Jimmy T., a hip dude with a Wario nose and a perfect blue afro, is dancing at Diamond City's disco, Club Sugar, when his phone rings. Bam! - welcome to Jimmy's sport-themed games. Every time the player loses a game, Jimmy's cell battery depletes just a little. No more battery and you've lost Jimmy's games. Jimmy's series of games are the second one players take on in WarioWare, after an introduction from Wario, though Jimmy shows up twice more to challenge the player with remixes of other characters' microgames.
Eventually, the player can unlock Chiritorie, a game based on a remote-controlled vacuum cleaner that Nintendo released in Japan in 1979. In the Chiritorie microgame, one player controls the Game Boy Advances L button and another controlled the R button and each directs a vacuum cleaner toward crumpled-up paper wads. Whoever gets a hundred points first wins, but he or she will have to avoid Jimmy, who wanders onscreen to clog up the vacuums.
Jimmy shows up again in WarioWare: Twisted, in which he seems to have never left the dancefloor at Club Sugar. Now, however, he's busting a move with his folks, Mama T. and Papa T., much to the annoyance of the club owner, who just wants them to eat their dinner and go home. Jimmy's microgame set, Big Tipper, demands that the player drastically rotate their Game Boy Advance to win.
In WarioWare: Touched, Jimmy and his family return once again to the dance floor - cell phones in tow, no doubt - but Jimmy's groove-busting is interrupted by an unfriendly beetle referred to in the credits as Scratchy the Fro Bug. True to his name, Scratchy irritates Jimmy something awful, but his family merely mimics his itch- generated gyrations, thinking they're new dance moves. Scratchy's nuisance then spawns Jimmy's microgame set, Dance Club Rub, in which the player must make short, quick movements with the Nintendo DS stylus to win. On the walk home, Scratchy strikes again, but his family doesn't notice. "There he goes again," they comment.