since he got Gummymon and Chocomon from Digi-Eggs that came out of his mother's computer, rather than finding them in Digital World.
  • Momma's Boy: He's shown going out of his way to call his mother frequently in the Japanese version.
  • The Protagonist: The central character of the first 02 movie, which deals with him being forced to accept that he has to Shoot the Dog (which is his basic character arc beneath all the Surreal Horror and Mind Screw of the final battle).
  • Ship Tease: With Kari and Yolei, who blush when he hits them each with a kiss on the cheek.
  • Unwitting Instigator of Doom: A dub only variant. In Digimon: The Movie, Willis is responsible for the creation of Diaboromon. He had only intended to create a digi-egg so he could have a third partner to have fun with, but it getting attacked by a virus caused it to mutate into the homicidal Diaboromon, and then corrupt Kokomon and nearly kill him.
  • Vitriolic Best Buds: If there's a chance to get under Daisuke's skin, he will absolutely go for it. In Natsu e no Tobira almost all of his dialog in the first chapter is screwing with the guy. Despite this, the two of them are still good friends, and can count on each other to have their backs in a fight.

    Terriermon 

Terriermon

One of Willis's two Digimon and the only one still with him during the events of Hurricane Touchdown. In the original Japanese version of Hurricane Touchdown he's always referred to by his In-Training name of Gummymon.His digivolutions are as follows:

  • In-Training: Gummymon, a green squishy blob with one horn.
  • Rookie: Terriermon, his default form. A small canine with Ear Wings.
  • Champion: Gargomon, a humanoid canine with two Arm Cannon Gatling Good attached on both of his hands.
  • Armor:
    • Destiny: Rapidmon (Armor), also known as GoldenRapidmon to distinct him with Digimon Tamers's counterpart. A humanoid canine covered with holy armors and wears two Holy Rings on each of his thighs, who can fire homing missiles.
Voiced by: Aoi Tada (JP), Mona Marshall (EN, Terriermon), Michael Sorich (EN, Gargomon), Lex Lang (EN, Rapidmon)

  • Adaptation Species Change: The dub refers to him as a bunny (presumably due to his giant ears), despite his name being Terriermon and the Japanese version noting him to be a dog.
  • All There in the Manual: In the original Japanese, the names Terriermon, Gargomon, and Rapidmon are never mentioned even once; as he's always referred with the name of his In-Training form Gummymon.
  • Arm Cannon: Has two rotary cannons for arms as Gargomon. As Rapidmon, his arms become missile launchers.
  • Canon Immigrant: His initial appearances were restricted to a thought to be Non-Serial Movie and a Drama CD, with no mention of him in the series proper, leading many to see him, his brother, and his partner as canon foreigners. However, Digimon Adventure: Last Evolution Kizuna, the canon movie that serves as the Grand Finale for Adventure, would have them appear in person as a cameo towards the end walking along the beach with his brother and Willis. They also make a cameo in Digimon Adventure 02: The Beginning.
  • Early-Bird Cameo: Not so much him, but the Terriermon line gets its first anime outing here. In the very next season of the show, A Terriermon would take the front stage as one of the three main partner Digimon.
  • Ear Wings: He can use them to float or glide, but not fly.
  • Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep": In the original Japanese, everyone keeps calling him "Gummymon" regardless of his forms.
  • Head Pet: Does this at one point when Willis needs shade.
  • Heroic Dog: He may look like a rabbit, but true to his namesake, he's a dog Digimon, and Willis' loyal partner.
  • Lightning Bruiser: Rapidmon (Armor) is extremely fast and has the offensive capabilities of a mega level so he definitely fits.
  • Mundane Utility: Terriermon can become a makeshift hat for Willis by hopping onto his head and spreading open his Ear Wings. This also allows Terriermon to rest his feet while Willis does the walking without getting exhausted from exposure to the sun.
  • Palette Swap:
    • His and Kokomon's In-Training forms are visually indistinguishable except for the fact the former is green and has a single horn, whereas the latter is pink and has three horns.
    • This version of Rapidmon is essentially a gold version of the regular Rapidmon. Other media simply refers to it as Rapidmon (Armor) for simplicity's sake.
  • Pistol-Whipping: Gargomon can hit hard enough to send Wendimon flying.
  • Theme Twin Naming: Named after candy. His In-Training form is called Gummymon, whereas his twin brother is Chocomon. In the Japanese version, Wallace keeps referring to them by these names even as they evolve into more powerful forms.

