September 12, 2018
- 20:1120:11, September 12, 2018 diff hist −8 m Ravenous Whiskerpillar Removed the mentions of potato since it makes no sense vs. caterpillar.
- 20:0920:09, September 12, 2018 diff hist 0 m Pileated Snagret In japanese, it's a crow with a snake body.
- 20:0120:01, September 12, 2018 diff hist +1 m Armored Cannon Beetle Its japanese name insinuates it's a "tokkuri" that has a top-mouth.
- 19:5919:59, September 12, 2018 diff hist 0 m Water Dumple Judging by its japanese name, it's a catfish in the form of a dumpling, not a dumpling that acts like a catfish.
- 19:5719:57, September 12, 2018 diff hist 0 m Skutterchuck Judging by its japanese name, it makes more sense that it is an eboshi launcher than and eboshi that launches.
- 19:5419:54, September 12, 2018 diff hist −86 m Nectarous Dandelfly Judging by how its name is built ("Usuba" "Mitsu" "Mochi"), it's more likely to hold Antlion honey than be an antlion that holds something wrapped like Mochi. The way it is written, "Mochi", as its last part, would be the genus and make it a rice cake.
- 19:5119:51, September 12, 2018 diff hist −53 m Iridescent Flint Beetle Small riches vs. big riches of its counterpart and the scarab pun seem more likely to be namesakes than rice cakes.
- 19:4519:45, September 12, 2018 diff hist +232 m Sandbelching Meerslug Explanation for its japanese and internal name.
- 19:4119:41, September 12, 2018 diff hist +4 m Fiery Blowhog No edit summary
- 19:3619:36, September 12, 2018 diff hist +1 m Puffy Blowhog "Tokkuri" is the genus, not balloon.
- 19:2919:29, September 12, 2018 diff hist +22 m Male Sheargrub Explain the internal naming reason in Pikmin.
- 19:2319:23, September 12, 2018 diff hist +28 m Female Sheargrub Explain the internal naming reason in Pikmin.
- 19:1819:18, September 12, 2018 diff hist 0 m Burrowing Snagret Matched japanese name with rest of site
- 19:1219:12, September 12, 2018 diff hist −61 m Waddlepus Changed the japanese name from "waddling bubbler" to "Bubble Octopus" since "dako" with a short "o" sound refers to an octopus (Tako->Dako with prefix), not the verb "to meander", which has a long "o" sound.