Editing Talk:Big Blooper (Super Paper Mario)
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So, Each of you saw the same catch card but it said different things? [General guy Genius] 2012 | So, Each of you saw the same catch card but it said different things? [General guy Genius] 2012 | ||
==Reorganizing Big Bloopers== | == Reorganizing Big Bloopers == | ||
We currently have no less than three articles for the franchise's big Bloopers. Right now, the Mega Blooper article is about the big Blooper enemy in general, while "Super Blooper (boss)" is about the ''Paper Mario'' boss and "Big Blooper" is about the ''Super Paper Mario | |||
We currently have no less than three articles for the franchise's big Bloopers. Right now, the Mega Blooper article is about the big Blooper enemy in general, while "Super Blooper (boss)" is about the ''Paper Mario'' boss and "Big Blooper" is about the ''Super Paper Mario" boss. There is considerable overlap with Mega Blooper and Big Bloopers, however. I'll explain as we take a closer look at big Bloopers in general. | |||
*''Mario Party'' series - Later games in the series introduce large versions of standard enemies, which is the origin of the "Mega Blooper" name. Note that while a large-sized Blooper previously appeared in ''Mario Party 9'', it is not described as a giant-sized Blooper nor does it appear alongside smaller Bloopers in the same game (as far as I'm aware), so it is technically not an appearance of a Mega Blooper. | *''Mario Party'' series - Later games in the series introduce large versions of standard enemies, which is the origin of the "Mega Blooper" name. Note that while a large-sized Blooper previously appeared in ''Mario Party 9'', it is not described as a giant-sized Blooper nor does it appear alongside smaller Bloopers in the same game (as far as I'm aware), so it is technically not an appearance of a Mega Blooper. | ||
*''Super Mario Maker'' series - As per the way the wiki handles all other big enemies, this and the aforementioned are taken as the same subject, comprising the bulk of the Mega Blooper coverage. | *''Super Mario Maker'' series - As per the way the wiki handles all other big enemies, this and the aforementioned are taken as the same subject, comprising the bulk of the Mega Blooper coverage. | ||
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*''Paper Mario'' - The Super Blooper is described by Goombario as a large-sized Blooper in relation to the other two Blooper bosses. However, given that it is shown directly spawning Blooper Babies on-screen (as opposed to the above game, where they just show up as two-dimensional images from the bottom of the screen), the Super Blooper can be considered a type of Blooper Nanny. As such, a big Blooper Nanny from the ''Super Mario Maker'' series can potentially be treated as a Super Blooper. | *''Paper Mario'' - The Super Blooper is described by Goombario as a large-sized Blooper in relation to the other two Blooper bosses. However, given that it is shown directly spawning Blooper Babies on-screen (as opposed to the above game, where they just show up as two-dimensional images from the bottom of the screen), the Super Blooper can be considered a type of Blooper Nanny. As such, a big Blooper Nanny from the ''Super Mario Maker'' series can potentially be treated as a Super Blooper. | ||
*''Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door'' - The Blooper boss fought by Mario is only known as a "Blooper" in this game, despite its large size. However, regular-sized Bloopers are later encountered in Bowser's underwater platforming section. Additionally, a large-sized Blooper appears in the Paper Mario stage in ''Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS'' and ''Super Smash Bros. Ultimate'', and while the whale from the first game also makes a cameo in the S.S. Flavion section, its design most closely points to this particular Blooper. In all languages, it is identified as a "Big Blooper" via tips. | *''Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door'' - The Blooper boss fought by Mario is only known as a "Blooper" in this game, despite its large size. However, regular-sized Bloopers are later encountered in Bowser's underwater platforming section. Additionally, a large-sized Blooper appears in the Paper Mario stage in ''Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS'' and ''Super Smash Bros. Ultimate'', and while the whale from the first game also makes a cameo in the S.S. Flavion section, its design most closely points to this particular Blooper. In all languages, it is identified as a "Big Blooper" via tips. | ||
*''Super Paper Mario'' - This one is a bit of an anomaly and not as clear-cut as one might expect. This boss is named the "Big Blooper" and appears to be a standard giant at first glance; however, it has ten marked tentacles. In French, it has a name also used for Gooper Blooper, and in Japanese, its name instead appears to be unique. So that must mean that the English name is a goof, right? Well as it turns out, the internal filename of this creature is <tt>e_big_gesso</tt>. This most likely means that it was conceptualized as a Big Blooper all along, and the English localization is a translation of an earlier version of the Japanese script. Note that size is still implied in its final Japanese name, 「ダイオーゲッソー」(''Daiō Gessō'', in which "''dai' | *''Super Paper Mario'' - This one is a bit of an anomaly and not as clear-cut as one might expect. This boss is named the "Big Blooper" and appears to be a standard giant at first glance; however, it has ten marked tentacles. In French, it has a name also used for Gooper Blooper, and in Japanese, its name instead appears to be unique. So that must mean that the English name is a goof, right? Well as it turns out, the internal filename of this creature is <tt>e_big_gesso</tt>. This most likely means that it was conceptualized as a Big Blooper all along, and the English localization is a translation of an earlier version of the Japanese script. Note that size is still implied in its final Japanese name, 「ダイオーゲッソー」(''Daiō Gessō'', in which "''dai""' can mean "big" and "''ō''" may have been meant to evoke the word "''ōkina''", making wordplay not present in a literal translation). As the Big Blooper in the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series is probably named after it, and the tentacles of that design are also different from standard Bloopers (at least until its whole body appears on-screen in ''The Thousand-Year Door''), the simplest solution is to include this Blooper in the same space as that Blooper. | ||
Given the preceding information, I propose the following action: '''Merge Mega Blooper with Big Blooper and add the ''Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door'' boss along with its ''Super Smash Bros.'' series cameos, and possibly retool "Super Blooper" to cover big Blooper Nannies from the ''Super Mario Maker'' series.''' [[User:LinkTheLefty|LinkTheLefty]] ([[User talk:LinkTheLefty|talk]]) 16:03, February 20, 2020 (EST) | Given the preceding information, I propose the following action: '''Merge Mega Blooper with Big Blooper and add the ''Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door'' boss along with its ''Super Smash Bros.'' series cameos, and possibly retool "Super Blooper" to cover big Blooper Nannies from the ''Super Mario Maker'' series.''' [[User:LinkTheLefty|LinkTheLefty]] ([[User talk:LinkTheLefty|talk]]) 16:03, February 20, 2020 (EST) [[User:LinkTheLefty|LinkTheLefty]] ([[User talk:LinkTheLefty|talk]]) 16:03, February 20, 2020 (EST) | ||
:Another thing to note: Super Blooper in PM literally uses the same sprite as normal Blooper in the same game, just at different sizes. This is the only | :Another thing to note: Super Blooper in PM literally uses the same sprite as normal Blooper in the same game, just at different sizes. This is the only thing I can think of that does so in that game other than Bowser between fights, but there are probably other examples I'm forgetting. Anyways, aside from the presence of tentacles, SPM Big Blooper also has that somewhat tiled design, which most other recurring things lack. [[User:Doc von Schmeltwick|Doc von Schmeltwick]] ([[User talk:Doc von Schmeltwick|talk]]) 16:10, February 20, 2020 (EST) | ||