Chain Event: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 16:49, May 5, 2022

Chain Event
Chain Event
Appears in Mario Party 9
Type Free-for-All minigame
Music track How Strange!

Chain Event is a Free-for-All minigame featured in Mario Party 9. The name is a pun on the phrases "main event" and "chain of events."

Introduction

The captain begins sliding down the chain and switches to dodge a Spiked Ball. The camera splits to show all players.

Gameplay

Players dodge Spiked Balls by switching from one side of a chain to the other as they slide down it. As they progress without being hit, players slide down faster, but getting hit stuns them and slows them down. The first player to reach the bottom wins.

To complete the bonus objective in Time Attack, the player cannot hit more than one Spiked Ball.

This minigame is also one of Bowser's Reverse Minigames. This time, victory goes to the player who reaches the bottom last. In order to accomplish this, players should attempt to hit every Spiked Ball they see rather than avoid it.

Ending

Wario finishes last.

The players reach the bottom of the chain and do their victory or losing poses, depending on their ranking.

In-game text

  • Rules (Normal)"Slide down the chain, and dodge the Spiked Balls. Be the first player to reach the ground to win!"
  • Rules (Reverse)"The player who takes the longest to slide down the chain wins! Try to hit Spiked Balls on the way down to slow your slide."
  • Controls"Hold the Wii Remote vertically. Tilt it in the direction you want to move."

See also

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese いそいで!くさりすべり[?]
Isoide! Kusari suberi
Quick! Chain Sliding
Chinese 鎖鏈滑降[?]
Suǒliàn huájiàng
Chain-Sliding
German Reaktionskette[?] Reaction Chain
Italian Spunzoni a catena[?] Spikes in Chain
Spanish (NOA) Cadena Perpetua[?] Eternal Chain; a play on cadena perpetua, which means "life imprisonment".
Spanish (NOE) Pinchazos en cadena[?] Chain Punctures

Template:MP9 Minigames