Ed

"Beauty is pain!"

- Ed

Ed is a horse villager who first appeared in as a jock villager, but was given a smug personality in. He has appeared in most of the games in the, with the exceptions of and. His name may come from Mr. Ed, a television show about a talking horse that aired in the early 1960s. His initial phrase, greenhorn, is a slang word to refer to amateurs, relating to both his original jock personality and his current smug personality.

Appearance
Ed is a teal horse with yellow hair which covers his right eye, and a white muzzle. He has purple eyeshadow and long eyelashes, giving a false impression that he is female, when he is actually a male. He has a tuft of blond fur at the end of his skinny teal tail. In he has round nostrils however in  and onward his nostrils are a long rounded triangular shape.

In, , and
From up to, Ed has a jock personality, which means he will have a keen interest in sport and fitness, making him appear competitive and in some cases rude when talking to other villagers, usually criticizing their fitness. He will appear slow-witted and absent-minded when talking about deep, meaningful things. He will get along well with peppy villagers, but get confused by the choice of lifestyle followed by lazy villagers, who appear opposite to the jock personality. He may offend and upset snooty and cranky villagers.

In
Ed has a smug personality since, which means he seems to be a mix between all male villagers. He often acts arrogantly, but can appear kind-hearted and polite, sometimes gentlemanly, and will flirt with the player regardless of gender. He will easily get along with most other villagers, though he will occasionally annoy cranky villagers with his arrogance.

Trivia

 * Although many villagers have had their personalities changed between games, Ed is the only villager present in both and  to have his personality changed in the latter game; all other cases of personality changes were of villagers that either had their personality changed in City Folk or, or were absent from City Folk.