The Lion King Wiki
Advertisement
The Lion King Wiki
Fibber
No Image
Physical information
Gender

Male

Species

Meerkat

Biographical information
Status

Living

Residence

Hakuna Matata

Affiliations

Meekon's colony

Relationship information
Family

Meekon (relative)

Allies

Meekon, Pumbaa, Simba, Timon, Victor

We just want to see the drawings! My friends don't believe there are any. In fact, I don't believe it either!
―Fibber[src]

Fibber is a male meerkat. He is a member of Meekon's colony.

After hearing the tale of the watu, Fibber joined up with Simba, Timon, and Pumbaa to search for them. With the help of a vulture named Victor, the friends found a cave covered in watu paintings. They brought evidence of the watu back to the meerkat elder, Meekon, but he simply dismissed their findings as being a bird nest and a rare plant.

Biography[]

Early life[]

Fibber lived in the jungle along with his colony.[1]

Legend of the watu[]

While listening to Meekon's tale about a mysterious race called "the watu," Fibber offered to show Simba and his friends, Timon and Pumbaa, watu paintings he had seen in a cave. He acted as their guide, though he started to doubt his own words about the watu. The friends eventually found the watu paintings, and Victor, the vulture who had guided them, even offered to show them some real watu. That night, the group slept in the cave, ignorant of the watu who visited. Afterward, Fibber was able to bring home something the watu had left behind: a catapult and a bowl. However, when he showed his findings to Meekon, the elder meerkat passed them off as a bird nest and a rare plant, which dismayed Fibber.[1]

Personality and traits[]

Fibber is dishonest and often blows small stories into exaggerated adventures. Additionally, he is quite innocent, inquisitive, and daring enough to go on a long journey in order to settle his own curiosity.[1]

Appearances[]

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Revealed in Two-Legged Creatures from The Lion King: A Nature Fun and Learn Series. Issues 46 and 47 (1995–1997).
Advertisement