idd
After prawn stops attacking you, use the bubble bowl move to hit him. After that, Ham-mers will appear. Do the same thing. Then, even more Ham-mers will appear. Do the same thing. After that, you defeat him.
hit him with the trident and hit him with whatever attack except the shield
hit him with your number five weopon
wait until he stops attacking and hit him three times then he will turn to normal krab
All you basically have to do is when he is about to charge you hit him with your spatula and sometimes you might get a good chance of hitting him while he's charging.
its not!
The Casbah
The Clash
1980s*
The exact number of meteorites that hit Neptune is unknown. It is very unlikely that any do, since Neptune is so far out in the Solar System. Still, at least a few hundred meteorites must hit Neptune each year. -Professor Zayle Heartow
first use neptunes weapon that you unlocked in the puzzle if you see Triton not glowing green hit im and he will do damage that's how i tried hoped it work for you
The first four moons of Neptune, Naiad, Thalassa, Despina, and Galatea, are so close to Neptune that they orbit within its ring system. Little is known about them. The next one out, Larissa, was actually discovered in 1981, when it blocked a star. This was attributed to the ring arcs, but later was found to be the moon, being re-discovered by Voyager 2 in 1989. Proteus is the second-largest moon in orbit around Neptune. It is so close to the planet that Earth-bound telescopes cannot see it. Triton is next (right), and is one of the strangest moons in the solar system. First, it is one of only three moons in the solar system that has an atmosphere (Jupiter's Io and Saturn's Titan are the other two). It is thicker than Io's, yet much thinner than Titan's. Its pressure is 1/100,000 of Earth's. Second, Triton has a retrograde orbit, which means that it orbits the opposite way the planet spins. This is a very strong indication that Triton was captured. This in itself is not strange; both of Mars' moons were captured. What is strange is that Triton is two-thirds the size of our moon. When two bodies have a close encounter, one does not automatically capture the other, especially if it is so big. One theory is that Triton must have actually hit Neptune, bounced off the atmosphere, and gone into orbit because it lost all of its momentum. Another way this could have happened is that Triton collided with one of Neptune's moons, smashed it to bits (possibly creating the rings), and lost so much momentum that it couldn't escape Neptune's gravity. Third, it is only 38 °C (100 °F) above absolute zero (the temperature at which all matter comes to rest). In such frigid a climate scientists did not expect to find active geysers. But, they did. They spew out a gaseous form of nitrogen, which is what creates its atmosphere. The eighth moon, Nereid, has a highly elliptical orbit that causes it to swing around Neptune at various distances. When closest, it is 1,342,530 km (834,210 miles) from the planet. At the farthest distance, it is 9,667,120 km (6,006,870 miles) from Neptune. The last five moons were discovered in the first few weeks of and throughout 2003. They have not yet been given official names by the International Astronomical Union. Very little is yet known about them.