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'''Girders''' | {{rewrite-expand|include ''[[The Super Mario Bros. Movie]]'' information}} | ||
{{about|the girders from the Donkey Kong series|the platforms in the ''Mario Kart'' series|[[Kanaami Road]]}} | |||
'''Girders''' appear in the [[Super Mario (franchise)|''Super Mario'' franchise]] as narrow platforms that player characters can move on. The first appearance of girders in a ''Super Mario'' game is ''[[Donkey Kong (game)|Donkey Kong]]'', and most of their appearances since then have been in reference to this appearance. | |||
==History== | ==History== | ||
===''Donkey Kong'' / ''Donkey Kong'' (Game Boy)=== | ===''Donkey Kong'' / ''Donkey Kong'' (Game Boy)=== | ||
[[File:Donkey Kong | [[File:Donkey Kong Arcade 25m Screenshot.png|frame|Girders as they appear in [[25m]] in the arcade version]] | ||
Girders | Girders are objects in ''[[Donkey Kong (game)|Donkey Kong]]''. The girders in [[25m]] are sloped and also known as '''ramps'''.<ref>Instruction manual for the Coleco Adam port.{{page needed}}</ref> Girders appear in all four stages. In [[Donkey Kong (Game Boy)|the Game Boy remake]], they appear in all of these stages, as well as several stages in the game's later worlds, such as [[Big-City]]. In both games, they act essentially as a semi-solid platform that [[Mario]] can walk on. | ||
===''Donkey Kong Country'' series=== | |||
====''Donkey Kong Country''==== | |||
Girders appear in ''[[Donkey Kong Country]]'' during the opening cutscene, where [[Cranky Kong]] stands on a stack of them while playing [[Opening (Donkey Kong)|opening]] theme on a phonograph. | |||
====''Donkey Kong Country Returns''==== | |||
[[File:DKCR Slammin Steel 1.png|thumb|left|Donkey Kong standing on a girder in [[Slammin' Steel]]]] | |||
Girders in ''[[Donkey Kong Country Returns]]'' are the main floor in the [[Factory (Donkey Kong Country Returns)|Factory]] world. In the background for the Factory's first level, [[Foggy Fumes]], girders arranged in the zig-zagged 25m layout can be seen at one point. This pattern also commonly appears on wall reliefs throughout the temple-themed levels, along with other depictions of ''Donkey Kong'' arcade graphics. | |||
{{br}} | |||
===''Mario vs. Donkey Kong'' series=== | ===''Mario vs. Donkey Kong'' series=== | ||
[[File:MLM Girder.png|thumb|left|A girder from ''Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Mini-Land Mayhem!'']] | [[File:MLM Girder.png|thumb|left|A girder from ''Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Mini-Land Mayhem!'']] | ||
Girders appear in every game of the ''[[Mario vs. Donkey Kong (series)|Mario vs. Donkey Kong]]'' series as semi-solid platforms, similarly to their appearance in ''Donkey Kong''. Girders in ''[[Mario vs. Donkey Kong]]'', ''[[Mario vs. Donkey Kong 2: March of the Minis]]'' and ''[[Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Minis March Again!]]'' are colored red, but were changed to gray with rounded corners as of ''[[Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Mini-Land Mayhem!]]'', which describes them as "gray steel frames".<ref>{{cite|format=PDF|date=2010|deadlink=y|archive=web.archive.org/web/20101122213848/http://www.nintendo.com/consumer/gameslist/manuals/DS_Mario_vs_DK_Mayhem.pdf|title=''Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Mini-Land Mayhem!'' instruction booklet|page=16|publisher=nintendo.com|language=en-us|accessdate=July 4, 2024}}</ref> | |||
This type of fixed girder is distinct from one of the series' staple gameplay mechanics, the [[Red Girder]]s, which first appear in ''[[Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Mini-Land Mayhem!]]'' These can be drawn between red rivet blocks using the touchscreen to help the Minis cross gaps or reach a higher area. | This type of fixed girder is distinct from one of the series' staple gameplay mechanics, the [[Red Girder]]s, which first appear in ''[[Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Mini-Land Mayhem!]]'' These can be drawn between red rivet blocks using the touchscreen to help the Minis cross gaps or reach a higher area. | ||
