Falling block: Difference between revisions
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'''Falling blocks'''<ref>M. Arakawa. Nintendo ''Game Boy'' Player's Guide. Page 7. "''The fortress level of World One features pseudo-Egyptian graphics and a great soundtrack. You can use Lift Blocks to bypass some danger, but watch for falling blocks in this rickety old place!''"</ref> are slab-like obstacles that appear in ''[[Super Mario Land]]''. They are tiles that appear identical to the surrounding landscape of a level, but they fall when [[Mario]] comes close to them, in a similar fashion to | '''Falling blocks'''<ref>M. Arakawa. Nintendo ''Game Boy'' Player's Guide. Page 7. "''The fortress level of World One features pseudo-Egyptian graphics and a great soundtrack. You can use Lift Blocks to bypass some danger, but watch for falling blocks in this rickety old place!''"</ref> are slab-like obstacles that appear in ''[[Super Mario Land]]''. They are tiles that appear identical to the surrounding landscape of a [[level]], but they fall when [[Mario]] comes close to them, in a similar fashion to [[falling spike]]s. Falling blocks appear only in [[World 1-3 (Super Mario Land)|World 1-3]] and [[World 4-1 (Super Mario Land)|World 4-1]] and cannot be defeated by any means. | ||
==Names in other languages== | ==Names in other languages== | ||
{{foreign names | {{foreign names |
Revision as of 18:39, April 17, 2024
- This article is about the obstacle from Super Mario Land. For the object from the same game also known as a falling block, see dropping lift. For the recurring object from the Super Mario franchise also known as a Falling Block, see Donut Block. For the recurring object from the Yoshi franchise also known as a falling block, see Cascading Stone.
Falling block | |
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First appearance | Super Mario Land (1989) |
Falling blocks[1] are slab-like obstacles that appear in Super Mario Land. They are tiles that appear identical to the surrounding landscape of a level, but they fall when Mario comes close to them, in a similar fashion to falling spikes. Falling blocks appear only in World 1-3 and World 4-1 and cannot be defeated by any means.
Names in other languages
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | 落ちてくる天井[2] Ochitekuru Tenjō |
Falling Ceiling | |
Italian | Soffitto cadente[3] | Falling ceiling |
References
- ^ M. Arakawa. Nintendo Game Boy Player's Guide. Page 7. "The fortress level of World One features pseudo-Egyptian graphics and a great soundtrack. You can use Lift Blocks to bypass some danger, but watch for falling blocks in this rickety old place!"
- ^ Shogakukan. 2015. Super Mario Bros. Hyakka: Nintendo Kōshiki Guidebook, Super Mario Land section, page 48.
- ^ Super Mario Bros. Enciclopedia, pag. 48
Super Mario Land | |
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Protagonists | Mario • Princess Daisy |
Bosses | King Totomesu • Dragonzamasu (Tamao) • Hiyoihoi • Biokinton (Chicken) • Tatanga (Pagosu) |
Locations | Sarasaland (Birabuto Kingdom • Muda Kingdom • Easton Kingdom • Chai Kingdom) |
Levels | World 1-1 • World 1-2 • World 1-3 • World 2-1 • World 2-2 • World 2-3 • World 3-1 • World 3-2 • World 3-3 • World 4-1 • World 4-2 • World 4-3 • Expert Level |
Items & vehicles | Super Mushroom • Superball Flower • Star • 1UP heart • Coin • Marine Pop • Sky Pop • Switch • Lift Block |
Enemies & obstacles | Batadon • Bombshell Koopa • Bullet Biff • Bunbun • Chikako • Dropping lift • Falling block • Falling spike • Fly • Ganchan • Gao • Gunion • Goombo • Honen • Kumo • Mekabon • Nyololin • Pionpi • Pipe Fist • Piranha Plant • Pompon Flower • Roketon • Roto Disc • Suu • Tokotoko • Torion • Yurarin • Yurarin Boo |
Other | Brick • Bonus game • Das Super Mario Spiel • Gallery • Glitches • Goal • Main Theme • Media • Mystery Block • Sub-area • Soundtrack |