Plumber Pole: Difference between revisions

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(→‎Names in other languages: Added foreign names.)
(→‎Names in other languages: Added Polish name.)
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|NorM=Plumber Pole
|NorM=Plumber Pole
|NorC=<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X3B0TI9cShE Super Mario Bros 3 VHS#2 - Norsk tale - Norsk tale]</ref>
|NorC=<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X3B0TI9cShE Super Mario Bros 3 VHS#2 - Norsk tale - Norsk tale]</ref>
|Pol=Hak na hydraulika
|PolM=Plumber Hook
|PolC=<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uISdSGtPMOM Nowe Przygody Braci Mario Odcinek 11 - Oj bratku]</ref>
|PorA=Vara de Bombeiro
|PorA=Vara de Bombeiro
|PorAM=Plumber Pole
|PorAM=Plumber Pole

Revision as of 20:34, September 21, 2024

Plumber Pole
The Plumber Pole in The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3
First appearance The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3 ("Oh, Brother!") (1990)
“I'll catch that faucet face with another one of my nifty gizmos: The Plumber Pole!”
Kooky von Koopa, "Oh, Brother!"

The Plumber Pole is a modified fishing rod built by Kooky von Koopa, which is capable of being cast through a series of Warp Pipes, hooking a Mario brother, and pulling him back through the pipes.

In The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3 episode "Oh, Brother!", Kooky, who is in an underground dungeon, uses the Plumber Pole to retrieve Mario from the Mushroom Kingdom. After locating Mario on the Koopascope, Kooky casts the Plumber Pole through a pipe, where it finds its way through the Pipe Maze, and into the Mushroom Kingdom, where it hooks onto Mario. Kooky then uses the Plumber Pole to pull Mario back through the pipes, and brings him all the way to the dungeon.

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning Notes
Chinese (simplified) 水管工钓竿[1]
Shuǐguǎngōng Diàogān
Plumber Pole
Danish Blikkenslager Fiskestang[2] Plumber Pole
Dutch Loodgieterhengel[3] Plumber Pole
French Trappe Plombier[4] Plumber Trap
German Klempnerangel[5] Plumber Pole
Italian Canna da idraulico[6] Plumber Pole
Norwegian Rørlegger Fiskestang[7] Plumber Pole
Polish Hak na hydraulika[8] Plumber Hook
Portuguese (NOA) Vara de Bombeiro[9] Plumber Pole
Portuguese (NOE) Vara de Encanador[10] Plumber Pole
Romanian Instala-undița[11] Compound of instalator ("plumber") and undiță ("fishing pole")
Spanish Caña Fontanera[12] Plumber Pole
Spanish (NOE) Anzuelo Fontanero[13] Plumber Hook original dub
Swedish Rörmokaremetspö[14] Plumber Pole

References