In ''Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Minis March Again!'', pieces of red-colored girders are among the objects that fall from the top of the screen when Donkey Kong slams his fists in [[Floor 1 Donkey Kong]]. Short girders appear first, followed by longer ones that are harder to avoid after | In ''Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Minis March Again!'', pieces of red-colored girders are among the objects that fall from the top of the screen when [[Donkey Kong]] slams his fists in [[Floor 1 Donkey Kong]]. Short girders appear first, followed by longer ones that are harder to avoid after Donkey Kong is hit a third time. The player loses a Mini toy if a girder crashes into it. | ||
===''Super Smash Bros. | ===''Super Smash Bros.'' series=== | ||
Girders appear in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Brawl]]'' in the [[ | [[File:75m SSBU.png|thumb|right|Girders as they appear on the 75 m stage in ''Super Smash Bros. Ultimate'']] | ||
Girders appear in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Brawl]]'', ''[[Super Smash Bros. for Wii U]]'', and ''[[Super Smash Bros. Ultimate]]'' in the [[75 m (stage)|75 m]] stage, based off of the original [[75m]] from ''Donkey Kong'', but with visible depth. In ''Super Smash Bros. Ultimate'', this depth can only be seen when the camera is manually turned while the game is paused. | |||
===''Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker''=== | |||
Girders appear in ''[[Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker]]'' in the level [[Retro Ramp-Up]], based off the [[25m]] stage from ''Donkey Kong''. In the [[Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker (Nintendo Switch / Nintendo 3DS)|versions]] of the game for Nintendo Switch and Nintendo 3DS, girders also appear in [[Uptown, Downtown]], a level based on the Metro Kingdom from ''Super Mario Odyssey''. | |||
===''Super Mario Odyssey''=== | ===''Super Mario Odyssey''=== | ||
[[File:SMO Girders.jpeg|thumb|left|Girders as they appear in ''Super Mario Odyssey'']] | |||
Girders appear in ''[[Super Mario Odyssey]]'', where they are seen as common platforms throughout the [[Metro Kingdom]]. They do not act as semi-solid platforms in this game, but items such as [[Coin]]s and [[Power Moon]]s can be found inside some of them. | Girders appear in ''[[Super Mario Odyssey]]'', where they are seen as common platforms throughout the [[Metro Kingdom]]. They do not act as semi-solid platforms in this game, but items such as [[Coin]]s and [[Power Moon]]s can be found inside some of them. | ||
===''The Super Mario Bros. Movie''=== | |||
Girders reappear in ''[[The Super Mario Bros. Movie]]'' during the fight between [[Mario]] and [[Donkey Kong]], one of which is broken by the former as [[Cat Mario]] in a successful attempt to defeat the latter. | |||
===Other appearances and allusions=== | ===Other appearances and allusions=== | ||
In the manual for ''[[Donkey Kong 64]]'', | In the manual for ''[[Donkey Kong 64]]'', Cranky Kong hopes that a 2D level design he submitted after three minutes of planning, the "Great Girder Grapple," made it into the game as a secret level, referencing him being the original Donkey Kong from the arcade game. While no level of this specific titles appear, it may allude to how the original game can be played in an arcade cabinet found in [[Frantic Factory]]. | ||
Girders appear in ''[[Pixels]]'' during the fight with [[Donkey Kong]], where the main characters have to climb to the top while avoiding the [[barrel]]s and [[fireball (Donkey Kong)|fireballs]]. Upon arrival to the stage, girders fall down similarly to the original game, creating a path to Donkey Kong. | |||
{{br}} | |||
==Names in other languages== | |||
{{foreign names | |||
|Ita=Trave | |||
|ItaM=Girder | |||
}} | |||
==See also== | |||
*[[Floor (Wrecking Crew series)|Floor]], a similar object from the [[Wrecking Crew (series)|''Wrecking Crew'' series]] | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
{{DK}} | {{DK}} | ||
{{DKGB}} | |||
