Goldbob: Difference between revisions

From the Super Mario Wiki, the Mario encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
m (typo)
Tags: Mobile edit Advanced mobile edit
 
(4 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 10: Line 10:


==History==
==History==
===''Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door''===
[[Mario]] and his [[Party member|party]] first meet Goldbob in [[Glitzville]] outside the [[Glitz Pit]] while he and his family are vacationing there. Goldbob and Bub soon becomes a fan of "The Great Gonzales" ([[Mario|Mario's]] adopted fighting name) after his position in the ranks of the Glitz Pit moves up. Goldbob continues to call Mario "Gonzales" until the end of the game, even after Mario "retires" from fighting.
[[Mario]] and his [[Party member|party]] first meet Goldbob in [[Glitzville]] outside the [[Glitz Pit]] while he and his family are vacationing there. Goldbob and Bub soon becomes a fan of "The Great Gonzales" ([[Mario|Mario's]] adopted fighting name) after his position in the ranks of the Glitz Pit moves up. Goldbob continues to call Mario "Gonzales" until the end of the game, even after Mario "retires" from fighting.


Line 26: Line 27:


In the original game's end credits [[parade]], Goldbob's silhouette can be seen with the Poshley Heights characters. In the remake, Bub runs across the stage gleefully holding the autograph while Goldbob and Sylvia walk behind him, followed by the Bob-ombs from Fahr Outpost.
In the original game's end credits [[parade]], Goldbob's silhouette can be seen with the Poshley Heights characters. In the remake, Bub runs across the stage gleefully holding the autograph while Goldbob and Sylvia walk behind him, followed by the Bob-ombs from Fahr Outpost.
===''Super Mario-kun''===
[[File:Excess Express Passengers SuperMarioKun.png|thumb|Goldbob in ''Super Mario-kun'']]
Goldbob appears in volume 34 of ''[[Super Mario-kun]]'' during the ''Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door'' arc. Goldbob rides the Excess Express with Bub (although Sylvia is not seen) and he is one of the passengers to get trapped by Smorg.


==Tattle==
==Tattle==
Line 32: Line 37:
==Gallery==
==Gallery==
<gallery>
<gallery>
PMTTYD Smorg screenshot.png
PMTTYD Goldbob Cannon Permission.png|Goldbob wants to know how dedicated Mario is to run [[Big Bob]].
Deliveryplease TTYD.png
PMTTYDNS concept art characters 9.png|Concept art of the [[Excess Express]] passengers and staff, including Goldbob and his family
PMTTYDNS concept art characters 9.png|Concept art of the [[Excess Express]] passengers and staff, including Goldbob and his family
</gallery>
</gallery>
Line 66: Line 74:
[[Category:Allies]]
[[Category:Allies]]
[[Category:Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door characters]]
[[Category:Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door characters]]
[[Category:Super Mario-kun characters]]
[[de:Goldfried]]
[[de:Goldfried]]
[[it:Bomb-oro]]
[[it:Bomb-oro]]

Latest revision as of 17:53, October 26, 2024

Goldbob
Goldbob.png
Sprite from Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door
Species Bob-omb
First appearance Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door (2004)
Latest appearance Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door (Nintendo Switch) (2024)
“Good day to you, Gonzales. What can I do for you today? What's that you say? You must use the cannon in Fahr Outpost to save the world? Hmmm... Well, that IS rather a pickle, isn't it?”
Goldbob, Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door

Goldbob is a Bob-omb who appears in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door; his name refers to his gold coloring, apparently a rare coloration for Bob-ombs. He is the president of Goldbobbington's, husband of Sylvia, and father of Bub.

History[edit]

Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door[edit]

Mario and his party first meet Goldbob in Glitzville outside the Glitz Pit while he and his family are vacationing there. Goldbob and Bub soon becomes a fan of "The Great Gonzales" (Mario's adopted fighting name) after his position in the ranks of the Glitz Pit moves up. Goldbob continues to call Mario "Gonzales" until the end of the game, even after Mario "retires" from fighting.

