Pier Pressure: Difference between revisions
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Players try to pick fishing lines that they think have Cheep Cheeps on them. A player who picks a fishing rod with a Cheep Cheep is safe and moves to the back of the line. A player who picks a fishing rod with an Urchin is knocked into the water and is eliminated. There is no way of telling whether a rod has a Cheep Cheep or an Urchin hooked to it, even if the line moves in a different way from another. The last remaining player wins. | Players try to pick fishing lines that they think have Cheep Cheeps on them. A player who picks a fishing rod with a Cheep Cheep is safe and moves to the back of the line. A player who picks a fishing rod with an Urchin is knocked into the water and is eliminated. There is no way of telling whether a rod has a Cheep Cheep or an Urchin hooked to it, even if the line moves in a different way from another. The last remaining player wins. | ||
In ''The Top 100'', computer players' turns can be skipped with {{button|3ds|X}}. | |||
==Controls== | ==Controls== |
Latest revision as of 23:16, December 9, 2024
Pier Pressure | |||
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Mario Party 9 Mario Party: The Top 100 | |||
Appears in | Mario Party 9 Mario Party: The Top 100 | ||
Type | Free-for-All minigame | ||
Time limit | 10 seconds per turn | ||
Music track | Island Activities | ||
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Pier Pressure is a luck-based Free-for-All minigame featured in Mario Party 9 and Mario Party: The Top 100. The name is a pun on the phrase "peer pressure," which is when one conforms to how their friends think or behave.
Introduction[edit]
An underwater shot shows Cheep Cheeps and Urchins swimming around. The camera then goes above water and shows the pier and the players.
Gameplay[edit]
Before the game starts, a "spinning" arrow chooses who goes first. The selected player takes a turn, and the players to their right follow in order.
Players try to pick fishing lines that they think have Cheep Cheeps on them. A player who picks a fishing rod with a Cheep Cheep is safe and moves to the back of the line. A player who picks a fishing rod with an Urchin is knocked into the water and is eliminated. There is no way of telling whether a rod has a Cheep Cheep or an Urchin hooked to it, even if the line moves in a different way from another. The last remaining player wins.
In The Top 100, computer players' turns can be skipped with .
Controls[edit]
Mario Party 9[edit]
- "Hold the Wii Remote sideways. Press to move and to pick a fishing rod while in front of it."
Mario Party: The Top 100[edit]
- : Move
- : Reel in a pole
In-game text[edit]
Mario Party 9[edit]
- Rules – "Pick the fishing rod with a Cheep Cheep on the hook. If you choose one with an Urchin on it, you're out!"
Mario Party: The Top 100[edit]
- Description – "Catch some Cheep Cheeps! But don't catch an Urchin by mistake, or you're out!"
- On-screen – "Reel in the fishing pole that looks like it has a Cheep Cheep!"
See also[edit]
Names in other languages[edit]
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | プクプクをつり上げろ![?] Pukupuku o Tsuriagero! |
Reel up the Cheep Cheeps! | |
Chinese | 釣起泡泡魚[?] Diàoqǐ Pàopàoyú |
Reel In the Cheep Cheeps | |
Dutch | Piervissen[?] | Pier fishing | |
French (NOA) | En bout de ligne[?] | At the end of line | |
French (NOE) | Cheep Cheep, hourra![?] | Cheep Cheep, hooray! (pun on the phrase "Hip, hip, hooray!") | |
German | Blindfischen[?] | Blind Fishing | |
Italian | Pesca fortunata[?] | Lucky fishing | |
Spanish | Cheep Cheep, ¡hurra![?] | Cheep Cheep, Hooray! (pun on "Hip, hip, hooray!") |