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''' | {{part conjecture}} | ||
{{item infobox | |||
|image=[[File:RockBlock CTTT.png|200px]]<br>Artwork from ''[[Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker]]'' | |||
|first_appearance=''[[Mario & Wario]]'' ([[List of games by date#1993|1993]]) | |||
|latest_appearance=''[[Super Mario Bros. Wonder]]'' ([[List of games by date#2023|2023]]) | |||
|variant_of=[[Brick Block]] | |||
}} | |||
'''Rock Blocks'''<ref>{{cite|date=November 1993|language=en-gb|title=''Nintendo Magazine System'' (UK) Issue #14|page=48}}</ref><ref>{{cite|date=April 1994|language=en-au|title=''Nintendo Magazine System'' (AU) Issue #13|page=16}}</ref><ref>{{cite|language=en-us|date=2003|publisher=Nintendo of America|title=''Wario World'' instruction booklet|page=24}}</ref><ref>{{cite|language=en-gb|title=''Wario World'' instruction booklet|page=24|date=2003|publisher=Nintendo of Europe}}</ref><ref>{{cite|author=Musa, Alexander; Hatchett, Geson|title=''Super Mario 3D World PRIMA Official Game Guide''|isbn=978-0-804-16249-4|date=2013|language=en-us||publisher=[[Prima Games]]|page=19}}</ref> (or '''rock blocks''')<ref>{{cite|quote=Rock block, so blue and hard. Break it with eggs, leave it in shards.|author=[[Message Block]]|title=''Yoshi's Story''}}</ref> are a variety of [[block]]s appearing throughout the [[Super Mario (franchise)|''Super Mario'' franchise]]. They are made of stone and typically harder to break than other blocks. They usually require the player to perform a particularly strong move or be under the effect of a specific [[power-up]] to break. In most appearances, Rock Blocks function similarly to the [[Block (Super Mario 64)|Black Bricks]] in ''[[Super Mario 64 DS]]''. | |||
There are similar objects in the [[Super Mario (series)|''Super Mario'' series]] called [[Hard Block]]s, a throwable [[Stone (Super Mario Maker 2)|Stone]] in ''[[Super Mario Maker 2]]'', and an obstruction called the [[Stone Block]] in ''[[Paper Mario]]'', but they have different properties from the Rock Block. In ''[[Super Mario Odyssey]]'', the [[Brick Block]]s in the [[Wooded Kingdom]] are larger than normal and made of stone but otherwise function normally. | |||
==History== | |||
===''Mario & Wario''=== | |||
[[File:HibiBlock.png|thumb]] | |||
Rock Blocks are nearly identical to later appearances in ''[[Mario & Wario]]'', being hit once to be cracked open. | |||
[[Category: | ===''Yoshi's Island'' series=== | ||
====''Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island''==== | |||
[[File:Rock Block - Yoshi's Island.png|thumb|Rock Blocks near a [[Kaboomba]] in ''Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island''.]] | |||
'''Cracked blocks'''<ref>{{cite|language=en-us|publisher=Nintendo of America|author=Miller, Kent and Terry Munson|title=''Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island'' Player's Guide|date=1995|page=28}}</ref> are found in many levels of ''[[Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island]]''. They are large blocks made of a durable type of rock, and can only be destroyed with [[Yoshi's Egg|Yoshi Egg]]s. | |||
====''Yoshi's Island DS''==== | |||
Rock Blocks return in ''[[Yoshi's Island DS]]'', and only [[Baby DK]] can destroy them with eggs or a [[Ground Pound|ground pound]]. | |||
===''Yoshi's Story''=== | |||
Rock blocks appear in ''[[Yoshi's Story]]''. They are roughly the same as in ''Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island'', as they can only be destroyed by Yoshi Eggs. Golden rock blocks also appear in the game; they cannot be destroyed by any means. | |||
===''Wario World''=== | |||
[[File:Rockblock WarioWorld.png|thumb|Wario between two Rock Blocks.]] | |||