    Kokomon 

Kokomon (Chocomon)

Willis's other Digimon. This one disappeared under mysterious circumstances and has been stalking Willis in the form of Wendimon ever since.His digivolutions are as follows:

  • In-Training: Chocomon, a Palette Swap of Gummymon with browny pink colour and three horns.
  • Rookie: Lopmon, a Palette Swap of Terriermon with brown colour and three horns. Despite being Palette Swap, Lopmon is referred as rabbit, not dog like Terriermon. This form is only seen at the ending of original Japanese.
  • Champion: Endigomon (Wendimon). The virus who corrupted Chocomon has dark-digivolved him into this bestial giant rabbit man Digimon.
  • Ultimate: Antylamon Virus. The corrupting virus has further dark-digivolved him into a leaner giant rabbit Digimon who is very fast.
  • Mega:
    • Cherubimon Vice: The corrupting virus has even further dark-digivolved him into this bestial Fallen Angel Digimon.
    • Cherubimon Virtue: A virus-free Cherubimon.
Voiced by: Paul St. Peter (EN, Wendimon and above), Wendee Lee (EN, Kokomon), Cherami Leigh (Lopmon; Hurricane Touchdown, uncut)


  • Adaptation Origin Connection: In the original version, the entity corrupting Chocomon is never properly identified, and he's largely acting out of a corrupted desire to go back to when Wallace was young, leading him to kidnap anyone with the original model Digivice. In Digimon: The Movie, the force corrupting him is the same virus that infected the digiegg that became Diaboromon, possessing some sort of obsession with Willis and driving Kokomon to chase after him, and his actions stem more from wanting to die so he can be reborn without the virus.
  • Adaptational Superpower Change: In most media, Cherubimon has lightning-based attacks. The movie makes him a major Adaptational Badass by turning him into a Reality Warper. In addition, he can de-age people (and de-evolve Digimon), regenerate his body after it's damaged, summon black holes and spit orbs of darkness.
  • Angelic Abomination: Cherubimon Vice looks alien even by Digimon standards, despite being an Angelic Digimon and a Vaccine-type to boot. Its body seems to be deteriorating and it's barely sentient, only driven by pure, sociopathic sadism.
  • Big Bad: For the movie The Golden Digimentals. Though unwillingly due to the fact he is corrupted by an unknown force.
  • Big "NO!": Gives one in the original version when he realizes how different things in the present are from how he remembers them.
  • Body Horror:
    • Wendimon's body does not follow any convention, with laser cannons erupting out of its torso and the long whiplike arms.
    • Cherubimon takes the cake, though, with his rotting ears, rotting frill, and flesh that tears like wet paper (not mentioning, of course, that he bleeds black snow). The sheer wrongness of how Cherubimon works is as much of a threat as Cherubimon itself.
  • Born-Again Immortality: Despite all that happened to Kokomon as a result of The Corruption, Willis still finds his egg in the end. Though this is retconned and subverted in the CD drama, "The Door into Summer", where Terriermon states that Kokomon was unable to be reborn because the virus ravaged him so badly. However, this CD Drama is retconned, since Kokomon appears along Willis and Terriermon in Digimon Adventure: Last Evolution Kizuna. So, it is a Double Subversion at the end.
  • Bloody Murder: When Cherubimon is injured, his body bleeds dozens of dark spheres. He can also voluntarily spit said orbs as an attack.
  • Canon Immigrant: His initial appearances were restricted to a thought to be Non-Serial Movie and a Drama CD, and with no mention of him in the series proper, leading many to see him, his brother, and his partner as canon foreigners. However, Digimon Adventure: Last Evolution Kizuna, the canon movie that serves as the Grand Finale for Adventure, would have them appear in person as a cameo towards the end walking along the beach with his partners. They also make a cameo in Digimon Adventure 02: The Beginning.
  • Cerebus Retcon: In the Natsu e no Tobira Drama CD, despite apparently finding Kokomon's egg at the end of the movie, Terriermon sorrowfully imparts that Kokomon did not appear... Until it was subverted in Last Evolution Kizuna which shows Lopmon with both Willis and Terriermon.
  • Chest Blaster: His Koko Crusher attack involves sprouting several small cannons from his chest.
