Cointagious: Difference between revisions

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|Ger=Münziplikator
|Ger=Münziplikator
|GerM=Pun on ''Münze'' (coin) and ''Multiplikator'' (multiplier)
|GerM=Pun on ''Münze'' (coin) and ''Multiplikator'' (multiplier)
|Fra=Tape Dé-Pièces
|Fre=Tape Dé-Pièces
|FraM=Tap Dice-Coins, ''dé'' (dice) being similar to ''des'' (some)  
|FreM=Tap Dice-Coins, ''dé'' (dice) being similar to ''des'' (some)  
|Ita=Gettonando
|Ita=Gettonando
|ItaM=Term for inserting money in a jukebox
|ItaM=Term for inserting money in a jukebox

Revision as of 23:17, January 7, 2024

Cointagious
Cointagious from Mario Party 7
Appears in Mario Party 7
Type 4-Player coin minigame
Time limit 20 seconds
Music track Fun in the Sun
Music sample

Cointagious is a 4-Player coin-collecting minigame in Mario Party 7. Its name is a pun on the word "contagious."

Introduction

The screen zooms in on the four players as four Dice Blocks appear.

Gameplay

In this minigame, the main goal is to collect as many coins as possible. For 20 seconds, the players hit Dice Blocks that roll from zero to three. The number that appears on a Dice Block when rolled is how many coins are received. There is no winner in this minigame, as, regardless of how many coins are received by the end of the minigame, everybody still walks away with something, unless a player did not get any coins at all.

Ending

After time is up, all the Dice Blocks disappear. All players who got coins do their victory animations. If a player does not get any coins, they will do their losing animation instead.

Controls

In-game text

  • Rules"Hit the Dice Block to earn the same number of coins as the number rolled."
  • Advice"You can hit the Dice Block many times. Jump, jump, jump!"

Gallery

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese たたいてコインサイコロ[?]
Tataite koin saikoro
Hit the Coin Dice
French Tape Dé-Pièces[?] Tap Dice-Coins, (dice) being similar to des (some)
German Münziplikator[?] Pun on Münze (coin) and Multiplikator (multiplier)
Italian Gettonando[?] Term for inserting money in a jukebox
Spanish Monedados[?] Portmanteau on moneda (coin) and dado (dice)