Yurarin Boo: Difference between revisions
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'''Yurarin Boo'''<ref name=manual>{{cite|language=en-us|publisher=Nintendo of America|date=1989 | '''Yurarin Boo'''<ref name=manual>{{cite|language=en-us|publisher=Nintendo of America|date=1989|title=''Super Mario Land'' instruction booklet|page=16}}</ref><ref name=GB>{{cite|date=1991|title=Nintendo ''Game Boy'' Player's Guide|page=5|language=en-us|publisher=Nintendo of America}}</ref> are fire-breathing seahorse enemies in ''[[Super Mario Land]]''. Yurarin Boos are stronger variants of [[Yurarin]], being able to shoot [[fireball]]s while moving up and down. Yurarin Boos are more common, appearing in all three [[level]]s of [[Muda Kingdom]], and they can also be found outside of the water. Yurarin Boos are invincible to [[Superball Mario|Superball]]s. A Yurarin Boo can be defeated from either being [[stomp]]ed or from being hit by two torpedoes fired by a [[Marine Pop]], rewarding 400 points in either case. [[Dragonzamasu]], the boss of the Muda Kingdom, resembles Yurarin Boos. | ||
In the ''Game Boy'' comic books spun off from the [[Nintendo Comics System]], produced by the company [[Valiant]], Yurarin Boos made cameos where they could fly, and be used as mounts by [[Pionpi]]. | In the ''Game Boy'' comic books spun off from the [[Nintendo Comics System]], produced by the company [[Valiant]], Yurarin Boos made cameos where they could fly, and be used as mounts by [[Pionpi]]. | ||
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==Names in other languages== | ==Names in other languages== | ||
{{foreign names | {{foreign names | ||
|Jap=ユラリン・プー<ref>{{cite|title=スーパーマリオランド (''Sūpā Mario Rando'') instruction booklet|page=18|language=ja|publisher | |Jap=ユラリン・プー<ref>{{cite|title=スーパーマリオランド (''Sūpā Mario Rando'') instruction booklet|page=18|language=ja|publisher=Nintendo|date=1989}}</ref> | ||
|JapR=Yurarin pū | |JapR=Yurarin pū | ||
|JapM=From「ユラリン」(''[[Yurarin]]'') and「プー」(''pū'', onomatopoeia for spitting) | |JapM=From「ユラリン」(''[[Yurarin]]'') and「プー」(''pū'', onomatopoeia for spitting) |
Revision as of 17:27, August 5, 2024
Yurarin Boo | |||
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Artwork from Super Mario Land | |||
First appearance | Super Mario Land (1989) | ||
Variant of | Yurarin | ||
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Yurarin Boo[1][2] are fire-breathing seahorse enemies in Super Mario Land. Yurarin Boos are stronger variants of Yurarin, being able to shoot fireballs while moving up and down. Yurarin Boos are more common, appearing in all three levels of Muda Kingdom, and they can also be found outside of the water. Yurarin Boos are invincible to Superballs. A Yurarin Boo can be defeated from either being stomped or from being hit by two torpedoes fired by a Marine Pop, rewarding 400 points in either case. Dragonzamasu, the boss of the Muda Kingdom, resembles Yurarin Boos.
In the Game Boy comic books spun off from the Nintendo Comics System, produced by the company Valiant, Yurarin Boos made cameos where they could fly, and be used as mounts by Pionpi.
In the Super Mario Land manga, a large Yurarin Boo is encountered in the Muda Kingdom, blocking Mario's way, who is unable to damage him with Superballs. It is rendered helpless after its mouth is tied shut and his fins are bound, and Mario and Mekakuribō keep it with them as a hostage that can guide them to the area boss. The Yurarin Boo is unwillingly cooperative and snarky at times, but does help during the boss battle: after Tamao cracks the Marine Pop's glass, Mario and Mekakuribō use the Yurarin Boo to stop the leak. After Tamao tries to hit them again, the Yurarin Boo grabs it, allowing Mario to shoot Dragonzamasu. After Mario and Mekakuribo leave Muda Kingdom, the Yurarin Boo decides to quit being a minion and opens a takoyaki shop.
Profiles
Super Mario Land
- Instruction booklet: This is the big brother of Yurarin. It moves up and down spitting out fireballs, and a superball as no effect on it.[1]
- Game Boy Player's Guide: These super seahorses leap from the water and spit fire.[2]
- 3DS Virtual Console manual: This is the big brother of Yurarin. It moves up and down, spitting out fireballs. Superballs have no effect on this creature.
Perfect Ban Mario Character Daijiten
Gallery
Names in other languages
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | ユラリン・プー[3] Yurarin pū |
From「ユラリン」(Yurarin) and「プー」(pū, onomatopoeia for spitting) | |
Dutch | Yurarin Boo[4] | - | |
French | Yurarin Boo[8] | - | |
German | Yurarin Boo[?] | - | |
Italian | Yurarin Boo[5][6][7] | - | |
Spanish | Yurarin Boo[?] | - |
References
- ^ a b 1989. Super Mario Land instruction booklet. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 16.
- ^ a b 1991. Nintendo Game Boy Player's Guide. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 5.
- ^ 1989. スーパーマリオランド (Sūpā Mario Rando) instruction booklet. Nintendo (Japanese). Page 18.
- ^ Club Nintendo (Netherlands) Classic. Page 8.
- ^ Super Mario Land Italian manual. Page 16.
- ^ Super Mario Land (3DS - Virtual Console) Italian e-manual. Page 14.
- ^ November 15, 2018. Super Mario Bros. Enciclopedia. Magazzini Salani (Italian). ISBN 889367436X. Page 47.
- ^ Super Mario Land French instruction booklet. Page 16.
Super Mario Land | |
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Protagonists | Mario • Princess Daisy |
Bosses | King Totomesu • Dragonzamasu (Tamao) • Hiyoihoi • Biokinton (Chicken) • Tatanga (Pagosu) |
Locations | Sarasaland (Birabuto Kingdom • Muda Kingdom • Easton Kingdom • Chai Kingdom) |
Levels | World 1-1 • World 1-2 • World 1-3 • World 2-1 • World 2-2 • World 2-3 • World 3-1 • World 3-2 • World 3-3 • World 4-1 • World 4-2 • World 4-3 • Expert Level |
Items & vehicles | Super Mushroom • Superball Flower • Star • 1UP heart • Coin • Marine Pop • Sky Pop • Switch • Lift Block |
Enemies & obstacles | Batadon • Bombshell Koopa • Bullet Biff • Bunbun • Chikako • Dropping lift • Falling block • Falling spike • Fly • Ganchan • Gao • Gunion • Goombo • Honen • Kumo • Mekabon • Nyololin • Pionpi • Pipe Fist • Piranha Plant • Pompon Flower • Roketon • Roto Disc • Suu • Tokotoko • Torion • Yurarin • Yurarin Boo |
Other | Brick • Bonus game • Das Super Mario Spiel • Gallery • Glitches • Goal • Media • Mystery Block • Sub-area • Soundtrack |