  • The Corruption: In the prologue, Kokomon is spirited away by some ill-defined force; when he returns, he's bigger, nastier, more violent, and consumed with a fixation on playing with Willis. Since he's vaguely aware Willis has grown up, he decides to get a hold of every kid he can find with the same model of digivice. With every evolution, he loses more and more hold on his actual self and becomes more and more of a perversion of childish innocence; its Mega form (identified in external materials as Cherubimon - Vice) is a Giant Monster Clown Rabbit with a really freaky laugh. Cherubimon is at that point basically an avatar of whatever force who kidnapped Kokomon. When Kari first sees Wendimon, she describes it as a "crying digimon". When she first sees Cherubimon Vice, she realizes that the crying digimon is completely absent. This is completely absent in the version of the movie folded into Digimon: The Movie, with the corruption instead being the virus that infected Diaboromon.
  • Creepily Long Arms: All of his forms from champion on have arms long enough to almost reach their feet. Wendimon's even stretch.
  • Death by Adaptation: The drama CD Natsu e no Tobira would have Wallace and Terriermon reveal to Daisuke and Mimi that even though they found his digiegg, Chocomon had been too far gone to be reborn. While this was his canon fate for some time, Digimon Adventure: Last Evolution Kizuna would later reveal this to be false, with Lopmon shown alongside Willis and Terriermon during a cameo at the end of the movie, retroactively making it this trope.
  • Death of Personality: When Hikari first encounters Wendigomon, she describes it as a "crying Digimon". When she finally encounters Cherubimon, she mentions that she can't sense the crying Digimon anymore. The sight of Miyako tending to Poromon reawakens Kokomon within his monstrous new body.
  • Death Seeker: A dub only version. While in both versions he tells Magnamon and Rapidmon to kill him and end his suffering, in the dub version he explicitly tells them what they need to do, and says "destroy" one last time, making clear that whenever he said "destroy", he was begging someone to destroy him.
  • Despair Event Horizon: Crosses it when Willis tells him that all of his good memories of them together are in the past. He draws on the power of whatever caused him to disappear years ago in order to Digivolve. This gives it full control of his body.
  • Detachment Combat: As Cherubimon, he swallows Magnamon and Rapidmon by respawning his head behind them when they think he's down.
  • Eat Me: Magnamon and Rapidmon allow themselves to be eaten by Cherubimon in order to take him out from the inside, but only in the English dub. In the original film, they are caught off guard and Swallowed Whole.
  • Evil Laugh: Cherubimon's laugh is a creepy, inhuman chirping noise.
  • Extendable Arms: Wendimon's Cable Crusher attack shoots out his arm for a long-range punch.
  • Fallen Angel: Cherubimon Vice is a corrupted angel in the expanded Digimon canon. Here, it's just a Monster Clown.
  • Glowing Eyes of Doom: Antylamon's eyes flicker before it sets sight on its targets.
  • Go Out with a Smile: In the Japanese version, Wendimon is seen smiling as Magnamon and Rapidmon's attacks destroy him. Terriermon then tells Wallace that Chocomon was able to laugh because he finally found peace.
  • Hair-Raising Hare: Endigomon has some bunny-like characteristics to his physiology, and Antylamon Virus takes the resemblance further. Although they both look unsettling, it's not until Chocomon evolves into Cherubimon Vice that he becomes an Eldritch Abomination, whose only similarity to its previous forms are the long, rabbit-like ears.
  • Healing Factor: Whatever is possessing Kokomon gives him this and allows him to reattach its mutilated body parts to its main body.
  • Hell Is That Noise: In the Japanese version, Cherubimon has a raspy, distorted laugh afflicted with white noise.
  • I Cannot Self-Terminate: Wendimon reappears inside Cherubimon's body and implores Magnamon and Rapidmon to destroy him.
  • Kick the Dog: After reaching the Mega form and devolving Veemon, Hawkmon, Armadimon, and Terriermon; he juggles them repeatedly in the air until Wallace got sick of seeing it and yelled at him to stop, to which he responded by tossing them aside to nearby cliffs.
