- “Ho-ho-ho.”
- —Millennium Star, Mario Party 3
The Millennium Star is the name of two known star entities, one false and one real, and the host of Mario Party 3, replacing Toad. The Millennium Star's name may be a reference to the fact that Mario Party 3 was originally released in Japan in the year 2000, the final year before the new millennium. The game explains this as being a specific type of star born once every thousand years, or once a millennium.
The false Millennium Star is a silver, mustachioed star who will grant the wish of any player who passes his test. The Millennium Star fell on the garden near Peach's Castle while Mario and his friends were resting. Mario and his friends argued about who would get the star, which resulted in Lakitu coming and suggesting that they have a contest to see who gets the star.
When the player first meets Princess Daisy during the story mode, Daisy makes the Millennium Star fall in love with her. When the player beats Waluigi's Island, the Millennium Star then says that the player has one more opponent. The player does not understand, so the Millennium Star tells the player that it is him. He then challenges the player to the Stardust Battle. After the player beats the Stardust Battle, the Millennium Star then says that he is not the real Millennium Star. Tumble then opens the top of his die cap to reveal another, much different Millennium Star. The real Millennium Star is a white star that emits an intense rainbow-colored halo and truly has the power to declare the Superstar of the Universe.
The real Millennium Star also appears in the intro sequence of Mario Party Advance.
Official profiles and statistic
Sticker information
Image | Game | Effect |
---|---|---|
Mario Party 3 | [Throwing] - Attack +21 |
Official profile from Mario Party: The Top 100
Millennium Star: "The brightest of all, said to shine only once a millennium! Whoever has it is the biggest super star in the galaxy!"
Gallery
- MP3 RealMStar.JPG
The actual form of the Millennium Star
The Millennium Star from Super Mario-Kun
Name in other languages
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | ミレニアムスター[?] Mireniamu Sutā |
Literal translation | |
Spanish | Estrella Milenaria[?] | Literal translation |