Leaf Leap
Template:More images Template:Minigame-infobox Leaf Leap is a 4-player minigame found in Mario Party 5, and returns in Mario Party: The Top 100. Upward Mobility, a minigame from Mario Party 9, plays very similar to this minigame.
Introduction
A bean is dropped into the dirt, spawning the beanstalk with the first leaf.
Gameplay
Players must jump from leaf to leaf to try and climb the highest on the beanstalk. If players jump to a leaf that isn't there, they will fall until they land back on a leaf below. The player who climbs the highest wins. An orange leaf indicates where the record is set.
Mario's silhouette makes a cameo as a crater in the moon, visible if the player reaches high enough. However, this is impossible in the PAL version of Mario Party 5, as the best possible score is 150 metres (or 180 yards), and the crater is first visible at 165.
This minigame appears as the fourth minigame in Mini-Game Decathlon. Here, the player's objective is to climb as many as possible within the time limit to earn as much points as possible, up to a maximum of 1,000. The default record for this minigame in Mini-Game Decathlon is 120 metres/yards.
Controls
Mario Party 5
- – Jump Direction (Left/Right)
- – Jump
Mario Party: The Top 100
- Left / Right: Aim jump
- : Jump
In-game text
Mario Party 5
- Rules – "Jump from leaf to leaf to climb the never-ending beanstalk. Whoever climbs the highest within the time limit wins."
- Advice – "If you jump in the wrong direction, you might free-fall until you land on a leaf below. Be careful!"
Mario Party: The Top 100
- Description – "Jump from leaf to leaf and climb higher than anyone else!"
- On-screen – "Climb the beanstalk by jumping onto the leaves!"
Names in other languages
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | まめのきジャンプ[?] Mamenoki Janpu |
Beanstalk Jump | |
Dutch | Klimop[?] | Ivy; also a pun on klim op (climb up) | |
German | Dem Himmel so nah...[?] | So close to the heaven | |
Italian | Di foglia in foglia[?] | From leaf to leaf | |
Spanish | La planta[?] | "The plant", while planta can also mean "floor" or "level" |