  • The Kindnapper: Wendimon is actually abducting everyone from around the world with an original-generation Digivice because he's trying to simply locate his old partner so they can have fun playing around again.
  • Lean and Mean: Antylamon Virus is substantially thinner and more agile than the hulking Wendimon.
  • Light Is Not Good: It's very hard to believe that Cherubimon Vice is a Vaccine-type just like its Virtue counterpart rather than a Virus-type.
  • Mental World: He trapped the season one Digidestined in his mindscape.
  • Mercy Kill: Wallace's entire character arc revolves around him realizing that Chocomon is too far gone and must be put out of his misery. He asks Daisuke to help him euthanize his corrupted partner, then Chocomon himself begs Magnamon and Rapidmon to be terminated.
  • No One Could Survive That!: Angemon and Angewomon literally tear his body apart. His face is even shown disintegrating, implying that their assault was successful... Then the skies darken and the heroes immediately realize that all they've really done was piss him off.
  • Not Himself: When Kari shows up and sees Cherubimon, she says that it's not Kokomon anymore. Something else is acting through him. Once Cherubimon consumes them, the original Kokomon appears to Magnamon and Rapidmon.
  • Nothing Is Scarier: At least in the original Japanese, we never find out what possessed him and caused him to disappear in the first place. Subverted in the dub, while we never the know what exactly the virus is, we do know that the virus is the same as that which corrupted Diaboromon.
  • One-Winged Angel: Cornered by Fladramon, Halsemon, Digmon and Gargomon, Antylamon retreats into the lake to safely evolve into his most powerful form, Cherubimon. Bonus points for Cherubimon being an angel Digimon.
  • Punched Across the Room: Wendimon gets pistol-whipped by Gargomon, who is maybe a tenth his size, so hard that he flies through a billboard and lands several hundred feet away.
  • Psychopathic Manchild: All he wants to do is spend the summer playing with Wallace. Forever.
  • Reality Warper: As Cherubimon, he was able to reverse the colors of the scenery and de-age the characters.
  • Red Eyes, Take Warning: Has them as Wendimon and Antylamon, with the latter also defaulting to an aggressive, yet still somewhat playful stare to go with it. Cherubimon averts this trope by having Supernatural Gold Eyes.
  • Spell My Name With An S:
    • Kokomon's champion form is based on the Wendigo, but it's name is either Wendimon or Endigomon, depending on which side of the Pacific you're on. (Wendigomon is at best a invoked Fan Nickname that decades later does indeed become its Dub name).
    • Kokomon is called Chocomon in the original version, to go along with his brother Gummymon's dessert Theme Naming.
  • Split Personality: The original Chocomon, which is referred to as the "crying Digimon", is a child desperately searching for his partner and unable to understand how things have changed since their last encounter. The other personality is a vicious beast that takes over Chocomon's body during the film's climax.
  • Symbolic Blood: Any injuries that Cherubimon receives emit black spheres, which he can also use to attack. When he is destroyed from the inside, he coughs up some kind of pink cloud. The latter is accompanied by a splattering sound in the dub.
  • Theme Twin Naming: In both the original and the dub, the twins are only referred to by the name of their In-Training forms, Chocomon and Gummymon.
  • Tearful Smile: Upon his death, both Chocomon and his brother smile while breaking into tears.
    Terriermon: Chocomon always cried a lot. But now... He was smiling.
  • Tragic Monster: He is separated from his partner when he was only a baby and twisted into a hideous beast over the course of the years. Chocomon spends his last moments as a prisoner inside his own body, begging his brother and Magnamon to end his suffering.
  • Troll: Antylamon and Cherubimon don't fight as much as they toy with their opponents. The latter even fakes being injured before giving out a vicious Slasher Smile and curb stomping them.
  • Who Are You?: Gargomon asks him this upon seeing his Cherubimon form. The corrupted Digimon responds by immediately de-evolving the others.
  • Yandere: A non-romantic version toward Willis, who he seems to just want to play with. He has no idea of how much time had passed since he disappeared.

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