Talk:Small bird: Difference between revisions

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I should note that the blue jays from the Wooded Kingdom are consistently referred to as "small birds" in ''The Art of Super Mario Odyssey'' - they are never referred to as the species they clearly are based on, nor are they ever generically just called a "bird", so the impression I have is that it is a literal translation of the same Japanese name used for the white birds of older games. That tells me they are recognized as the same subject. If these blue jays are "small birds", then Bowser's Kingdom's sparrows of the same name are certainly "small birds". That's at least my view. - [[User:Nintendo101|Nintendo101]] ([[User talk:Nintendo101|talk]]) 16:01, April 7, 2024 (EDT)
I should note that the blue jays from the Wooded Kingdom are consistently referred to as "small birds" in ''The Art of Super Mario Odyssey'' - they are never referred to as the species they clearly are based on, nor are they ever generically just called a "bird", so the impression I have is that it is a literal translation of the same Japanese name used for the white birds of older games. That tells me they are recognized as the same subject. If these blue jays are "small birds", then Bowser's Kingdom's sparrows of the same name are certainly "small birds". That's at least my view. - [[User:Nintendo101|Nintendo101]] ([[User talk:Nintendo101|talk]]) 16:01, April 7, 2024 (EDT)
:I’m not arguing whether the small birds take inspiration from the little birds, but I see it as an expansion of the concept: in the Mushroom Kingdom and Bonneton we have the familiar little birds, that then ''Odyssey'' reveals being part of a bigger family of small birds. It should be noted that this page deals with the little birds because they are recurring and even had gameplay value in at least one game. They definitely deserve an individual page. Now, we might argue that there’s simply too little material to make a page about the broader small birds, and at this point we can decide to make this a page about the small birds as well. Absolutely nothing wrong with this, but I think at this point we should indeed vote on this intermediate step before jumping to conclusions and already making the rename. This is my position, and sorry if it wasn’t clear.—[[User:Mister Wu|Mister Wu]] ([[User talk:Mister Wu|talk]]) 07:13, April 8, 2024 (EDT)
:I’m not arguing whether the small birds take inspiration from the little birds, but I see it as an expansion of the concept: in the Mushroom Kingdom and Bonneton we have the familiar little birds, that then ''Odyssey'' reveals being part of a bigger family of small birds. It should be noted that this page deals with the little birds because they are recurring and even had gameplay value in at least one game. They definitely deserve an individual page. Now, we might argue that there’s simply too little material to make a page about the broader small birds, and at this point we can decide to make this a page about the small birds as well. Absolutely nothing wrong with this, but I think at this point we should indeed vote on this intermediate step before jumping to conclusions and already making the rename. This is my position, and sorry if it wasn’t clear.—[[User:Mister Wu|Mister Wu]] ([[User talk:Mister Wu|talk]]) 07:13, April 8, 2024 (EDT)
::Thank you for clarifying your position. It's appreciated :) I I respect your perspective. But I do think ''Super Mario Odyssey'' considers the small birds in the Mushroom Kingdom, Cascade Kingdom etc. to all be one in the same, not just conceptually-related but distinct birds, and it consequently would be more accurate to keep them all in one article together.
::I'm not sure how helpful this is, but it is noteworthy that the posts dedicated to the small birds from Fossil Falls, Tostarena, Steam Gardens, and Mount Volbono on the [https://www.nintendo.com/jp/switch/aaaca/archives/world.html?page=1 Odyssey Journal] refer to them all as {{hover|小鳥|ko tori}} ("small bird"), whereas a post dedicated to the pigeons in the Metro Kingdom simply refers to them as {{hover|鳥|tori}} ("bird"). To me, this name unifies these specific birds together, distinguishes them from the other avifauna in the game, and is directly shared with the white crested birds in the ''[[Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia]]'', suggesting they are one in the same. The use of 小鳥 for the small birds in Tostarena, Steam Gardens, and Mount Volbono mirrors the localization choices made in ''[[The Art of Super Mario Odyssey]]'' (and presumably the original Japanese text), where there was plenty of opportunity to have adopted more discrete names for these animals, as was done with penguins, gulls, doves, and pigeons in the same book. Not these guys though - they are all explicitly named "small birds". In my experience on the wiki, we have lumped other subjects together that were previously seen as different because they share the same name in Japanese, and it seems inconsistent to not do the same here. (With regards to ''The Art of Super Mario Odyssey'', they are demonstrated to even share the same name in English.)
::I would also say that the small birds in Bonneton are probably not supposed to be the same literal species as the one from the Mushroom Kingdom. Their differences are more apparent [https://www.models-resource.com/nintendo_switch/supermarioodyssey/model/66702/ here], where they are side-by-side. Their body shapes are different. Their beak shapes and sizes are different. The color of their eyes differ, and even the shade of white differs. If they were suppose to be the same literal species, then I don't understand why they would have changed so many subtle details and not just include a hat. So I would think splitting each small bird into separate articles would necessitate splitting the Bonneton birds off too, and I am not sure that is the most accurate direction to take this. - [[User:Nintendo101|Nintendo101]] ([[User talk:Nintendo101|talk]]) 21:41, April 9, 2024 (EDT)

