Goggles (character)

Goggles is a character from the Splatoon manga and the series' mascot, who first appeared un-named in Chapter 0, a fan-made promotional manga published in June's CoroCoro Special issue in 2015, in which he was in a different outfit, more in-sync with the promotional-art character he was based on. He has appeared in every chapter since.

Description
Goggles has worn five different outfits through the course of the manga, excluding his short-lived outfits that were only featured in one chapter, like his outfit changes in Chapter 3. They all (excluding the Octo Expansion gear) share the same headgear, the Pilot Goggles, which the character was named after. In Chapter 0, he wore the Zink Layered LS and Purple Hi-Horses. Throughout the CoroCoro Cup, he wore the Armor Jacket Replica and Hero Runner Replicas. During the Hero Mode chapters, he wore the Hero Headset Replica with his goggles, Hero Jacket Replica and Hero Runner Replicas. In the Square King Cup arc and onwards (excluding the Octo Expansion arc) he wore the Eggplant Mountain Coat and Hero Runner Replicas. In the Octo Expansion arc, he wore the Sennyu Goggles, Sennyu Suit and Sennyu Inksoles.

Personality
Throughout the manga, Goggles is shown to be quite naïve and often not serious, a trait that is shared with fellow teammate Bobble Hat. In the first volume of the manga, his info in the Inkling Almanac reveals that he is a restless sleeper. In addition to this, he is also shown to engage in practical jokes, mostly pantsing other Inklings (notably Rider) and getting naked in public. He has also confused wasabi with tooth paste.

Relationships
He is shown to get along well with the other members of Team Blue, despite Headphones and Specs taking often offense to his actions, while Bobble Hat seems to not mind his shenanigans. Rider is Goggles' best friend outside of Team Blue. Originally Rider was a self-centered enemy to Goggles, but Goggles' compassion for his team members taught Rider to be nicer to his teammates.

Trivia

 * He is hard of hearing and often confuses things, such as "Turf War" for "Surf War".