Eternal Flame

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Eternal Flame
The Eternal Flame in Mario is Missing! (DOS)
DOS
The Eternal Flame in Mario is Missing! (NES)
NES
The Eternal Flame in Mario is Missing! (SNES)
SNES
First appearance Mario is Missing! (1992)

The Eternal Flame is an item in the PC, SNES, and NES versions of Mario is Missing! It is lit at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier located at the base of the Arc de Triomphe in Paris. It is stolen by Bowser's Koopa Troopas, causing the entire Arc de Triomphe to shut down. The Koopa Troopas then roam around the city until Luigi defeats them and takes it back. After asking the locals about the item, with all of them providing information such as how the Arc dates back to the 1790s (which is misleading; although one of its sculptures, "La Marseillaise", depicts an event from 1792, the Arc was not completed until 1836), he is asked a series of questions by the monument's Curator before he can return it. Afterwards, he receives a reward of $1750.

InformationEdit

Person Quote
PC version
  "Hey, that's the torch I saw at the Arch de Triumph. I bet you'll get a monument just like it if you can stop Bowser."
  "I saw it under the Arch, where Napoleon had hoped to march. What a torch!"
  "That's the flame that takes its name from the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier."
  "Read my lips, the Arc de Triomphe dates from the late 1790s. That is lit daily."
  "Don't let the fire go out. It marks the Unknown Soldier's Tomb."
SNES version
  "Hey, that's the torch I saw at the Arch de Triumph. I bet you'll get a monument just like it if you can stop Bowser."
  "I saw it under the Arch, where Napoleon had hoped to march. What a torch!"
  "That's the flame that takes its name from the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier."
  "Read my lips, the Arc de Triomphe dates from the late 1790s. That is lit daily."
  "Don't let the fire go out. It marks the Unknown Soldier's Tomb."
NES version
  "Hey, that's the torch I saw at the Arch de Triumph. I bet you'll get a monument just like it if you can stop Bowser."
  "I saw it under the Arch, where Napoleon had hoped to march. What a torch!"
  "That's the flame that takes its name from the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier."
  "Read my lips, the Arc de Triomphe was completed in 1836. That is lit daily."
  "Don't let the fire go out. The Old Soldiers Association uses it for the Unknown Soldier's Tomb."

Names in other languagesEdit

Language Name Meaning Notes
German die Ewige Flamme[1] the Eternal Flame

ReferencesEdit

  1. ^ Mario wir vermisst (CD-ROM). Software Toolworks (German). Retrieved September 27, 2024.