Tryclyde: Difference between revisions

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{{quote|Step right up... if you're ready to get... toasted!|Tryclyde|[[Super Mario Advance]]}}
{{quote|Step right up... if you're ready to get... toasted!|Tryclyde|[[Super Mario Advance]]}}
'''Tryclyde''', also known as '''Triclyde''', is a large, three-headed snake capable of breathing balls of fire. He is also an inhabitant of [[Subcon]], the land of dreams. His design is based on the mythical {{wp|Lernaean Hydra}}, a giant, multi-headed serpent.
'''Tryclyde''', also known as '''Triclyde''', is a [[List of bosses|boss]] introduced in ''[[Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic]]'' and ''[[Super Mario Bros. 2]]''. He is a large, three-headed snake capable of breathing balls of fire. He is also an inhabitant of [[Subcon]], the land of dreams. His design is based on the mythical {{wp|Lernaean Hydra}}, a giant, multi-headed serpent.


==History==
==History==
Line 16: Line 16:
====''Super Mario Bros. 2''====
====''Super Mario Bros. 2''====
[[File:SMB2 Tryclyde.png|thumb|x200px|Tryclyde's original appearance from ''Super Mario Bros. 2'']]
[[File:SMB2 Tryclyde.png|thumb|x200px|Tryclyde's original appearance from ''Super Mario Bros. 2'']]
In ''[[Super Mario Bros. 2]]'', Tryclyde acts as the guardian of both [[World 2 (Super Mario Bros. 2)|World 2]] and [[World 6 (Super Mario Bros. 2)|World 6]]. Upon sighting the player, he shoots [[fireball]]s at them. Tryclyde can take damage from a [[Mushroom Block]] being thrown at it, and they are resistant to Tryclyde's fire breath. After being hit by three Mushroom Blocks, Tryclyde is defeated. In this incarnation, he is red with black stripes or wrinkles. Only the front two heads actually move and spit fire; the back one stays still and only reacts to getting hit.
Tryclyde is a boss in ''Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic'' and ''Super Mario Bros. 2''. He is red with black stripes or wrinkles. His color changes in the ''[[Super Mario All-Stars]]'' and ''[[Super Mario Advance]]'' remakes. In both reissues, Tryclyde is recolored turquoise and orange, yet official artwork still depicts him the usual red. Most artwork in relation to ''Super Mario Bros. 2'' shows Tryclyde with visible bottom fangs, yet in-game, the upper fangs are visible instead. He is also depicted in artwork with plain smooth skin rather than stripes. There are some unused sprites in ''Super Mario Advance'' of [[Cobrat]] with Tryclyde's palette. Presumably, if they were used, he would act like [[Fryguy]] and [[Clawgrip]] and start out as a regular enemy type before undergoing a transformation.<ref>{{cite|author=TCRF|language=en|title=[[tcrf:Super Mario Advance#Unused Enemies|''Super Mario Advance'' § Unused Enemies]]|publisher=The Cutting Room Floor|accessdate=October 25, 2013}}</ref>


While Tryclyde reprises his role in the version of ''Super Mario Bros. 2'' included in ''[[Super Mario All-Stars]]'', he is only the boss of World 2 in the ''[[Super Mario Advance]]'' version, his rematch in World 6 having been replaced by [[Mouser]]'s own (originally from [[World 3 (Super Mario Bros. 2)|World 3]]). His color changes in the remakes, coloring him turquoise and orange. Upon defeat in ''Super Mario Advance'', Tryclyde can be heard shouting, "Impossible!" In both reissues, Tryclyde is recolored turquoise, yet official artwork still depicts him the usual red. Most official artwork related to ''Super Mario Bros. 2'' shows Tryclyde with visible bottom fangs, yet in-game, the upper fangs are visible instead. He is also depicted in artwork with plain smooth skin rather than stripes.
In gameplay, Tryclyde is the guardian of both [[World 2 (Super Mario Bros. 2)|World 2]] and [[World 6 (Super Mario Bros. 2)|World 6]]. He shoots [[fireball]]s at the player character on sight. Only the front two heads actually move and spit fire; the back one stays still and only reacts to getting hit. Tryclyde can take damage from a [[Mushroom Block]] being thrown at it. After three hits, Tryclyde is defeated. In ''Super Mario Advance'', Tryclyde is fought only once, with his rematch in World 6 having been replaced by [[Mouser]]'s own (originally from [[World 3 (Super Mario Bros. 2)|World 3]]); in said version, Tryclyde shouts "Impossible!" when defeated.
 
