Unga Bunga

Unga Bunga is a boss is Sonic Boom: Fire and Ice. It is the boss of Kodiak Frontier, a snowy evergreen forest themed island, and resembles a giant totem pole.

Appearance
Unga Bunga is composed of nine visible parts: six body fragments, a head with horns protruding out of the sides and curling upwards, and the two large arms and hands. Unga Bunga is mostly a garnet color, with some blue and black here and there.

Battle
Sonic and Amy arrive at the scene, where D-Fekt runs toward an inactive Unga Bunga and creates a blue aura around himself. He then floats into what seems to be a small cockpit in the head of the inactive robot, and Unga Bunga immediately wakes up. It springs from its idle position and begins the battle. The battle requires the player to switch off between Sonic and Amy. First, Unga Bunga will spin one of his hands around and jab it toward the player. He will then breath fire onto his hand, and try to smash the player with it. When Unga Bunga misses, the player must lock on to Unga Bunga's hand and attack it. Unga Bunga will do this a second time, and then when the player hits its hand, Unga Bunga will let out a war cry. This starts the second phase of the battle. A dizzy Unga Bunga drives its one arm into the left side of the screen. The player will have to switch to Amy for what will happen next. Blocks of ice begin to fall from the left side of the screen. Amy must pound Unga Bunga's arm with her hammer to make it rise into the air. Once this is accomplished, the player will have to switch back to Sonic again so he can freeze blocks of water that will lead up to the top of Unga Bunga's head, where D-Fekt is.. When the player has hit D-Fekt, Unga Bunga loses one of its horns, and the phases repeat again. When the battle is complete, Unga Bunga collapses into a pile of its sections.

Etymology
Unga Bunga is obviously based off a totem pole, which are common in Native American tribes. These are based mostly on the Pacific coast of North America, where there are many evergreen forests and very cold winters.