{{MVDK}} | {{MVDK}} | ||
{{MVDKMOTM}} | {{MVDKMOTM}} | ||
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{{MVDKTS}} | {{MVDKTS}} | ||
{{MM&FaC}} | {{MM&FaC}} | ||
{{CTTT}} | |||
{{SMO}} | {{SMO}} | ||
[[Category:Platforms]] | [[Category:Platforms]] | ||
[[Category:Donkey Kong (game) | [[Category:Donkey Kong (game) objects]] | ||
[[Category:Mario vs. Donkey Kong | [[Category:Mario vs. Donkey Kong objects]] | ||
[[Category:Mario vs. Donkey Kong 2: March of the Minis]] | [[Category:Mario vs. Donkey Kong 2: March of the Minis]] | ||
[[Category:Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Mini-Land Mayhem!]] | [[Category:Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Mini-Land Mayhem!]] | ||
[[Category:Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Minis March Again!]] | [[Category:Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Minis March Again!]] | ||
[[Category:Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Tipping Stars]] | [[Category:Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Tipping Stars]] | ||
[[Category:Mini Mario & Friends: amiibo Challenge | [[Category:Mini Mario & Friends: amiibo Challenge objects]] | ||
[[Category:Super Mario Odyssey | [[Category:Super Mario Odyssey objects]] | ||
[[Category:The Super Mario Bros. Movie objects]] |
Latest revision as of 09:19, October 16, 2024
It has been requested that this article be rewritten and expanded to include more information. Reason: include The Super Mario Bros. Movie information
- This article is about the girders from the Donkey Kong series. For the platforms in the Mario Kart series, see Kanaami Road.
Girders appear in the Super Mario franchise as narrow platforms that player characters can move on. The first appearance of girders in a Super Mario game is Donkey Kong, and most of their appearances since then have been in reference to this appearance.
History[edit]
Donkey Kong / Donkey Kong (Game Boy)[edit]
Girders are objects in Donkey Kong. The girders in 25m are sloped and also known as ramps.[1] Girders appear in all four stages. In the Game Boy remake, they appear in all of these stages, as well as several stages in the game's later worlds, such as Big-City. In both games, they act essentially as a semi-solid platform that Mario can walk on.
Donkey Kong Country series[edit]
Donkey Kong Country[edit]
Girders appear in Donkey Kong Country during the opening cutscene, where Cranky Kong stands on a stack of them while playing opening theme on a phonograph.
Donkey Kong Country Returns[edit]
Girders in Donkey Kong Country Returns are the main floor in the Factory world. In the background for the Factory's first level, Foggy Fumes, girders arranged in the zig-zagged 25m layout can be seen at one point. This pattern also commonly appears on wall reliefs throughout the temple-themed levels, along with other depictions of Donkey Kong arcade graphics.
Mario vs. Donkey Kong series[edit]
Girders appear in every game of the Mario vs. Donkey Kong series as semi-solid platforms, similarly to their appearance in Donkey Kong. Girders in Mario vs. Donkey Kong, Mario vs. Donkey Kong 2: March of the Minis and Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Minis March Again! are colored red, but were changed to gray with rounded corners as of Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Mini-Land Mayhem!, which describes them as "gray steel frames".[2]
This type of fixed girder is distinct from one of the series' staple gameplay mechanics, the Red Girders, which first appear in Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Mini-Land Mayhem! These can be drawn between red rivet blocks using the touchscreen to help the Minis cross gaps or reach a higher area.
In Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Minis March Again!, pieces of red-colored girders are among the objects that fall from the top of the screen when Donkey Kong slams his fists in Floor 1 Donkey Kong. Short girders appear first, followed by longer ones that are harder to avoid after Donkey Kong is hit a third time. The player loses a Mini toy if a girder crashes into it.