Revision as of 20:41, April 9, 2024

Did this need splitting?

They're obviously intended to be the same thing as the Birds from Super Mario World, they even look the same...and they were covered there just fine as well. Howsabout we merge this? Doc von Schmeltwick (talk) 16:50, 23 July 2017

We have an article for generic butterflies, despite their differences in behavior. The ones in Super Mario Sunshine don't need their own page, and neither do the ones in 3D Land.This also got rid of the coverage of other ambient birds in the series, as well as removing reference to the ones in Mario is Missing, which actually do things. This was unnecessary and somewhat appalling. Doc von Schmeltwick (talk) 16:54, 23 July 2017

Well, these birds always have the same appearance in the various games they are featured in, two of which are spin-off titles, not games directly derived from Super Mario 3D games. I think that this alone makes them notable enough. To further show their importance, these same birds are going to be featured in Mario + Rabbids Kingdom Battle, a crossover game. Also, the birds of Super Mario Sunshine are involved in the gameplay, so I don't really see why they don't deserve their own page. If you want to create a page for the other ambient birds, feel free to create it, but in my opinion these little white birds are just too relevant not to deserve their own page.--Mister Wu (talk) 18:56, 23 July 2017 (EDT)
No, they're not "obviously intended" to be the same thing as the birds from Super Mario World (and I don't even know where you got "they even look the same", they don't have the same color and structure, at best, they're both passerine-like birds, but that's pretty much it). In Super Mario World, the birds have sparrow-like designs and have their colors based on the colored Yoshis. In Super Mario 3D Land, they are white, designed after tists, and have crests and do not draw any parallel to the appearance of the birds on the roof of Super Mario World. And as Mister Wu said, if the ambient animals have a gameplay function, they deserve their own page, and the birds and butterflies in Super Mario Sunshine etc do have a gameplay function different from their real world counterpart and thus deserve a page.
I've gave this specific bird a page mostly because of its extremely specific design for an ambient object and its gameplay role in Mario Sports Superstars. BabyLuigiFire.pngRay Trace(T|C) 19:02, 23 July 2017 (EDT)
To add to this, these birds even have an entry in the objects section of Super Mario 3D Land in the Encyclopedia Super Mario Bros., on page 185:
小鳥
コースにいてマリオが近づくと飛び立つ。
This also gives them an official Japanese name, by the way. Anyway, regardless of whether this last aspect is notable for this wiki or not, their relevance reaching the point of affecting the gameplay of Mario Sports Superstars already makes them worth a page. Regarding the other birds, after a discussion we had we reached the consensus that it's probably better at this point to concentrate our efforts on the most relevant ones, such as the ones that affect the gameplay.--Mister Wu (talk) 20:06, 23 July 2017 (EDT)

Moving to "Little Bird"

This wasn't discussed. Just saying. Doc von Schmeltwick (talk) 22:10, 20 October 2017 (EDT)

BJAODN

dude, when I saw 1996 on the year on the first revision, It should be in BJAODN.
The preceding unsigned comment was added by Astro-Lanceur (talk).

