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Deceptive Snack

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Deceptive Snack
Pikmin 4 treasure
Treasure Catalog icon for the Deceptive Snack.
Series Sweet Tooth Series
Value Icon that represents Sparklium on the wiki, based on the icon found in Pikmin 4. × 40
Weight 5
Maximum carriers 10
Locations Crackling Cauldron
Dandori Challenge stages None
Dandori Battle stages None
Total amount 2

This article or section is about an upcoming or recently released game.
The content here is subject to change as more information is discovered.
All information added here must be verifiable and not speculative.

The Deceptive Snack (おやじの味?lit 'Oyaji's taste') is a treasure in Pikmin 4 located in the Crackling Cauldron. It is a nori senbe, a Japanese rice cracker with dried seaweed layered on top.

Collecting the treasure

The following article or section contains guides.
The strategies shown are just suggestions.

Sun-Speckled Terrace

The Deceptive Snack is inside of a sideways flower pot on Sublevel 1 of the Crackling Cauldron. it is located in the southern section of the map. It is guarded by a Shearwig, which should be defeated before attempting to collect this treasure, although it is not mandatory to do so. To collect this treasure, you must throw 5 Pikmin at it.

Hero's Hideaway

It is lying on the ground at the top of Sublevel 1 of the Frozen Inferno. To collect this treasure, you must throw a fire starter at the bundles of straw in front of it. Then, throw 5 Pikmin at it.

Notes

Schnauz's notes

This treasure takes a sophisticated palate to appreciate. First, a salty-sweet sauce is put atop some kind of white foodstuff. It's then fried and topped with a thin black layer of...paper? It sounds awful, but it tastes wonderful. Surprising in the best way!

Olimar's Notes

It's sweet...but not too sweet. Salty... but not overly so. It tastes like something a more refined palate would appreciate. Perhaps belonging to someone whose tastes were developed over the course of many years.

Louie's Notes

A crunchy and uncomplicated treat.

Gallery

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning Notes
Flag of Japan Japanese おやじの味?
Oyaji no Aji
Oyaji's taste おやじ? can be translated either as an elder man or a masculine term for one's own father.
Flag of the Netherlands Dutch Zoetzoute misleider Salty-sweet Deceiver
Flag of France French Trompe-la-langue Deceive-the-tongue
Flag of Germany German Unauffällige Köstlichkeit Inconspicuous Delicacy
Flag of Italy Italian Salatino dell'inganno Saltine of deceit
Flag of Brazil Portuguese Engana-língua Tongue-twister
Flag of Spain Spanish Falsa galleta Fake cookie