A different variety of Rock Blocks appeared as obstacles that [[Wario]] encountered during the events of ''[[Wario World]]''. They can be small or very large, but each has a weak point indicated by a cracked side with a bandage on it. Wario can break these blocks by [[punch]]ing or Ground Pounding the weak side. The blocks can also be destroyed by using a [[Piledriver]], [[Wild Swing-Ding]], or [[Mega Toss]]. In some areas, Rock Blocks can move upward and slam down like a [[Thwomp]] to squash Wario. | |||
===''Super Mario'' series=== | |||
====''Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3''==== | |||
[[File:Grey_Brick_Block.png|frame|left]] | |||
Gray-colored [[Brick Block]]s working like Rock Blocks appear in [[World-e]] of ''[[Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3]]''. These blocks specifically appear in the levels [[A Sky-High Adventure]] and [[Puzzling Pipe Maze]], in which they appear to obstruct certain pathways. These solid blocks cannot be destroyed easily, breaking only by using the [[Hammer Suit]] or the [[Tanooki Suit]]'s [[Statue Mario|statue]] mode. Unlike Brick Blocks and [[White Block]]s, these gray blocks do not glisten. | |||
On the Japanese e-Reader card for Puzzling Pipe Maze, [[Roy|Roy Koopa]] claims to have invented these blocks by himself. | |||
====''Super Mario Galaxy''==== | |||
In [[Rolling Gizmo Galaxy]], '''stone blocks'''<ref>{{cite|Fletcher, Black|title=''Super Mario Galaxy: PRIMA Official Game Guide (Collector's Edition)''|location=Roseville|publisher=[[Prima Games]]|language=en-us|date=2007|page=313|isbn=978-0-76155-713-5}}</ref> cover holes needed to progress. They are destroyed when Mario collides with them on the [[Star Ball|Rolling Ball]]. | |||
====''Super Mario 3D World'' / ''Super Mario 3D World + Bowser's Fury'' ==== | |||
[[File:SM3DW Rock Blocks.jpg|thumb|Mega Mario breaking Rock Blocks in ''Super Mario 3D World'']] | |||
Rock Blocks reappear in ''[[Super Mario 3D World]]'' and ''[[Super Mario 3D World + Bowser's Fury]]'' as a gray variation of [[Mega Block|Big Block]]s, thus resembling larger variants of the gray-colored Brick Blocks from ''Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3''. They cannot be destroyed by the player on their own (except when under the effects of a [[Mega Mushroom]]); therefore, the player must make use of other means to break them, such as [[Bob-omb]]s, [[cannonball]]s, having them be hit by a [[Conkdor]], among others. | |||
In the ''[[Bowser's Fury]]'' campaign of ''Super Mario 3D World + Bowser's Fury'', throwing a [[Green Shell]] at a Rock Block destroys it. | |||
====''Super Mario Maker 2''==== | |||
In ''[[Super Mario Maker 2]]'', [[Hard Block]]s take the form of Rock Blocks in the ''Super Mario 3D World'' level style. | |||
====''Super Mario Bros. Wonder''==== | |||
Rock Blocks reappear in ''[[Super Mario Bros. Wonder]]'' in [[Jewel-Block Cave]]'s [[Wonder Effect]], where it can only be destroyed by either the [[Wonder Konk]]{{derived}} or [[Giant Spiked Ball]]s. | |||
===''Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker''=== | |||
Rock Blocks reappear in ''[[Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker]]'' and its Nintendo Switch and Nintendo 3DS [[Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker (Nintendo Switch / Nintendo 3DS)|ports]], where they are identical to the ''Super Mario 3D World'' version. | |||
===''Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam''=== | |||
Rock Blocks return in ''[[Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam]]'', as obstacles that can be broken by the [[Trio Hammer]] move. They appear primarily in [[Doop Doop Dunes]]. | |||
==Gallery== | |||
<gallery> | |||
SMW2 Rock Block brown.png|''[[Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island]]'' | |||
SMW2 Rock Block tan.png|''Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island'' | |||
SMW2 Rock Block maroon.png|''Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island'' | |||
SMW2 Rock Block gray.png|''Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island'' | |||