Super Smash Bros. series[edit]
Girders appear in Super Smash Bros. Brawl, Super Smash Bros. for Wii U, and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate in the 75 m stage, based off of the original 75m from Donkey Kong, but with visible depth. In Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, this depth can only be seen when the camera is manually turned while the game is paused.
Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker[edit]
Girders appear in Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker in the level Retro Ramp-Up, based off the 25m stage from Donkey Kong. In the versions of the game for Nintendo Switch and Nintendo 3DS, girders also appear in Uptown, Downtown, a level based on the Metro Kingdom from Super Mario Odyssey.
Super Mario Odyssey[edit]
Girders appear in Super Mario Odyssey, where they are seen as common platforms throughout the Metro Kingdom. They do not act as semi-solid platforms in this game, but items such as Coins and Power Moons can be found inside some of them.
The Super Mario Bros. Movie[edit]
Girders reappear in The Super Mario Bros. Movie during the fight between Mario and Donkey Kong, one of which is broken by the former as Cat Mario in a successful attempt to defeat the latter.
Other appearances and allusions[edit]
In the manual for Donkey Kong 64, Cranky Kong hopes that a 2D level design he submitted after three minutes of planning, the "Great Girder Grapple," made it into the game as a secret level, referencing him being the original Donkey Kong from the arcade game. While no level of this specific titles appear, it may allude to how the original game can be played in an arcade cabinet found in Frantic Factory.
Girders appear in Pixels during the fight with Donkey Kong, where the main characters have to climb to the top while avoiding the barrels and fireballs. Upon arrival to the stage, girders fall down similarly to the original game, creating a path to Donkey Kong.
Names in other languages[edit]
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Italian | Trave[?] | Girder |
See also[edit]
- Floor, a similar object from the Wrecking Crew series
References[edit]
- ^ Instruction manual for the Coleco Adam port.[page number needed]
- ^ 2010. Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Mini-Land Mayhem! instruction booklet (PDF). nintendo.com (American English). Page 16. Archived November 22, 2010, 21:38:48 UTC from the original via Wayback Machine. Retrieved July 4, 2024.
Donkey Kong | |
---|---|
Characters | Donkey Kong • Mario • Pauline |
Levels | 25m • 50m • 75m • 100m |
Items and objects | Bolt • Conveyor Belt • Hammer • Ladder • Lift • Parasol, Hat & Bag |
Enemies and obstacles | Barrel • Cement tub • Fire • Fireball • Jack • Oil drum |
Other | 25m Theme • Gallery • Media • Opening • Staff |
Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Minis March Again! | |
---|---|
Characters | Mario • Pauline • Donkey Kong • Toads |
Minis | Mini Mario • Mini Toad • Mini Peach • Mini Donkey Kong |
Floors | Mini Mayhem • Sandstone Stroll • Magnet Mania • Jungle Rumble • Rooftop • Basement |
Items and objects | Blue Spring • Box Spring • Cannon • Clock • Coin (large) • Color Switch • Conveyor Belt • Door • Girder • Hammer • Key • Key Door • Ladder • M-Token • Magnet • Mini Mario Card • Pink Block • Pokey Block • Pop-up Gate • Rotate Pipe • Shy Guy Block • Spike • Spin-bar magnet • Warp Pipe • Yellow Spring |