That makes no sense. Alex95sig1.pngAlex95sig2.png 20:07, 27 November 2017 (EST)
It was me forgetting to change the date on Super Mario 3D Land on the infobox from a copy-pasta. It originally said 1996. Considering how quickly the mistake was fixed, I don't think it deserves to be on BJAODN. BabyLuigiFire.pngRay Trace(T|C) 21:30, 27 November 2017 (EST)
Oh. Yeah, no, probably not. Alex95sig1.pngAlex95sig2.png 22:03, 27 November 2017 (EST)

"Little Bird"

In the one source we have for the name, The Cat Mario Show, "little bird" is clearly a descriptor and not meant to be a proper name. They're likely called "little birds" in the first place to distinguish them from other birds in the game, like Flaptor and Wingo. It's even shortened to just a generic "bird" after being introduced. Scrooge200 (talk) PMCS Mustard Cafe Sign.png 19:57, May 23, 2019 (EDT)

Even if we are going to keep the “little” part of the name, it’s still spelled “little bird,” not “Little Bird.” The capitalization should be changed. Scrooge200 (talk) PMCS Mustard Cafe Sign.png 18:27, August 19, 2019 (EDT)
I have always been confused about them being called "Little Birds" and thought "Birds" would make more sense. I didn't notice our sources for that until now. Since both sources refer to them as "little birds", we should keep their name, because it currently appears to be official. However, "little" is not capitalized in either source, so I do agree about changing the capitalization. --DeepFriedCabbage 18:47, August 19, 2019 (EDT)
As surprising as it sounds, little is part of the Japanese name as well, hence this consistency in using the adjective might not be a coincidence. In any case, both in Japanese and in English those birds don't have a proper name, so I agree with changing the capitalization to match that used in the official Twitter account. Mister Wu (talk) 19:57, August 19, 2019 (EDT)

Rename to "small bird"

Proposal.svg This talk page section contains an unresolved talk page proposal. Please try to help and resolve the issue by voting or leaving a comment.

Current time: Monday, November 25, 2024, 04:18 GMT

Our friends here are consistently referred to as "small birds" in The Art of Super Mario Odyssey (pages 69 142, 249). Because this text is a direct translation of a Japanese book and it is equally as justifiable to translate their Japanese name as "little bird", I thought this could have just been a preference of the book's translators. However, I recently noticed that these birds are explicitly named in Super Mario Odyssey, in the mission "Small Bird in Bowser's Castle".

In all other missions that involve striking a bird for a Power Moon, the general term "bird" is used, but this sometimes includes avifauna that are clearly not the same thing as the little birds - namely hawks, seagulls, doves, pigeons, penguins and the small UFOs. They have different body shapes, and are not recognized as "small birds" in The Art of Super Mario Odyssey. So I think "bird" is the overarching term for all of these animal characters. But "small bird"? That's specific to the subject of this article, and I believe it is the current, preferred English name.

I offer two options:

  1. Rename the article to "small bird".
  2. Leave it as is.

Proposer: Nintendo101 (talk)
Deadline: April 18th, 2024, 23:59 GMT

Rename article to "small bird"

  1. JanMisali (talk) Per proposal; in-game names take priority over other names.
  2. Somethingone (talk) If this is the official in-game name, then it makes sense to go with it. Best to be consistent with our policy.
  3. Camwoodstock (talk) We are sorry to the Small Birds that we've been using the wrong name for them this entire time... no joke, we have this article perma-watchlisted just because we love it when this gets a new picture in the gallery. We would also be fine with Small bird as a mere redirect, but we think this just makes sense for consistency's sake--no matter how small the subject matter is, we should be treating it with the same scrutiny and quality as the rest of our articles, even if the previous name is more poetic sounding in our opinion.
  4. Ahemtoday (talk) Seems like a pretty cut-and-dry case to me.
  5. FanOfRosalina2007 (talk) Per proposal.
  6. Hewer (talk) Per all.

