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Revision as of 22:38, 19 June 2025
Spike | |
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My Little Pony character | |
![]() Spike as he appears in "Molt Down" | |
First appearance | "Friendship Is Magic – Part 1" (2010) |
Created by | Lauren Faust Meghan McCarthy |
Based on | Spike from the My Little Pony toyline's first incarnation |
Voiced by |
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| full_name =
| nicknames = Spikey-wikey
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| species = Dragon (Equestria)
Dog (Equestria Girls)
| title = Great and Honorable Spike the Brave and Glorious
| occupation =
- Twilight Sparkle's assistant
- Friendship ambassador
- Twilight's royal advisor
- Member of the Council of Friendship (finale)
| family =
- Twilight Sparkle (adoptive older sister)
- Shining Armor (adoptive older brother)
- Twilight Velvet (adoptive mother)
- Night Light (adoptive father)
- Princess Cadance (adoptive sister-in-law)
- Princess Flurry Heart (adoptive niece)
| relatives = | spouse = | significant_other = }}
My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic |
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Spike is a fictional character who appears in the fourth incarnation of Hasbro's My Little Pony toyline and media franchise, beginning with My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic (2010–2019). He serves as a main supporting character throughout the series and is the adoptive younger brother and assistant to Twilight Sparkle, the series' main protagonist. He is voiced by Cathy Weseluck.[1]
Spike is depicted as an anthropomorphic baby dragon who helps Twilight organize her daily activities, takes notes during her friendship lessons, and magically sends her letters through his fire breath. He harbors an unrequited crush on Rarity and dreams of growing up to become a brave and noble dragon.
Appearances
![]() | This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (May 2025) |
Fourth My Little Pony incarnation (2010–2021)
My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic
Spike is a purple baby dragon with green spines. He was orphaned as an egg and hatched by Twilight as part of her entrance exam for Princess Celestia's academy. He was also raised among Twilight's family as her adopted younger brother. Spike fulfills the role of Twilight's "number one assistant" to which he is named for his loyalty and skill at helping Twilight solve problems and learn lessons. He also has a crush on Rarity, an insatiable appetite for sparkly gems, and the ability to send letters via his fiery dragon breath.
During the season three premiere, The Crystal Empire, Spike becomes a hero of the titular kingdom after helping deliver the Crystal Heart to Princess Cadance and contributing to the defeat King Sombra. He becomes known throughout the Crystal Empire as "Great and Honorable Spike the Brave and Glorious." He later saves the Crystal Empire again during the episode "Equestria Games" when he saves the stadium for the titular event from being hit from a giant mass of ice falling from the sky.
Spike coming to terms with his identity as a dragon living among ponies is a recurring theme in the series, explored in episodes like "Dragon Quest," "Gauntlet of Fire," and "Father Knows Beast." In "Gauntlet of Fire," he befriends Princess Ember, who becomes the new Dragon Lord and ruler of the Dragon Lands. Spike later becomes Equestria's official friendship ambassador to the dragons.
In "Molt Down", he gains a pair of wings after undergoing a developmental stage for dragons called the "molt". At the end of the series, he becomes Twilight's royal adviser. Spike acts as a foil to Twilight and her friends in terms of personality, size, and shape which "provides plenty of opportunity for exploring this difference in storylines". Spike is the only male member of his team.
My Little Pony: Equestria Girls
Spike is a main character in the first two Equestria Girls films.
In the first film, he travels to the human world with Twilight to help her recover her stolen crown containing the Element of Magic after it is stolen by Sunset Shimmer, transforming into a talking dog in the process while Twilight transforms into a teenaged human girl. His role in the film is consists mostly of reassuring Twilight as she navigates the complexities of her new human transformation and trying to fit in as she poses as a new student at Canterlot High School. After Twilight befriends the human counterparts of her friends from Equestria and wins the crown back by being elected Princess of the Fall Formal, Spike is kidnapped by Sunset's acolytes during the film's climax. Sunset is eventually defeated and reformed, and Spike and Twilight return to Equestria together.
In the second film, Spike returns to the human world and reassumes his talking dog form with Twilight to help her Canterlot High friends to confront the Dazzlings, who can hypnotize others with their magical voices. Twilight is recruited to join The Rainbooms, her friends' rock band as she works on a counter-spell to perform at the CHS Battle of the Bands and break the Dazzlings' spell on the students. After the Rainbooms are trapped under a stage during the final round of the competition, Spike finds DJ Pon-3 who helps them escape and defeat the Dazzlings. Spike and Twilight then return to Equestria.