SMW2 Rock Block gray smooth.png|''Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island'' | |||
SMW2 Rock Block.png|''Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island'' | |||
SMW2 Rock Block blue smooth.png|''Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island'' | |||
Story Rock Block blue.png|''[[Yoshi's Story]]'' | |||
Story Rock Block yellow.png|''Yoshi's Story'' | |||
SMG Screenshot Stone Block.png|''[[Super Mario Galaxy]]'' | |||
Rock Block SM3DW Prima.jpg|''[[Super Mario 3D World]]'' | |||
MLPJTrioHammer.png|''[[Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam]]'' | |||
SMM2 Hard Block SM3DW icon.png|''[[Super Mario Maker 2]]'' ([[Hard Block]] in ''[[Super Mario 3D World]]'' style) | |||
</gallery> | |||
==Names in other languages== | |||
{{foreign names | |||
|Jap=ひびブロック<ref>{{cite|language=ja|publisher=Nintendo|date=1993|title=''Mario & Wario'' instruction booklet|page=8}}</ref> | |||
|JapR=Hibi Burokku | |||
|Jap2=岩ブロック | |||
|Jap2R=Iwa Burokku | |||
|Jap3=ロックブロック<ref>{{cite|language=ja|publisher=[[Shogakukan]]|date=October 19, 2015|title=''Super Mario Bros. Hyakka: Nintendo Kōshiki Guidebook'', ''Super Mario 3D World'' section|page=234|isbn=978-4-09-106569-8}}</ref> | |||
|Jap3R=Rokku Burokku | |||
|JapM=Cracked Block | |||
|Jap2M=Stone Block | |||
|Jap3M=Rock Block | |||
|Ger=Fels-Block | |||
|GerM=Rock Block | |||
|Ita=Blocco di Roccia<ref>{{cite|title=''Wario World'' Italian manual|publisher=Nintendo of Europe|language=it|date=2003|page=22}}</ref> | |||
|Ita2=Blocco pietra | |||
|Ita2N=''Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker'' | |||
|Ita3=Blocco roccia<ref>''[[Mini Mario & Friends: amiibo Challenge]]'' Italian e-manual, section 9</ref> | |||
|Ita4=Blocco Roccia<ref>{{cite|date=November 15, 2018|title=''[[Super Mario Bros. Encyclopedia|Super Mario Bros. Enciclopedia]]''|publisher=Magazzini Salani|language=it|isbn=889367436X|page=234}}</ref> | |||
|ItaM=Block [made out] of Rock | |||
|Ita2M=Stone block | |||
|Ita3M=Rock block | |||
|Ita4M=Rock Block | |||
|Fre=Gros rocher<ref>''Yoshi's Story'' [https://youtu.be/T3DHV6Z6C9w?si=5nV5XDNBsf7HYKn_&t=121 in-game name] (French localization)</ref> | |||
|FreM=Big rock | |||
|Fre2=Bloc bleu<ref name=NMFR>{{cite|title=''Nintendo Magazine : Le seul magazine officiel Nintendo 64''. Issue 5|date=1998|publisher=Nintendo and {{wp|Arnoldo Mondadori Editore|EMAP France}}|language=fr|page=[https://download.abandonware.org/magazines/Nintendo%20magazine/nintendomagazine_numero05/Le%20Magazine%20Officiel%20Nintendo%20N%C2%B005%20-%20Page%20062%20%281998%20Mai-Juin%29.jpg 62]}}</ref> | |||
|Fre2M=Blue block | |||
|Fre2N=''Yoshi's Story'' | |||
}} | |||
==References== | |||
<references/> | |||
{{navboxes| | |||
{{Blocks}} | |||
{{M&W}} | |||
{{YI}} | |||
{{Yoshi's Story}} | |||
{{Wario World}} | |||
{{SMB3}} | |||
{{YIDS}} | |||
{{SMG}} | |||
{{SM3DW}} | |||
{{CTTT}} | |||
{{M&LPJ}} | |||
{{SMM2}} | |||
{{SMBW}}}} | |||
[[Category:Blocks]] | |||
[[Category:Hazardous objects]] | |||
[[Category:Bowser's Fury objects]] | |||
[[Category:Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker objects]] | |||
[[Category:Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam objects]] | |||
[[Category:Mario & Wario]] | |||
[[Category:Super Mario 3D World objects]] | |||
[[Category:Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 objects]] | |||
[[Category:Super Mario Bros. Wonder objects]] | |||
[[Category:Super Mario Maker 2 objects]] | |||
[[Category:Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island objects]] | |||
[[Category:Wario World objects]] | |||
[[Category:Yoshi's Island DS objects]] | |||
[[Category:Yoshi's Story objects]] |
Latest revision as of 11:03, December 20, 2024
This article's title is conjectural for a part of its content. If an official name is found for the currently unnamed portion of content, it may need to be split into a new article.