Leave it as is

  1. Mister Wu (talk) Based on what emerged from the comments. These birds have had a consistent design across many games, and are not what we have in Bowser’s Kingdom. There are small differences among the many small birds of Odyssey, with the little birds being one of them, so we should first ask ourselves a different question: do we want to make this page a page about all the small birds or do we want it to deal with just the iconic ones that appear in several games, with the same consistent design? Worth noting how the Twitter post dealing with Bonneton’s little birds - that are instead the familiar little birds we saw in the other games wearing a hat - indeed used the term “little birds”.

Comments

Just a comment, but "little bird" just has a nicer ring to it. Icon showing how many lives Mario has left. From Super Mario 64 DS. It's me, Mario! (Talk / Stalk) 20:31, April 4, 2024 (EDT)

I agree, it sounds so poetic. Sometimes wiki policy can make names so dry. Super Mario 64 promotional artwork MegaBowser64 (talk) Artwork of Bowser in New Super Mario Bros. U 20:32, April 4, 2024 (EDT)
I also prefer the name "little bird", but "small bird" is just the current name. Besides, it is part of a shared naming convention with similar creatures highlighted in The Art of Super Mario Odyssey: small animals (an encompassing term for the chipmunks, rats, crabs, and geckos) and small UFOs (the tiny Torkdrift-looking critters). Those creatures will receive their own articles at some point. Changing the name of this bird article would accurately reflect their conceptual relationship. - Nintendo101 (talk) 21:15, April 4, 2024 (EDT)

This is just an idea, but maybe "small bird" can be a redirect for little bird? link:User:Sparks Sparks (talk) link:User:Sparks 20:35, April 4, 2024 (EDT)

That would be a good compromise, I would at least rather have that than do nothing at all. Super Mario 64 promotional artwork MegaBowser64 (talk) Artwork of Bowser in New Super Mario Bros. U 22:28, April 4, 2024 (EDT)

Anyhow I'm abstaining from voting as it feels like a very very hairsplit decision so the impact either way is insignificant. Icon showing how many lives Mario has left. From Super Mario 64 DS. It's me, Mario! (Talk / Stalk) 13:38, April 5, 2024 (EDT)

Oh also "seagulls". D:< Hmph!! Icon showing how many lives Mario has left. From Super Mario 64 DS. It's me, Mario! (Talk / Stalk) 13:40, April 5, 2024 (EDT)
This is one of those things where Nintendo made a decision to annoy me specifically. - Nintendo101 (talk) 15:50, April 5, 2024 (EDT)

I'm not sure how significant this is, but I think it's important to note that the small birds in Bowser's Kingdom are NOT the same kind of bird as the little dove-like birds we see across the Mushroom Kingdom. They do have the same shape, but their feathers are brown and black, making them resemble little sparrows. If we end up moving this page with this mission as the clincher, maybe it's important that we cover all small birds across Super Mario Odyssey in this article (as well as mentioning the butterflies from the Lost Kingdom, and the UFO """birds""" from the Moon Kingdom), instead of only some of them. ArendLogoTransparent.pngrend (talk) (edits) 18:43, April 6, 2024 (EDT)

The impression I have from The Art of Super Mario Odyssey is that every kingdom has a bird, but not all of these animals are considered the small bird, if that makes sense. The top hat-wearing birds from the Cap Kingdom, the scarlet macaws from the Cascade Kingdom, budgerigars from the Sand Kingdom, pink birds from the Lake Kingdom, blue jays from the Wooded Kingdom, salt-covered birds from the Luncheon Kingdom, Eurasian tree sparrows from Bowser's Kingdom, and traditional white birds from the Mushroom Kingdom are all small birds. I think they should all be covered here.
Though mechanical equivalencies, the avifauna present in the other kingdoms (the doves from the Cloud Kingdom, pigeons from the Metro Kingdom, gulls from the Seaside Kingdom, penguins from the Snow Kingdom, mini-Torkdrifts from the Moon Kingdom, and butterflies from the Lost Kingdom) are not considered small birds, and should have their own articles. (Three of them already do.) - Nintendo101 (talk) 19:53, April 6, 2024 (EDT)

