Li'l Cinder

From the Super Mario Wiki, the Mario encyclopedia
(Redirected from Lil' Cinder)
Jump to navigationJump to search
Li'l Cinder
Li'l Cinder artwork
Artwork from Super Mario Galaxy 2
First appearance Super Mario Galaxy (2007)
Latest appearance Super Mario 3D All-Stars (2020)
Relatives
Comparable

Li'l Cinders,[1] originally known as Lava Bubbles,[2] are enemies in Super Mario Galaxy and Super Mario Galaxy 2. Their name directly references "cinder," which is a small part of any highly combustible material. They have an ice counterpart called Li'l Brrs. They slowly chase Mario (or Luigi) upon spotting him and attempt to ram into him to inflict damage. If Mario touches a Li'l Cinder, he catches fire and starts running around uncontrollably while losing a wedge of his life meter.

History[edit]

Super Mario Galaxy[edit]

Melty Molten Galaxy
Lava Bubbles on the Starting Planet in the Melty Molten Galaxy

Lava Bubbles first appear in Super Mario Galaxy, where they sometimes spawn from lava pools. Mario can use a spin attack nearby or shoot a Star Bit to put out the flame surrounding a Lava Bubble, making it fall on the ground vulnerable and blackened. In this state, the enemy attempts to escape Mario by weakly and unpredictably hopping away and seeks a pool of lava to regenerate its flame. While in its cold state, the Lava Bubble can be kicked or jumped on to defeat it, producing a coin. However, Lava Bubbles produce nothing upon defeat in Daredevil Comet conditions. Lava Bubbles are completely immune to Fire Mario's fireballs, with their bodies simply absorbing the flame. They are the most common enemy in the Melty Molten Galaxy.

Appearances[edit]

  • Baseline sprite of the Star Pointer in Super Mario Galaxy. marks missions where they are completely absent.
  • Galaxy StarP.png marks missions where they are loaded and may be visible, but cannot be encountered directly.
Domes Galaxies Missions
Bedroom Freezeflame Galaxy The Frozen Peak of Baron Brrr Freezeflame's Blistering Core Hot and Cold Collide Frosty Cosmic Mario Race Purple Coins on the Summit Conquering the Summit
Garden Melty Molten Galaxy The Sinking Lava Spire Through the Meteor Storm Fiery Dino Piranha Lava Spire Daredevil Run Red-Hot Purple Coins Burning Tide

Super Mario Galaxy 2[edit]

A screenshot of Mario in the Battle Belt Galaxy.
Li'l Cinders on the Li'l Cinder Planet in the Battle Belt Galaxy

Li'l Cinders are much more prolific in Super Mario Galaxy 2. In some of Bowser's stages, they can be summoned by Magikoopas. If Mario rolls a snowball into a Li'l Cinder, he instantly defeats it.

Appearances[edit]

  • Baseline sprite of the Star Pointer in Super Mario Galaxy. marks missions where they are completely absent.
  • Galaxy StarP.png marks missions where they are loaded and may be visible, but cannot be encountered directly.
Worlds Galaxies Missions
World 2 Bowser's Lava Lair Bowser's Big Lava Power Party Lava Lair Speed Run
World 3 Freezy Flake Galaxy Bowser on Ice Sorbetti's Chilly Reception The Chimp's Skating Challenge
World 4 Bowser's Gravity Gauntlet Breaking into Bowser's Castle Gravity Star Speed Run
World 6 Melty Monster Galaxy The Magnificent Magma Sea A Stroll Down Rolling Lane The Chimp's Bowling Challenge
Battle Belt Galaxy Mini-Planet Mega-Run Mini-Planet Daredevil Run Snacktime for Gobblegut
World S Mario Squared Galaxy Make Mario a Star Luigi's Purple Coin Chaos

Gallery[edit]

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese メラメラ[?]
Meramera
Japanese onomatopoeia for something flaring up; shared with Flaret
French Mélaméla[?] Same as Japanese name
German Feuer-Flamy[?] Fire Flamy
Italian Vampy[?] From vampata ("blaze")
Spanish (NOA) Roca Volcánica[?] Volcanic Rock
Spanish (NOE) Mera[?] From Japanese name

References[edit]

  1. ^ Browne, Catherine (May 23, 2010). Super Mario Galaxy 2: PRIMA Official Game Guide. Roseville: Random House Inc. ISBN 978-0-30746-907-6. Page 27.
  2. ^ Black, Fletcher (November 9, 2007). Super Mario Galaxy PRIMA Official Game Guide. Prima Games (American English). ISBN 978-0-7615-5643-5. Page 185, 280–285, 287, 290–292.