There are some unused sprites in ''Super Mario Advance'' of [[Cobrat]] with Tryclyde's palette. Presumably, if they were used, he would act like [[Fryguy]] and [[Clawgrip]] and start out as a regular enemy type before undergoing a transformation.<ref>{{cite|author=TCRF|language=en|title=[[tcrf:Super Mario Advance#Unused Enemies|''Super Mario Advance'' § Unused Enemies]]|publisher=The Cutting Room Floor|accessdate=October 25, 2013}}</ref>


====''BS Super Mario USA''====
====''BS Super Mario USA''====
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===''Super Mario Bros. & Friends: When I Grow Up''===
===''Super Mario Bros. & Friends: When I Grow Up''===
[[File:ZooKeeper.png|thumb|left|Tryclyde on the left side of the Zookeeper coloring page]]
[[File:ZooKeeper.png|thumb|left|Tryclyde on the left side of the Zookeeper coloring page]]
In the coloring book game ''[[Super Mario Bros. & Friends: When I Grow Up]]'', the coloring page for Zoo Keeper features Tryclyde in a cage. The description for the job is as follows:
In the coloring book game ''[[Super Mario Bros. & Friends: When I Grow Up]]'', the coloring page for Zoo Keeper features Tryclyde in a cage. He is mentioned in the job description.<ref>{{cite|quote=Mario the zoo keeper thinks he's one lucky fellow. After all, not many zoos in the world have such unusual creatures as Birdo, Tryclyde and Pidgit.|author=Zoo Keeper description|title=''Super Mario Bros. & Friends: When I Grow Up''}}</ref>
 
:''Mario the zoo keeper thinks he's one lucky fellow. After all, not many zoos in the world have such unusual creatures as Birdo, Tryclyde and Pidgit.''
{{br}}
{{br}}
===''The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!''===
===''The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!''===
[[File:CartoonTryclyde.jpg|thumb|200px|Tryclyde in the episode "[[Raiders of the Lost Mushroom]]" in ''[[The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!]]'']]
[[File:CartoonTryclyde.jpg|thumb|200px|Tryclyde in the episode "[[Raiders of the Lost Mushroom]]" in ''[[The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!]]'']]

Revision as of 17:17, August 8, 2024

Tryclyde
Tryclyde
Artwork from Super Mario Advance
Species Cobrat
First appearance Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic (1987, overall)
Super Mario Bros. 2 (1988, Super Mario franchise)
Latest appearance Ultimate NES Remix (2014)
Latest portrayal Charles Martinet[1] (2001)
“Step right up... if you're ready to get... toasted!”
Tryclyde, Super Mario Advance

Tryclyde, also known as Triclyde, is a boss introduced in Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic and Super Mario Bros. 2. He is a large, three-headed snake capable of breathing balls of fire. He is also an inhabitant of Subcon, the land of dreams. His design is based on the mythical Lernaean Hydra, a giant, multi-headed serpent.

History

Background

Not much of Tryclyde's past is revealed, though it is mentioned that he was originally an outcast; he was recruited by Wart due to his "cunning brain and offensive capabilities which are three times normal strength".[2]

Super Mario series

Super Mario Bros. 2

Tryclyde from Super Mario Bros. 2.
Tryclyde's original appearance from Super Mario Bros. 2

Tryclyde is a boss in Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic and Super Mario Bros. 2. He is red with black stripes or wrinkles. His color changes in the Super Mario All-Stars and Super Mario Advance remakes. In both reissues, Tryclyde is recolored turquoise and orange, yet official artwork still depicts him the usual red. Most artwork in relation to Super Mario Bros. 2 shows Tryclyde with visible bottom fangs, yet in-game, the upper fangs are visible instead. He is also depicted in artwork with plain smooth skin rather than stripes. There are some unused sprites in Super Mario Advance of Cobrat with Tryclyde's palette. Presumably, if they were used, he would act like Fryguy and Clawgrip and start out as a regular enemy type before undergoing a transformation.[3]

In gameplay, Tryclyde is the guardian of both World 2 and World 6. He shoots fireballs at the player character on sight. Only the front two heads actually move and spit fire; the back one stays still and only reacts to getting hit. Tryclyde can take damage from a Mushroom Block being thrown at it. After three hits, Tryclyde is defeated. In Super Mario Advance, Tryclyde is fought only once, with his rematch in World 6 having been replaced by Mouser's own (originally from World 3); in said version, Tryclyde shouts "Impossible!" when defeated.

BS Super Mario USA

Tryclyde returned as a boss in BS Super Mario USA, and was fought similarly as in his battle from Super Mario Bros. 2. Tryclyde's mugshot depicts him having a green coloration, slightly closer to his in-game sprite reused from Super Mario All-Stars, but is colored red in cutscenes that he appears in.

Super Mario Bros. & Friends: When I Grow Up

Mario as a zookeeper.
Tryclyde on the left side of the Zookeeper coloring page

In the coloring book game Super Mario Bros. & Friends: When I Grow Up, the coloring page for Zoo Keeper features Tryclyde in a cage. He is mentioned in the job description.[4]

The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!

“Three heads are better than one!”
Tryclyde, "The Adventures of Sherlock Mario"

Tryclyde (voiced by Harvey Atkin) is featured in several episodes of The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!, which depict him as being quite powerful, though somewhat unintelligent. He is shown to have a pale yellow belly as opposed to white. Instead of working for Wart, he works for King Koopa as a member of his Koopa Pack, often appearing to help him, Mouser and Koopa Troopa in their plots. His middle head could talk, but he rarely did so. He most often battled Princess Toadstool, who was usually able to defeat him. In "The Great Gladiator Gig", Tryclyde assumes the alter ego of "Tryclydius" to fit with King Koopa's Roman motif, and in "Koopa Klaus", he assumes the moniker of "Randolph the Red-Nosed Tryclyde", going with King Koopa's Santa Claus motif of the same name.

