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What is the plot?
At the park, Bu-Ling is challenged by Long Yuebin, the apprentice sent by her father to test her skills and determine whether she is worthy to inherit KouEnJi Kenpou. The confrontation begins as a formal martial-arts duel, with Bu-Ling taking it seriously and relying on speed, agility, and quick attacks rather than brute force.
As the duel develops, Long Yuebin proves stronger and more disciplined than Bu-Ling expects. He steadily counters her moves, forces her onto the defensive, and eventually defeats her in front of everyone watching. Bu-Ling is shocked and frustrated by the loss, because she expected to win through determination and because the fight is not only about pride but about her future.
After the defeat, Long Yuebin reveals the condition attached to the duel's outcome: Bu-Ling's father had already decided that if Yuebin won, Bu-Ling would have to marry him. Bu-Ling is stunned by this declaration and immediately resists the idea, realizing that the duel was never just about martial arts but about her father arranging her life without her consent.
The situation becomes even more upsetting for Bu-Ling as the implications sink in. Her defeat has turned into a forced engagement, and she is left facing the fact that her father's decision has made the duel into a binding family arrangement. The episode closes on the emotional weight of that revelation, with Bu-Ling trapped between humiliation, anger, and disbelief at the marriage condition tied to her loss.
What is the ending?
In the ending, Pudding is forced into a marriage arrangement after losing a duel, but she rejects the idea emotionally and the episode closes with her shaken by how little control she has over her own future. The ending is less about a battle and more about Pudding being cornered by an adult decision made without her consent.
Pudding's story is the focus of the ending. She has already been challenged by Yuebing Long, a student of her father's dojo, and when she loses, the result of that duel is revealed to be a marriage agreement her father had made in advance. The shock comes not only from losing, but from learning that her future was decided before she even entered the fight. Taruto leaves, and Yuebing then reveals that he knows she is Mew Pudding and says he wants to be with her. Pudding is left angry and uncomfortable, because the arrangement feels imposed on her rather than chosen by her.
By the end of the episode, Pudding remains the main person affected by the outcome. Her fate in this story is not a physical defeat on the battlefield, but a personal crisis: she has been assigned an unwanted fiancé and must face the reality that her father has treated her future like a prize tied to a martial contest. The other main characters are not shown resolving this conflict at the end; the scene centers on Pudding's reaction and leaves the situation unsettled.
Is there a post-credit scene?
Yes. Episode 33's "Petit" short does not have a separate post-credit scene; the episode simply ends after the main gag sequence, with no additional stinger or extra scene after the credits.
The available episode listings and the uploaded "Petit! Tokyo Mew Mew New" mini-anime materials identify episode 33 as a short-form installment rather than a standard episode, and they do not describe any post-credit content.
Why does Taruto create the cactus monster in the park, and what does that attack reveal about his plan in this episode?
This question focuses on Taruto's specific role in the episode's monster attack, since the park battle is the central action beat described in the available sources. The episode summary says Taruto creates a cactus monster in the middle of the park, and the Mews struggle to defeat it, which makes Taruto's motive and the significance of the attack one of the most natural viewer questions about the plot itself.
How does Pudding’s family situation tie into the episode’s title, "A Fiancé Appears! Pudding’s Fated Marriage?!"?
This is a highly specific character question because the episode title points directly at Pudding/Bu-Ling and the idea of a fiancé or marriage. The episode information states that Bu-Ling's father sends his apprentice, Yuebing Long, to challenge her for the title of successor to KouEnJi Kenpou, and that the challenge leads to the fiancé/marriage framing in the title.
Who is Yuebing Long, and why does he matter to Bu-Ling’s story in this episode?
This question is about a specific character relationship rather than the series in general. According to the episode listing, Yuebing Long is Bu-Ling's father's apprentice, and he wins the challenge that is meant to test Bu-Ling's suitability as the successor to KouEnJi Kenpou, making him the episode's key guest character.
What happens during the park fight with the cactus monster, and why do the Mews struggle against it?
This is one of the most natural plot-specific questions because the brief plot summary highlights the fight as the episode's main action sequence. The source says Taruto's cactus monster appears in the park and that the Mews try to take it down but struggle, which implies viewers often want to know the mechanics of the battle and why the team has trouble overcoming it.
How does the episode balance Pudding’s personal challenge with the monster attack storyline?
This question targets the episode's structure and the way it splits attention between a character-focused subplot and the battle plot. The available summaries show two distinct threads: Taruto's cactus monster attack in the park and Bu-Ling/Pudding's succession challenge involving Yuebing Long, so a common viewer question would be how those two elements intersect within the episode.
Is this family friendly?
Yes--Tokyo Mew Mew New: Specials / Petit #17 is generally family-friendly for children, with the usual mild anime-cartoon style content rather than anything explicit or graphic. The broader Tokyo Mew Mew franchise is rated around TV-Y7 / PG-type levels in parental guidance sources, with mild violence, mild profanity, and mild frightening scenes noted, plus occasional revealing costumes in the series overall.
Potentially objectionable or upsetting elements for children or sensitive viewers may include:
- Mild action violence: cartoon fighting, impact hits, and creature/monster conflict.
- Mild scary moments: tense or alarming scenes that may be a little unsettling for younger viewers.
- Revealing character costumes: some outfits are described as somewhat revealing, though not explicit.
- Mild language: occasional insults or harsh words in some versions of the series.
I could not verify scene-specific details for Petit #17 from the available results, so the warning above is based on the franchise's established parental-guide content rather than a confirmed breakdown of that exact mini-episode.