Square (platform): Difference between revisions

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|latest_appearance=''[[Super Mario 3D All-Stars]]'' ([[List of games by date#2020|2020]])
|latest_appearance=''[[Super Mario 3D All-Stars]]'' ([[List of games by date#2020|2020]])
}}
}}
{{quote2|These square sections may circle each other like dance partners, but their purpose is to dump [[Mario]] into the void.|''The Super Mario 64 Player's Guide''|page 42}}
{{quote|These square sections may circle each other like dance partners, but their purpose is to dump [[Mario]] into the [[pit|void]].|''Super Mario 64'' Player's Guide|source=page 42}}
[[File:SM64 Dark World Platforms.png|Mario navigating the squares|thumb|left]]
[[File:SM64 Dark World Platforms.png|Mario navigating the squares|thumb|left]]
The '''squares'''<ref>"''You'll begin on the platform beside the moving squares.''" &ndash; Scott Pelland and Dan Owsen. ''The Super Mario 64 Player's Guide''. Redmond: [[Nintendo|Nintendo of America]], 1996. Page 43.</ref> are three pairs of platforms in [[Bowser in the Dark World]] in ''[[Super Mario 64]]'' and ''[[Super Mario 64 DS]]''. One pair is found at the beginning of the level, while two more pairs are at a much higher elevation later in the level. Each of the pairs move in a counterclockwise cycle around a larger square rim; one of the level's [[Red Coin]]s is located on the edge of the rim of the first pair at the higher elevation, requiring [[Mario]] to use the squares to reach it. The platforms themselves have a {{wp|Steel blue|steel blue}} color in ''Super Mario 64'', while they are gray in ''Super Mario 64 DS''. Despite their name, they are actually {{wp|Octahedron|octahedron}}s due to being composed of eight slanted triangles.
The '''squares'''<ref>{{cite|quote=You'll begin on the platform beside the moving squares.|author=Pelland, Scott and Dan Owsen|title=''The Super Mario 64 Player's Guide''|location=Redmond|date=1996|publisher=[[Nintendo|Nintendo of America]]|page=43|language=en-us}}</ref> are objects in ''[[Super Mario 64]]'' and ''[[Super Mario 64 DS]]''. They are three pairs of platforms located in [[Bowser in the Dark World]]. One pair is found at the beginning of the level, while two more pairs are at a much higher elevation later in the level. Each of the pairs moves in a counterclockwise cycle around a larger square rim; one of the level's [[Red Coin]]s is located on the edge of the rim of the first pair at the higher elevation, requiring [[Mario]] to use the squares to reach it. The platforms themselves have a {{wp|steel blue}} color in ''Super Mario 64'', while they are gray in ''Super Mario 64 DS''. Despite their name, they are actually {{iw|wikipedia|octahedron}}s due to being composed of eight slanted triangles.
{{br}}


==References==
==References==

Latest revision as of 14:01, June 24, 2024

Square
Model of a square from Super Mario 64.
First appearance Super Mario 64 (1996)
Latest appearance Super Mario 3D All-Stars (2020)
“These square sections may circle each other like dance partners, but their purpose is to dump Mario into the void.”
Super Mario 64 Player's Guide, page 42
Mario in Bowser in the Dark World
Mario navigating the squares

The squares[1] are objects in Super Mario 64 and Super Mario 64 DS. They are three pairs of platforms located in Bowser in the Dark World. One pair is found at the beginning of the level, while two more pairs are at a much higher elevation later in the level. Each of the pairs moves in a counterclockwise cycle around a larger square rim; one of the level's Red Coins is located on the edge of the rim of the first pair at the higher elevation, requiring Mario to use the squares to reach it. The platforms themselves have a steel blue color in Super Mario 64, while they are gray in Super Mario 64 DS. Despite their name, they are actually octahedrons due to being composed of eight slanted triangles.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "You'll begin on the platform beside the moving squares." – Pelland, Scott and Dan Owsen (1996). The Super Mario 64 Player's Guide. Redmond: Nintendo of America (American English). Page 43.