Rock Block | |
---|---|
Artwork from Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker | |
First appearance | Mario & Wario (1993) |
Latest appearance | Super Mario Bros. Wonder (2023) |
Variant of | Brick Block |
Rock Blocks[1][2][3][4][5] (or rock blocks)[6] are a variety of blocks appearing throughout the Super Mario franchise. They are made of stone and typically harder to break than other blocks. They usually require the player to perform a particularly strong move or be under the effect of a specific power-up to break. In most appearances, Rock Blocks function similarly to the Black Bricks in Super Mario 64 DS.
There are similar objects in the Super Mario series called Hard Blocks, a throwable Stone in Super Mario Maker 2, and an obstruction called the Stone Block in Paper Mario, but they have different properties from the Rock Block. In Super Mario Odyssey, the Brick Blocks in the Wooded Kingdom are larger than normal and made of stone but otherwise function normally.
History[edit]
Mario & Wario[edit]
Rock Blocks are nearly identical to later appearances in Mario & Wario, being hit once to be cracked open.
Yoshi's Island series[edit]
Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island[edit]
Cracked blocks[7] are found in many levels of Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island. They are large blocks made of a durable type of rock, and can only be destroyed with Yoshi Eggs.
Yoshi's Island DS[edit]
Rock Blocks return in Yoshi's Island DS, and only Baby DK can destroy them with eggs or a ground pound.
Yoshi's Story[edit]
Rock blocks appear in Yoshi's Story. They are roughly the same as in Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island, as they can only be destroyed by Yoshi Eggs. Golden rock blocks also appear in the game; they cannot be destroyed by any means.
Wario World[edit]
A different variety of Rock Blocks appeared as obstacles that Wario encountered during the events of Wario World. They can be small or very large, but each has a weak point indicated by a cracked side with a bandage on it. Wario can break these blocks by punching or Ground Pounding the weak side. The blocks can also be destroyed by using a Piledriver, Wild Swing-Ding, or Mega Toss. In some areas, Rock Blocks can move upward and slam down like a Thwomp to squash Wario.
Super Mario series[edit]
Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3[edit]
Gray-colored Brick Blocks working like Rock Blocks appear in World-e of Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3. These blocks specifically appear in the levels A Sky-High Adventure and Puzzling Pipe Maze, in which they appear to obstruct certain pathways. These solid blocks cannot be destroyed easily, breaking only by using the Hammer Suit or the Tanooki Suit's statue mode. Unlike Brick Blocks and White Blocks, these gray blocks do not glisten.
On the Japanese e-Reader card for Puzzling Pipe Maze, Roy Koopa claims to have invented these blocks by himself.
Super Mario Galaxy[edit]
In Rolling Gizmo Galaxy, stone blocks[8] cover holes needed to progress. They are destroyed when Mario collides with them on the Rolling Ball.
