Ozone The Flying Squirrel

Ozone The Flying Squirrel is an anthropomorphic cartoon Squirrel created by Eric Langile, first debuting in Squirrel Wars, in 1926. He has since been one of ATBW's popular characters since being revived in 1988. He is the mascot of the brand Ozone Speakers, which makes subwoofers and car speakers. He briefly appeared in Pinto The Flying Squirrel in a few episodes but is otherwise not part of the series. After numerous failed attempts to get Ozone back into the spotlight, he was made into an adult character, starting in Ozone The Flying Squirrel: The Abundant Adventure in 2006. He still appears in merchandise accessories today.

Appearances
After his final debut in 1943, he appeared in a video game 45 years later, in 1988.

Color Version
In 1935, Ozone and his siblings were colorized, changing from Black and white to brown and mid brown, and Ozone's pants were originally colored Red, while Calzone's were colored Blue and Flyzone's were green. It remained this way through 1943, the year of their last appearance. Their sister debuted in Ozone Comes Home in 1936 and has pink colored shorts and a pink bow.

Revival
In 1988, the character was again revived, this time in Ozone the Flying Squirrel, which was released on March 15, 1988 as a launch title for the system. Attempts to replace Zach the Stick Person with Ozone were planned but have failed. In this appearance, Ozone and his two brothers were made black and white again but retained the colored shorts and boots. Only this time around however, Ozone's shorts were blue, Calzone's were green, and Flyzone's became red. Their sister was also made to Black and White but kept the pink shorts and bow tie. They would continue making appearances afterwards, including a re-release of the game in 1994 on the NES and SNES, the latter being titled Super Ozone The Flying Squirrel. Ozone's Super Adventure was also another game released on the SNES in 1992 and the ATBW A64 the following year.

They appeared in another game in 1998 on the ATBW A128 titled The Adventures of Ozone the Flying Squirrel. However, this game was intended for mature audiences as the company's CEO Eric Langile Jr. thought that no one would be interested in it if it was made a kid's game.