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Inside the cottage from the first mission is the Big Penguin. When approached, he claims to be the world-champion sledder and challenges the player to a race to the end of the slide. If the player accepts, he immediately turns around and starts to belly-slide down, starting the race. If the player takes any kind of shortcut, which includes both skipping part of the course by [[jump]]ing down and taking the hidden path inside the wall, the Big Penguin tells them that they cheated, disqualifying them from the race. Once the player wins the race legitimately, the Big Penguin congratulates them for breaking his record and gives them a [[Power Star]] as a reward. | Inside the cottage from the first mission is the Big Penguin. When approached, he claims to be the world-champion sledder and challenges the player to a race to the end of the slide. If the player accepts, he immediately turns around and starts to belly-slide down, starting the race. If the player takes any kind of shortcut, which includes both skipping part of the course by [[jump]]ing down and taking the hidden path inside the wall, the Big Penguin tells them that they cheated, disqualifying them from the race. Once the player wins the race legitimately, the Big Penguin congratulates them for breaking his record and gives them a [[Power Star]] as a reward. | ||
The game uses two methods to detect cheating. One of them is an invisible trigger placed inside the hidden path. This trigger remains active even after the race finishes, so if the player uses [[kick|Jump Kick]]s to ascend back up the slide and go through the hidden path, the Big Penguin accuses [[Mario]] of cheating. The other method is a timer that increments whenever Mario is airborne but resets when he lands. If Mario remains airborne for two seconds during the race, the game determines that the player must have skipped part of the slide and considers them to have cheated. This allows the player to perform a skip by sliding off to the right on the turn immediately before the hidden path; since it takes less than two seconds of airtime to perform this shortcut, the Big Penguin does not accuse Mario of cheating. This method remains active until the Big Penguin finishes the race, so if the player performs a [[Wall Jump|Wall Kick]] and [[Ground Pound|Pound the Ground]] attack past the finish line to extend Mario's airtime past two seconds before the Big Penguin finishes, he accuses Mario of cheating.<ref>UncommentatedPannen | The game uses two methods to detect cheating. One of them is an invisible trigger placed inside the hidden path. This trigger remains active even after the race finishes, so if the player uses [[kick|Jump Kick]]s to ascend back up the slide and go through the hidden path, the Big Penguin accuses [[Mario]] of cheating. The other method is a timer that increments whenever Mario is airborne but resets when he lands. If Mario remains airborne for two seconds during the race, the game determines that the player must have skipped part of the slide and considers them to have cheated. This allows the player to perform a skip by sliding off to the right on the turn immediately before the hidden path; since it takes less than two seconds of airtime to perform this shortcut, the Big Penguin does not accuse Mario of cheating. This method remains active until the Big Penguin finishes the race, so if the player performs a [[Wall Jump|Wall Kick]] and [[Ground Pound|Pound the Ground]] attack past the finish line to extend Mario's airtime past two seconds before the Big Penguin finishes, he accuses Mario of cheating.<ref>UncommentatedPannen (June 29, 2020). [https://youtu.be/thuY_6Zr8Qg?t=2925 Seeing the Unseen]. ''YouTube''. Retrieved February 19, 2023.</ref> In the DS version, if [[Luigi]] uses his [[Backward Somersault]], that is also considered cheating. | ||
After the player collects all 120 Power Stars in ''Super Mario 64'' or all 150 Power Stars in ''Super Mario 64 DS'', the player can go back to the Big Penguin to find that he has become massive and more difficult to beat due to being "out of shape." There is no reward for winning the race again except for further praise. | After the player collects all 120 Power Stars in ''Super Mario 64'' or all 150 Power Stars in ''Super Mario 64 DS'', the player can go back to the Big Penguin to find that he has become massive and more difficult to beat due to being "out of shape." There is no reward for winning the race again except for further praise. |