>>18245430Yea, but his shiny form looks like a wee little drunk panda stumbling around the place and he's green, so I sadly always associate the two. Also, if you wanted to go the stretch route, I remember coming across an old Irish fairytale on TG4 before, where a fairy agreed to marry a human, and warned that if she received 3 unwarranted blows she'd leave. Yer man proceeds to slap her for crying at a wedding (foresaw their demise), laughing at a funeral (using powers to look back on dead persons happy life) and something else which I've forgotten. I don't tell it well, but the fairy in the story really reminds me of gardevoir, especially seeing as how it involves a human shaped fairy with psychic abilities who you marry. Again, it's a long shot, but mega-milf may come in handy competitively speaking?
Her colour scheme also suits. Most fairies and ghosts fit the Irish theme well due to all the stories, but it's questionable whether anyone will get what you're trying to do unless they're really obvious
More definitely, sawsbuck due to it looking a bit like a stag, the national animal, garden vivillon as you get those from the UK and Ireland and it's quite like the burren green butterfly, and kingdra fits very well as a kelpie (supernatural water horse)
>>18245548>>18245485 's suggestion works for steel