Goldbob and his family appear again aboard the Excess Express on their ride home to Poshley Heights. He and Sylvia argue over what to get Bub for his birthday, with Goldbob wanting a house or a car to flaunt the family's wealth and Sylvia wanting to get him study materials to prepare him for the future. Their arguing seems of little concern to Bub, who actually just wants an autograph of the Excess Express engineer. The argument is so loud that the Excess Express conductor can hear them from outside their room. The following day, Goldbob apologizes to Mario for seeing him and his wife when they "weren't at their best". Upon learning about Bub's fascination with trains, Goldbob asks Mario if he knows where he can purchase a train, staying true to his desire to find a gift that will flaunt wealth but also incorporating Bub's own desires. Goldbob and Bub admire the Express outside as it is stopped at Riverside Station. Sylvia apparently convinces Goldbob to tone down the gift as later that night Bub is excited that his parents are getting him a train set rather than an actual train, though Goldbob is adamant that the train set must be solid gold.

At the start of the third day, Goldbob, along with his family and the other passengers and staff, goes missing, being absorbed into a hoard of Smorgs that attacks the train. Mario eventually defeats the Smorgs, causing them to blow away in the wind. After the incident, Goldbob and his family safely arrive in Poshley Heights.

During Chapter 7, Mario must visit Goldbob in Poshley Heights to gain his permission to use Fahr Outpost's cannon, Big Bob. Goldbob was the one who started business with the cannon but stopped because his wife did not like the noise. Mario must give up all his coins to Goldbob in exchange for Goldbob's written permission, though Goldbob returns him the coins soon thereafter.

When Bowser and Kammy Koopa arrive in Poshley Heights, Bowser can optionally talk to Goldbob and Sylvia, who are only interested in discussing the fountain outside of Poshley Sanctum. Bewildered by their interest in the fountain, Bowser says they scare him and moves on.

Later, Goldbob posts a trouble in Rogueport's Trouble Center in which he asks for a package to be sent to General White. After Mario delivers the package to General White, Goldbob rewards him with 64 coins, a reference to the Nintendo 64.

Cutscene showing the chapter 6 characters giving support to Mario through the Garnet Star in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door (Nintendo Switch)
Goldbob joins others in Poshley Heights to lend support to Mario in the remake

During Mario's battle against the Shadow Queen, Goldbob, his family, residents of Poshley Heights, and, in the remake, staff from the Excess Express gather outside of Poshley Sanctum to shout support into the Garnet Star to empower Mario and his partners.

In the original game's end credits parade, Goldbob's silhouette can be seen with the Poshley Heights characters. In the remake, Bub runs across the stage gleefully holding the autograph while Goldbob and Sylvia walk behind him, followed by the Bob-ombs from Fahr Outpost.

Super Mario-kun[edit]

Pennington, Goldbob, Bub, Zip Toad, Businessman, etc in Super Mario-kun
Goldbob in Super Mario-kun

Goldbob appears in volume 34 of Super Mario-kun during the Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door arc. Goldbob rides the Excess Express with Bub (although Sylvia is not seen) and he is one of the passengers to get trapped by Smorg.

Tattle[edit]

  • "That's Goldbob the Bob-omb. He's head of a wealthy business, Goldbobbington's. He's got buckets of ducats, they say. I guess some folks are just good with money!"

Gallery[edit]

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese ゴールドマン[?]
Gōrudoman
Goldman
Chinese 金色曼[?]
Jīnsè Màn
Golden Man
Dutch Goudriaan[?] From "goud" (gold) and the Dutch name Adriaan
French Orboom[?] Goldboom
German Goldfried[?] "Gold" + "-fried", a common suffix for male German names
Italian Bomb-oro[?] From "Bob-omb" and oro ("gold")
Korean 골드맨[?]
Goldeumaen
Goldman
Spanish Bombotín[?] Pun on bomba ("bomb") and botín ("booty" or "loot"). Alternatively, his name might come from Emilio Botín, a Spanish millionaire banker, as his wife is also named after two Spanish millionaire sisters.