Super Mario 3D World / Super Mario 3D World + Bowser's Fury[edit]
Rock Blocks reappear in Super Mario 3D World and Super Mario 3D World + Bowser's Fury as a gray variation of Big Blocks, thus resembling larger variants of the gray-colored Brick Blocks from Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3. They cannot be destroyed by the player on their own (except when under the effects of a Mega Mushroom); therefore, the player must make use of other means to break them, such as Bob-ombs, cannonballs, having them be hit by a Conkdor, among others.
In the Bowser's Fury campaign of Super Mario 3D World + Bowser's Fury, throwing a Green Shell at a Rock Block destroys it.
Super Mario Maker 2[edit]
In Super Mario Maker 2, Hard Blocks take the form of Rock Blocks in the Super Mario 3D World level style.
Super Mario Bros. Wonder[edit]
Rock Blocks reappear in Super Mario Bros. Wonder in Jewel-Block Cave's Wonder Effect, where it can only be destroyed by either the Wonder Konk[derived] or Giant Spiked Balls.
Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker[edit]
Rock Blocks reappear in Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker and its Nintendo Switch and Nintendo 3DS ports, where they are identical to the Super Mario 3D World version.
Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam[edit]
Rock Blocks return in Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam, as obstacles that can be broken by the Trio Hammer move. They appear primarily in Doop Doop Dunes.
Gallery[edit]
Super Mario Maker 2 (Hard Block in Super Mario 3D World style)
Names in other languages[edit]
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | ひびブロック[9] Hibi Burokku |
Cracked Block | |
岩ブロック[?] Iwa Burokku |
Stone Block | ||
ロックブロック[10] Rokku Burokku |
Rock Block | ||
French | Gros rocher[14] | Big rock | |
Bloc bleu[15] | Blue block | Yoshi's Story | |
German | Fels-Block[?] | Rock Block | |
Italian | Blocco di Roccia[11] | Block [made out] of Rock | |
Blocco pietra[?] | Stone block | Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker | |
Blocco roccia[12] | Rock block | ||
Blocco Roccia[13] | Rock Block |
References[edit]
- ^ November 1993. Nintendo Magazine System (UK) Issue #14. Page 48.
- ^ April 1994. Nintendo Magazine System (AU) Issue #13. Page 16.
- ^ 2003. Wario World instruction booklet. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 24.
- ^ 2003. Wario World instruction booklet. Nintendo of Europe (British English). Page 24.
- ^ Musa, Alexander; Hatchett, Geson (2013). Super Mario 3D World PRIMA Official Game Guide. Prima Games (American English). ISBN 978-0-804-16249-4. Page 19.
- ^ "Rock block, so blue and hard. Break it with eggs, leave it in shards." – Message Block. Yoshi's Story.
- ^ Miller, Kent and Terry Munson (1995). Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island Player's Guide. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 28.
- ^ 2007. Super Mario Galaxy: PRIMA Official Game Guide (Collector's Edition). Roseville: Prima Games (American English). ISBN 978-0-76155-713-5. Page 313.
- ^ 1993. Mario & Wario instruction booklet. Nintendo (Japanese). Page 8.
- ^ October 19, 2015. Super Mario Bros. Hyakka: Nintendo Kōshiki Guidebook, Super Mario 3D World section. Shogakukan (Japanese). ISBN 978-4-09-106569-8. Page 234.
- ^ 2003. Wario World Italian manual. Nintendo of Europe (Italian). Page 22.
- ^ Mini Mario & Friends: amiibo Challenge Italian e-manual, section 9
- ^ November 15, 2018. Super Mario Bros. Enciclopedia. Magazzini Salani (Italian). ISBN 889367436X. Page 234.
- ^ Yoshi's Story in-game name (French localization)
- ^ 1998. Nintendo Magazine : Le seul magazine officiel Nintendo 64. Issue 5. Nintendo and EMAP France (French). Page 62.
- Blocks
- Hazardous objects
- Bowser's Fury objects
- Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker objects
- Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam objects
- Mario & Wario
- Super Mario 3D World objects
- Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 objects
- Super Mario Bros. Wonder objects
- Super Mario Maker 2 objects
- Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island objects
- Wario World objects
- Yoshi's Island DS objects
- Yoshi's Story objects