Spike makes minor appearances with Twilight in subsequent Equestria Girls media.
My Little Pony: Pony Life
Spike appears as a secondary character in the spin-off reboot series, My Little Pony: Pony Life voiced by Tabitha St. Germain rather than Cathy Weseluck. He is depicted as already having wings from the beginning of the series.
My Little Pony: Make Your Mark
Spike appears as a secondary character in the reboot series, My Little Pony: Make Your Mark. Since he already appears as a grown dragon, his voice is provided by Martin Roach. Instead of walking on two legs in his previous form, he walks on four legs. He only appears in Chapter Six of the series, and he is now Dragon Lord, a role previously held by Princess Ember.
Equestria Girls alternate version
Spike's human world counterpart first appears in a cameo during the post-credits scene of My Little Pony: Equestria Girls – Rainbow Rocks as the ordinary pet dog of Twilight Sparkle's human world counterpart. He is fully introduced in My Little Pony: Equestria Girls – Friendship Games where he gains the ability to talk after being exposed to Equestrian magic and appears as a supporting character in subsequent media.
Development
Lauren Faust, the creator of Friendship Is Magic, envisioned the character as "the sensitive little boy who has a lot of sisters and just seems to get along better with girls".[2] On Spike's role as a dragon outsider living among ponies, Meghan McCarthy says: "He's trying to figure out who he is. What beyond being Twilight's assistant is his role in this world? I think he reflects how everybody feels at some point in their life".[3]
Reception and analysis
Researchers Christian Valiente and Xeno Rasmusson wrote in their 2015 article Bucking the Stereotypes that Spike exemplifies the series' pattern of positioning male characters in secondary roles to female protagonists, describing him as Twilight Sparkle's sidekick who acts as her assistant with dialogue that is typically short and comedic, placing him "socially beneath the female characters." The authors remarked that no male characters other than Spike and Big Macintosh (Applejack's brother) appeared in the series premiere.[4]
In her 2013 analysis of My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic, author Jen A. Blue criticized Spike's characterization in "The Ticket Master" as "extremely gender-essentialist," noting that the character rejects attending the Grand Galloping Gala explicitly because such events are "for girls" and dismisses them as "girly, frilly, frou-frou nonsense." While Blue acknowledged that this attitude is subverted by the episode's ending when Spike is revealed to be secretly disappointed about missing the event, she argued that the initial presentation reinforces harmful gender stereotypes by suggesting certain activities are inherently gendered, particularly problematic given the episode's timing as one likely viewed by early male fans of the series.[5]
In her analysis of the episode "A Dog and Pony Show", Blue criticized Spike's portrayal as exhibiting early signs of "Nice Guy Syndrome", describing his behavior toward Rarity as following a troubling transactional model of romance where he expects affection in return for favors and services. She commented that Spike treats a gem payment from Rarity as a "token of love" despite her not giving it as such, and fantasizes about rescuing her and being rewarded with a kiss; Blue argued that this approach "denies Rarity any internality or emotional life of her own, instead making her affection a prize to be won or a commodity to be bought." Blue further suggested that this episode established dragons within the series as representing "the collective Shadow of ponies as a whole," embodying the dark side of geek culture.[6]
See also
- Twilight Sparkle
- Rarity
- Cutie Mark Crusaders
- My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic fandom
- List of My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic characters
References
- ^ "Spike Voices (My Little Pony)". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved 2025-05-26.
- ^ Snider (2013), p. 79
- ^ Snider (2013), p. 19
- ^ Valiente, Christian; Rasmusson, Xeno (2015). "Bucking the Stereotypes: My Little Pony and Challenges to Traditional Gender Roles". Journal of Psychological Issues in Organizational Culture. 5 (4): 88–97. doi:10.1002/jpoc.21162.
- ^ Blue (2013), p. 39-44
- ^ Blue (2013), p. 187-192
Bibliography
- Snider, Brandon T. (2013). The Elements of Harmony: My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic: The Official Guidebook. New York: Little, Brown and Company. ISBN 978-0-316-24754-2.
- Blue, Jen A. (2013-08-31). My Little Po-Mo: Unauthorized Critical Essays on My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic Season One. pp. 39–44.