Enemies | Monkey robots (Capture Kong · Circus Kong) • Bird • Piranha Plant (fire) • Pokey • Polterguy • Snapjaw • Snifit • Spear Guy • Thwomp |
Miscellaneous | Media • Staff • Super Mini Mario World |
Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Tipping Stars | ||
---|---|---|
Characters | Donkey Kong • Mario • Pauline • Toads | |
Minis | Cursed Mini Mario • Gold Mini Mario • Mini Donkey Kong • Mini Luigi • Mini Mario • Mini Pauline • Mini Peach • Mini Toad | |
Enemies | Donkey Kong's robots (Cannon Kong · Capture Kong · Circus Kong) • Fire Piranha Plant • Piranha Plant • Pokey • Shy Guy • Thwomp | |
Worlds | Rolling Hills • Jumpy Jungle • Runaway Warehouse • Crumbling Cavern • Dashing Desert • Twilight Valley • Orbiting Observatory • Bonus Levels (Bonus 1 · Bonus 2 · Bonus 3) | |
Objects | Items | Coin (large) • Hammers • M Coin • Pickup |
Resource items | Blue Lift • Movable Pipe • Pink Block • Purple Conveyor • Red Girder • Spring | |
Fixed objects | Cannon • Color Switch • Conveyor Belt • Girder • Goal Door • Ladder • Magnet Ground • Rock • Spikes • Warp Pipe | |
Further info | Gallery • Media • Official online levels • Slide • Staff (Nintendo 3DS version · Wii U version) • Stamps • Workshop Store |
Super Mario Odyssey | ||
---|---|---|
Playable characters | Mario • Cappy | |
Non-playable characters | Princess Peach • Tiara • Bonneters • Bonneter biologist • Frogs • Hint Toad • Uncle amiibo • Talkatoo • Tostarenans • Desert Wanderer • Sheep • Moe-Eyes • Sphynx • Jaxi • Glydon • Koopas • Roving Racers • Lakitus • Goombettes • Lochladies • Style Sisters • Dorries • Steam Gardeners • Rabbits • New Donkers • Mayor Pauline • Band • Shiverians • Shiverian Racers • Shiverian Elder • Bubblainians • Coach • Dog • Volbonans • Poochy • Toads • Captain Toad • Toad Brigade (Green Toad · Yellow Toad · Purple Toad) • Archivist Toadette • Jammin' Toad • Yoshi • Luigia | |
Enemies | Astro-Lanceur • Banzai Bill • Big Chain Chomp • Big Poison Piranha Plant • Bitefrost • Broode's Chain Chomp • Bullet Bill • Burrbo • Chain Chomp • Chargin' Chuck • Cheep Cheep • Chincho • Coin Coffer • Donkey Kong • Fire Bro • Fire Piranha Plant • Fuzzy • Goomba • Gushen • Hammer Bro • Klepto • Komboo • Lava Bubble • Magmato • Maw-Ray • Mini Goomba • Moonsnake • Parabones • Paragoomba • Poison Piranha Plant • Pokio • Pulse Beam • Sherm • Spiny • Stairface Ogre • T-Rex • Trapeetle • Tropical Wiggler • Ty-foo • Uproot • Urban Stingby • Urban Stingby Larva • Yoofoe | |
Obstacles | Banzai Bill Cannon • Barrel • Bill Blaster • Boulder • Cannonball • Freezing water • Icicle • Lava • Lava Geyser • Oil drum • Pepper • Poison • Quicksand • Revolving lattice wall • Rotating defense mechanism • Senobi Generate Point • Shell • Spike Trap • Turret • Wind • Wind Blow Tower • Wooden roller | |
Bosses | Broodals | Topper • Hariet • Spewart • Rango |
Large bosses | Madame Broode • Knucklotec • Torkdrift • Bowser • Mechawiggler • Mollusque-Lanceur • Cookatiel • Ruined Dragon • RoboBrood | |
Items | Bubble • Coin • Coin pile • Fruit • Heart • Hidden Coin • Key • Life-Up Heart • Moon Shard • Multi Moon • Note • Pauline's lost items • Power Moon • Regional coin • Rock • Rocket Flower • Seed • Turnip • Yoshi's Egg | |