In the series' writer's bible, it mentions that there are more than one Tryclyde.[5]

Nintendo Comics System

Though Tryclyde never made a direct appearance in any issues of Nintendo Comics System, one of the comics' Dear Princess Toadstool features had him writing to Princess Toadstool in a thinly veiled attempt to get a date with her. In the letter, Tryclyde refers to himself using words such as "we" and "we're."

Nintendo Adventure Books

In one of the bad endings of Pipe Down!, Ludwig von Koopa plays a mournful tune on a harmonica to summon Tryclyde to attack Mario and Luigi. Before the heroes can react, Tryclyde grabs them both by their rears and drags them off to his lair.

Super Mario-kun

Tryclyde. Page 34, volume 8 from Super Mario-kun.

Tryclyde appears in volume 8 of Super Mario-kun. Tryclyde's heads are given distinct personalities: the middle one is big and a bully to the other heads, the left one is smart, and the right one is dumb. The three heads always bicker with each other, causing one of them to bite the other. When this happens, the middle head (having the pain receptors) always hurts itself. This bickering eventually helps them be defeated. Mario, Luigi, and Yoshi encounter Tryclyde in a pyramid. Tryclyde burns Mario and Yoshi, but Luigi has a Frog Suit. He gives Mario a Magical Potion. Tryclyde steals it from him, but drops it on Mario, enabling Mario to recover from a Mushroom. Mario then defeats Tryclyde by throwing Mushroom Blocks at him.

Tryclyde has appeared as part of Wart's ultimate form during the fight. He appears to be jutting from Wart's head.

Profiles and statistics

Super Mario Bros. 2

  • Instruction booklet description:
    • English:
      He was once an outsider, but now he is one of Wart's helpers since he impressed Wart with his cunning brain and offensive capabilities which are three times normal strength.[2]

Super Mario Advance

  • Instruction booklet description:
    • English (British):
      Once an outsider, Tryclyde was enlisted by Wart because of his evil planning and triple-strength attack.[6]

Perfect Ban Mario Character Daijiten

Template:PEGMCE profile

Gallery

For this subject's image gallery, see Gallery:Tryclyde.

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning Notes
Chinese (simplified) 三头蛇[7]
Sān-Tóu Shé
Three-Headed Snake
Dutch Tryclyde[10] -
French Tryclyde[?] -
German Triclyde[?] -
Italian Tryclyde[11][12] -
Triciclo (The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!)[?] Trike/Tricycle
Tritesta[13] Three-heads
Trezucche[14] Three-heads, lit. "three-pumpkins"; zucca ("pumpkin") is figuratively used for "head"
Korean 삼두사[?]
Samdusa
Three-Headed Snake

References

  1. ^ The Voice of Mario. GameSpy (English). Archived December 14, 2004, 20:16:33 UTC from the original via Wayback Machine. Retrieved January 6, 2024.
  2. ^ a b 1988. Super Mario Bros. 2 instruction booklet. Nintendo of America (English). Page 27.
  3. ^ TCRF. Super Mario Advance § Unused Enemies. The Cutting Room Floor (English). Retrieved October 25, 2013.
  4. ^ "Mario the zoo keeper thinks he's one lucky fellow. After all, not many zoos in the world have such unusual creatures as Birdo, Tryclyde and Pidgit." – Zoo Keeper description. Super Mario Bros. & Friends: When I Grow Up.
  5. ^ The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! writer's bible. worthpoint.com (English). Retrieved October 5, 2020.
  6. ^ 2001. Super Mario Advance instruction booklet. Nintendo of Europe (British English). Page 12.
  7. ^ From the ending scenes of Super Mario Advance as localized by iQue. Reference: 无敌阿尔宙斯 (August 28, 2013). 神游 超级马力欧2敌人官译. Baidu Tieba (Simplified Chinese). Archived February 26, 2017, 16:11:09 UTC from the original via Wayback Machine. Retrieved August 8, 2024.
  8. ^ 1987. Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic instruction booklet. Nintendo (Japanese). Page 36.
  9. ^ a b 1992. Super Mario USA instruction booklet (PDF). Nintendo (Japanese). Page 30. Retrieved November 17, 2022.
  10. ^ Club Nintendo (Netherlands) Classic. Page 35.
  11. ^ Super Mario Bros. 2 manual. Nintendo (Italian). Page 27.
  12. ^ "Sconfiggi Tryclyde!" – Super Mario Bros. 2 level 7-2. NES Remix 2.
  13. ^ 2010. Super Mario All-Stars Limited Edition manual. Nintendo of Europe (Italian). Page 38.
  14. ^ 2001. Super Mario Advance manual. Nintendo of Europe (Italian). Page 112.