![]() ![]() This time, Tak has been stuck in the Dream World and cannot leave until he can complete a quest that the Dream Juju has choose him for. The blast returns all the villagers to normal, but Tlaloc was too close to the blast, so he remains a sheep. Tak then defeats the evil shaman by using his own dark magic against him, turning Tlaloc into a sheep, catapulting him into his source of power. After this is done, The Moon Juju reveals that Tak is the mighty warrior of the prophecy and sends him to fight Tlaloc. After collecting the Yorbels and reviving Lok, Lok gets a case of diarrhea called 'Resurrection's Revenge', so Tak has to retrieve the three Moonstones in his place. After this, Tak uses his newly improved magic powers to collect 100 magic Yorbels which are scattered throughout the areas, and Lok's spirit from the spirit world. He is assigned by Jibolba to collect 9 Nubu Plants to turn Lok back to human form. In the beginning of the series, Tak is one of only a few Villagers who was not turned into sheep by Tlaloc. Tak and the Power of Juju Main article: Tak and the Power of Juju (video game) See the Television Series section below for details. In Tak: Guardians of Gross, Tak's personality is the same as his T.V. He does make them here and there throughout the game. Most of this is due to the fact that Lok is being the main source of the comic relief that there was no need to have Tak make a whole lot of jokes, but when he does he is the only one laughing. In Tak 3, his maturity is higher and voice is lower. From the first scene in the "Tak's Dream" level, he was reluctant on going on the rescue mission, calling it 'the oldest line in the book', but ultimately decided to do after told he would only wake up if he accepted the quest. ![]() In Tak 2, his personality is more mature and determined. He provides most of the comic relief in the first game, though lets Lok handle the jokes in the next two. In a nutshell, Tak's personality is a bit of a lazy teenager, though matures over the course of the games. There would be little difference in his appearance into the television series, where his cape is replaced with his Weapons case once more while keeping his build and loincloth of the last two games. In the next game, Tak: The Great Juju Challenge, Tak's appearance has gone unchanged. His voice is now noticeably lower, as a result of his aging. Tak's hair is a bit longer and shaggier, indicating him being older. He also sports an animal skin cape with a spiral emblem, which allows Tak to glide short distances. He is now a bit taller, thinner, and in better shape. In Tak 2: The Staff of Dreams, Tak went through a very big change. He had a higher pitched voice, indicating his young age. Tak was short, had a bowl-cut hairdo, a dark red loincloth, and a pudgy belly. He had purple face paint around his eyes and also carried a small case on his back to hold his weapons. ![]() In the first game, Tak was the size of an average kid, with the many details of his appearance relating to tribesmen. Of course his Tan skin tone, dark brown hair, turquoise eyes, as well as his face paint placement all stayed consistent. Through the series Tak went through a lot of changes with the first game giving him a young child like appearance, with him being around 10-ish in age, and in later games showing a drastic difference in both appearance and age, presumably 12-14 years.
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