Driftwood Jellyfish Sheets
From the Super Mario Wiki, the Mario encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
Driftwood Jellyfish Sheets | |
---|---|
Description | |
"Mysterious sheets that feel kind of slick and wet to the touch. Gross." | |
First appearance | Mario & Luigi: Dream Team (2013) |
The Driftwood Jellyfish Sheets is an item that appears in Mario & Luigi: Dream Team, and one of the five Ultibed parts. It is a collection of jellyfish-texture bedsheets found in Driftwood Shore. Mario and Luigi find it in a room hidden behind a suspicious door after they receive an Old Lithograph from Broque Madame. Before they can retrieve it, a trio of Fly Guys R steal it. The Bros. must replay Mole Hunt to obtain whereabouts from the Mole Hunt old man, then head to Pi'illo Blimport. Once they defeat the Fly Guys R in battle, the Bros. can collect the sheets.
Ultibed Manual text
First Hint
- "The Driftwood Jellyfish Sheets, as the name implies, are said to be on Driftwood Shore. Who might know about them?"
Second Hint
- "Find a secret cave somewhere at the beach, and search within! Be sure to look around the places you've already visited as well."
Third Hint
- "Some fiends stole the item you found! The old man at the Mole Hunt seems to know where the suspects are off to..."
Fourth Hint
- "The old man at the Mole Hunt says the thieves who took your item are heading towards Pi'illo Blimport."
Description
- "You beat the thieves and got the sheets! Driftwood jellyfish are incredibly rare—they only appear once every thousand years!"
Names in other languages
Language | Name | Meaning |
---|---|---|
French (NOA) | Draps méduse de Lidodemer |
Driftwood jellyfish sheets |
Italian | Medulenzuola Dormiriva |
Medulenzuola is a combination from medusa (jellyfish) and lenzuola (sheets), while Dormiriva is the Italian name of Driftwood Shore |
Portuguese | Lençóis de medusa dorminhoca |
Sleepy jellyfish sheets |
Spanish (NOA) | Sábanas medusa sosegada |
Quiet jellyfish sheets, sosegada comes also from "sosiego", which in turn comes from "Costa Sosiego" (NoA Spanish name for Driftwood Shore) |
Spanish (NOE) | Sábanas de medusa sestera |
Sleepy jellyfish sheets, sestera comes also from "siesta" (nap), which in turn comes from "Playa Siesta" (NoE Spanish name for Driftwood Shore) |