Jashin leaves a puddle of glue at the door for Yurine to step on. It's used in a few movies like Doraemon: Nobita and the Steel Troops and Doraemon: Nobita and the Birth of Japan, the latter which turns out extremely useful in holding Gigazombie's robots in place since these robots are made of memory clay capable of reforming themselves in seconds after being destroyed. One of the many gadgets from Doraemon, the Instant Adhesive Gun, can fire blobs of glue on targets holding them in place.He has to use all his might to detach himself from his gigai, and manages to dispatch the Hollow and rescue the girl in time. This leads to trouble later when the two Soul Reapers have to go fight a Hollow Ikkaku is unable to leave his gigai body, since the glue is so strong that the wig is attached not just to the gigai's head but to Ikkaku's soul too. A filler episode of Bleach has Yumichika gluing a wig to Ikkaku's bald head when they're in the human world, so that the girl they're staying with will stop crushing on him (she has a fetish for shaved heads).It remains there for the entire episode, until he shatters it by slamming it on the ground. Akihisa Yoshii of Baka and Test: Summon the Beasts accidentally superglues his hand to a table in one episode of the anime. Since Sakuramochi-nesan's made out of mochi (and has very quick throwing reflexes), she can handle and launch it without any consequences. Thanks to having no coating, it's horribly sticky, sticking enemies (and sometimes others that attempt to copy her ability) to each other and gumming up Baikinman's robots. Sakuramochi-nesan from Anpanman throws plain, uncoated mochi at her enemies.Alice from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland becomes stuck when crossing a chessboard that has been covered in honey.
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