What makes him terrifying is the fact that one of the features that define him is. With the incantation complete, they both see a vision of a mountain which Gargamel recognizes as Skull Mountain, and on that mountain Papa Smurf sees the cause of their nightmares which he himself recognizes: the fabled Crown Of Dreams. Without knowing the intricacies to speech and language, one would never know when I'm using sarcasm (as many don't) and I wouldn't be able to interpret it when others do. The worst thing about the Black/Purple Smurfs is unlike the zombies they're loosely based on. Back in the village, the Smurfs are busy pinching each other's tails in order to keep themselves from falling asleep, while Papa Smurf is trying to create a stay-awake potion. Gargamel fearfully runs for his life, but is soon captured by a giant Papa Smurf who is pleased to have the wizard right where he wanted him all along. He hears them finding the smurfberries and eating them, but as he pounces from behind the bush to capture them, he sees that the Smurfs are now bigger than he is. This crown, Papa Smurf says, has the power to make dreams and nightmares a reality, and so the Smurfs follow Papa Smurf as he heads out of Gargamel's hovel to get to Skull Mountain. Gargamel chases him and Handy when Clumsy trips and ends up in Gargamel's net, who then just takes him and puts him in a sandwich while Clumsy helplessly stutters in fear as he's about to be eaten. Papa Smurf tells her that what's chasing her is still just a dream. The Smurfs And The Magic Flute (comic book), https://smurfs.fandom.com/wiki/The_Smurfs%27_Nightmare?oldid=69178, 1997 (Game Boy version, Europe only), 1999 (Game Boy Color version). This suggests that he was completely comfortable with his personal identity, as well as everyone else around him. As a geek, I'm surrounded by and am a master of sarcasm. In a way, and as evidenced by what he's saying, Gargamel dreams about torturing the Smurfs - right down to calling his catch a victim and questioning said victim whether they'd rather be simmered slowly or brought to a rapid boil (neither of which is pleasant). On a nice bright sunny day in the Smurf Village, Smurfette goes out into her garden to pick a flower, only for the flower to turn into a vicious giant Smurf-eating blossom that makes her run until she gets captured by an identical plant. The Smurfs' Nightmare (also known as The Smurfs 3) is a game released for the Gameboy and Gameboy Color. Whatever you do, don't say "Kaplowey"! In Part One of the Psychology of cartoons, I focused more on the individual psychology of certain cartoon characters. The Smurf language was much more complex than we give it credit for.
The Smurfs had a clear identification of their given roles, whether inherited or assigned.