Objects | ? Block • 2D block • 8-bit character • 8-bit pipe • Airship • Arrow Sign • Bar • Barrier • Beanstalk • Big mushroom • Binding Band • Binoculars • Bird (traveling) • Boombox • Bowser statue • Brick Block • Bubbler • Butterfly • Cactus • Checkpoint Flag • Cheese rock • Coin Block • Coin ring • Crate • Falling Platform • Floating corn • Flower • Flower Road • Frost-Frosted Cake • Giant Swing • Girder • Goomba button • Green plant • Ground-Pound Switch • Hat Launcher • Hat Trampoline • Hidden Block • Hill • Hip Drop Move Lift • Hint Art • Hole • Jaxi Stand • Jaxi Statue • Jizo • Keyhole Pedestal • Koopa Shell • Lantern • Lava cannon • Letter • Lever Switch • Lift • Lochlady Dress • Lurker • Manhole • Meat • Mini Rocket • Moon Cage • Moon Pipe • Moon platform • Moon Rock • Motor scooter • Movable cover • Mushroom Platform • Mysterious Cloud • Nut • P Switch • Parking lot • Penguin • Pipe • Pole • Pole (bollard) • Post • Propeller Pillar • Push-Block • Puzzle Part • RC Car • Rising Stone Pillar • Rotating building • Rotating dial • Rotating platform • Sand Geyser • Scarecrow • Seagull • Seesaw • Slingshot • Slots • Small animal • Small bird • Small UFO • Soirée Bouquet • Spark pylon • Sparkle Water • Spinning block • Spinning saucepan • Steel Block • Stone marker • Stone spire • Stone wall • Stupendous Stew • Swing • Swinging Scaffolding • Sword • Tail Tree • Tapering platform • Taxi • Trampoline • Transparent Platform • Trash Can • Travel Tip • Treasure chest • Tree • Vanishing platform • Warp hole • Wire Net Platform • Wooden pendulum • Yellow turnstile • Zipper | |
Locations | Main game | Cap Kingdom (Bonneton) • Cascade Kingdom (Fossil Falls) • Sand Kingdom (Tostarena) • Lake Kingdom (Lake Lamode) • Wooded Kingdom (Steam Gardens) • Cloud Kingdom (Nimbus Arena) • Lost Kingdom (Forgotten Isle) • Metro Kingdom (New Donk City) • Snow Kingdom (Shiveria) • Seaside Kingdom (Bubblaine) • Luncheon Kingdom (Mount Volbono) • Ruined Kingdom (Crumbleden) • Bowser's Kingdom (Bowser's Castle) • Moon Kingdom (Honeylune Ridge) |
The Odyssey Continues... | Mushroom Kingdom (Peach's Castle) • Dark Side (Rabbit Ridge) • Darker Side (Culmina Crater) | |
Other | The Odyssey • Crazy Cap • Starshroom | |
Moves | Backward Somersault • Cap Jump • Cap Throw • Capture • Crawl • Crouch • Dash • Dive • Double Jump • Downward Throw • Drill Spin • Ground Pound • Ground Pound Jump • Jump • Long Jump • Quick Swim • Roll • Side Somersault • Spin Jump • Spin Throw • Swim • Triple Jump • Upward Throw • Wall Jump | |
Gameplay elements | amiibo • Balloon Worlda • Beach Volleyball • Bound Bowl Grand Prix • Completion • Gravity • Gravity field • Health Meter • Jump-Rope Challenge • Koopa Freerunning • Koopa Trace-Walking • Nintendo Labob • Objectives • Picture Match • RC Car Challenge • Snapshot Mode | |
Music compositions | "Jump Up, Super Star!" • "Break Free (Lead the Way)" | |
Further info | The Art of Super Mario Odyssey • Gallery • Glitches • Lists of names in other languages (Clothing · Music List · Power Moons · Souvenirs) • Mario Reads Your Letters • Music List • Original soundtrack • Pre-release and unused content • Quotes • Sound selection • Staff • The Super Mario Players | |
- Platforms
- Donkey Kong (game) objects
- Mario vs. Donkey Kong objects
- Mario vs. Donkey Kong 2: March of the Minis
- Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Mini-Land Mayhem!
- Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Minis March Again!
- Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Tipping Stars
- Mini Mario & Friends: amiibo Challenge objects
- Super Mario Odyssey objects
- The Super Mario Bros. Movie objects