Gray P Switch | |
---|---|
Gray P Switches from Super Mario World (left) and Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2 (right) | |
First appearance | Super Mario World (1990) |
Latest appearance | Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2 (2001) |
Effect | Temporarily turns onscreen enemies into Gray Coins |
Variant of | P Switch |
Gray P Switches[1] (or Gray P-Switches)[2] are objects in Super Mario World and its reissue. They appear identical to normal Switch Blocks except that they are gray with pink rims as opposed to blue with orange rims. When pressed, they turn some types of enemies into Gray Coins.
As revealed by hacking, Gray P Switches also possess the ability to transform Munchers into ordinary coins for the duration of their effect, similar to regular Switch Blocks in Super Mario Bros. 3. However, as Gray P Switches never appear in the same levels as Munchers in Super Mario World, this functionality cannot be seen in-game.
Due to a glitch, Gray P Switches act like normal P Switches after being taken through a pipe, though they retain their gray coloration.
Coincidentally, Switch Blocks in Family Computer and Nintendo Entertainment System releases of Super Mario Bros. 3 appear in a gray palette in the fortress levels. Gray P Switches themselves went unused in the Game Boy Advance version, however, and would have functioned like how they originally did.[3]
Names in other languagesEdit
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | スイッチブロック (銀色)[4] Suitchi Burokku (gin-iro) |
Switch Block (silver-colored) | |
German | Silberner P-Block[5] | Silver P-Block | |
Italian | Interruttore P d'argento[6] | Silver P Switch | |
Spanish (NOA) | P-Switch Gris[7] | Gray P-Switch |
ReferencesEdit
- ^ August 1991. Nintendo Mario Mania Player's Guide. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 153 and 161.
- ^ September 1991. Nintendo Power Volume 28. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 23.
- ^ TCRF. Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3/Unused Objects#Silver P-Switch. The Cutting Room Floor. Retrieved July 31, 2021.
- ^ 2015. Super Mario Bros. Hyakka: Nintendo Kōshiki Guidebook, Super Mario World section. Shogakukan (Japanese). Page 60.
- ^ Menold, Marcus, Claude M. Moyse, and Andreas G. Kämmerer, editors (1993). Der offizielle Nintendo Spieleberater "Super Mario World". Großostheim: Nintendo of Europe GmbH (German). Page 17.
- ^ Super Mario Bros. Enciclopedia. Page 60.
- ^ Club Nintendo (Chile) Año 1 No. 2. Page 11.