Flame the Sunbird
“ | Flame is the Sunbird protector of the Master Sunstone on the mysterious Rainbow Island. He can fly sky-high, the sun does not bother him at all. | ” |
Flame the Sunbird Animal Crossing card, clearly displaying Chris's knowledge of how to use a comma |
Flame the Sunbird is some Kazooie ripoff that is somehow involved with the Chaotic Combo. Much like Punchy he is a master of Random Access Humor and often says lines completely unrelated to what's going on. Some argue he is a rip off of Bean the Dynamite, a character from Sonic the Fighters.
“ | I could use some pants. | ” |
Flame, while randomly guarding the Legendary Master Sunstone |
“ | Big Red Light! | ” |
Flame, after missing his attack against Blake. |
In the Comic
Flame the Sunbird is a minor character in the Comic. His role is to look after the Legendary Master Sunstone, however it is stolen by Blake acting under the orders of Giovanni. Just to reiterate, its entire purpose in life is to protect this stupid fucking rock, only to have it stolen by some big-shit rip-off of a rip-off in an eyeblink. It is later returned to its correct place when the Chaotic Combo & Sonichu defeat Blake.
Flame also appears in the Episode 18 Prologue. When the Chaotic Combo are celebrating their 19th birthday Flame is in attendance.
Flame is Not a Pokémon
Interestingly enough in his introduction Flame remarks that he is not a Pokémon nor is he related to one. However a few pages later he is uses the Pokémon move Drill Peck when chasing Blake as he escapes on his hover board. Why Chris bothered to contradict himself like that is never explained. An interesting correlation has been drawn between Christopher's super-ultra-unique character Flame and Moltres, also known as the "Flame Pokémon." Moltres is a legendary bird drawn in the image of the phoenix, who can be found in part of Victory Road in the original Pokémon Gameboy games. Because no credit was given to the Pokémon creators by the true, honest Chris Chan, it is universally accepted that the similarities are purely coincidental and not a complete rip-off.