@Mister Wu, I am not sure if the birds from Super Mario 64, the parrots from Sunshine or any other animals in games released before Super Mario 3D Land are the small bird, and I am not personally invested in reducing them into a generic "bird" article. However, I do feel pretty confidant that the sparrows in Bowser's Kingdom and the traditional white birds from 3D Land, 3D World, and Odyssey are intended to be the literal same thing, even if they are derived from different real world species of animals. That was just a design choice to compliment the respective kingdom's topography, similar to how every kingdom has its own vegetation that are all the same thing even though they reflect a wide diversity of real-world species.

I should note that the blue jays from the Wooded Kingdom are consistently referred to as "small birds" in The Art of Super Mario Odyssey - they are never referred to as the species they clearly are based on, nor are they ever generically just called a "bird", so the impression I have is that it is a literal translation of the same Japanese name used for the white birds of older games. That tells me they are recognized as the same subject. If these blue jays are "small birds", then Bowser's Kingdom's sparrows of the same name are certainly "small birds". That's at least my view. - Nintendo101 (talk) 16:01, April 7, 2024 (EDT)

I’m not arguing whether the small birds take inspiration from the little birds, but I see it as an expansion of the concept: in the Mushroom Kingdom and Bonneton we have the familiar little birds, that then Odyssey reveals being part of a bigger family of small birds. It should be noted that this page deals with the little birds because they are recurring and even had gameplay value in at least one game. They definitely deserve an individual page. Now, we might argue that there’s simply too little material to make a page about the broader small birds, and at this point we can decide to make this a page about the small birds as well. Absolutely nothing wrong with this, but I think at this point we should indeed vote on this intermediate step before jumping to conclusions and already making the rename. This is my position, and sorry if it wasn’t clear.—Mister Wu (talk) 07:13, April 8, 2024 (EDT)
Thank you for clarifying your position. It's appreciated :) I I respect your perspective. But I do think Super Mario Odyssey considers the small birds in the Mushroom Kingdom, Cascade Kingdom etc. to all be one in the same, not just conceptually-related but distinct birds, and it consequently would be more accurate to keep them all in one article together.
I'm not sure how helpful this is, but it is noteworthy that the posts dedicated to the small birds from Fossil Falls, Tostarena, Steam Gardens, and Mount Volbono on the Odyssey Journal refer to them all as 小鳥 ("small bird"), whereas a post dedicated to the pigeons in the Metro Kingdom simply refers to them as ("bird"). To me, this name unifies these specific birds together, distinguishes them from the other avifauna in the game, and is directly shared with the white crested birds in the Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia, suggesting they are one in the same. The use of 小鳥 for the small birds in Tostarena, Steam Gardens, and Mount Volbono mirrors the localization choices made in The Art of Super Mario Odyssey (and presumably the original Japanese text), where there was plenty of opportunity to have adopted more discrete names for these animals, as was done with penguins, gulls, doves, and pigeons in the same book. Not these guys though - they are all explicitly named "small birds". In my experience on the wiki, we have lumped other subjects together that were previously seen as different because they share the same name in Japanese, and it seems inconsistent to not do the same here. (With regards to The Art of Super Mario Odyssey, they are demonstrated to even share the same name in English.)
I would also say that the small birds in Bonneton are probably not supposed to be the same literal species as the one from the Mushroom Kingdom. Their differences are more apparent here, where they are side-by-side. Their body shapes are different. Their beak shapes and sizes are different. The color of their eyes differ, and even the shade of white differs. If they were suppose to be the same literal species, then I don't understand why they would have changed so many subtle details and not just include a hat. So I would think splitting each small bird into separate articles would necessitate splitting the Bonneton birds off too, and I am not sure that is the most accurate direction to take this. - Nintendo101 (talk) 21:41, April 9, 2024 (EDT)