N64 Choco Mountain: Difference between revisions
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'''''Mario Kart DS''''' | '''''Mario Kart DS''''' | ||
*''' | *'''American website:''' "''This mountain path is brimming with hazards. Whether you're dodging a boulder or testing your nerve along a cliff edge, Choco Mountain is no joke.''" | ||
*'''European website:''' "''If Choco Mountain was a chocolate bar, it would be the kind with teeth-breaking crunchy bits inside, rather than a smooth and creamy centre. Here, deadly rockslides knock the unwary driver into an abyss, while you fight to maintain control over the undulating terrain.''" | *'''European website:''' "''If Choco Mountain was a chocolate bar, it would be the kind with teeth-breaking crunchy bits inside, rather than a smooth and creamy centre. Here, deadly rockslides knock the unwary driver into an abyss, while you fight to maintain control over the undulating terrain.''" | ||
Revision as of 18:09, August 12, 2018
Template:Racecourse Choco Mountain is a racing track in Mario Kart 64 and Mario Kart DS. The track is raced in the Flower Cup and features falling rocks as obstacles. Halfway through it, a strange chocolate pyramid can be seen. The course reappears in Mario Kart DS in the Leaf Cup. The only change is that no banister appears at all, making it a little more difficult to complete the course.
Water can also been seen in this course. Before the finish line, there is a curve with a water trap in it, where the racers could fall into. In the 50cc difficulty level, the curve is protected by a banister where the players could not fall into the trap; however, the banister disappears if the player chooses a higher difficulty level than 50cc. While it is one of the shortest tracks in Mario Kart 64, this is deflected in Mario Kart DS. In fact, it is one of the longest tracks overall from that game, and it's the longest retro track.
Course layout
The race starts out on a straight road that eventually leads to a curve to the right. The curve also features a twisty road and a row of Item Boxes for players to use. After the curve and the twist, the road continues curving until a U-turn leads players into a longer straight road. This straight road leads to an overhang, where players originally started.
Past the overhang, another curve to the left takes players to the bottom left part of the course, where the road is somewhat straight, but not as straight as the preceding road. Players then turn left, pass a row of item boxes, and drive over a small hill that makes players fly. After the small hill, there is a somewhat sharp curve to the left. In the 50cc, banisters are set to prevent players from flying into the water below. However, the banisters are not present in the 100cc, 150cc, and EXTRA modes. Boulders fly out on the sharp curve to flatten and slow down any player that is present in their landing spot.
After the falling boulders, a right curve takes players to a straight road, with the road below them to the left. In Mario Kart 64, if players fall into the road below, they must race the part they were just in, also with the penalty of losing any position if players are behind them. After this dangerous place is a curve to the left, with three sets of hills that also send players flying into the finish line, where they start the track again.
Mario Kart DS
This course returns as a retro course as the second course in the Leaf Cup. Not many changes were made, aside from the graphics, and the banister that protects the player in Mario Kart 64 in 50cc and Time Trials was removed completely. The course was available in Wi-Fi.
Official descriptions
Mario Kart 64
- Instruction manual: "This mountainous course climbs and descends through extreme altitude differences and has continuous sharp curves. Your skills at sliding can greatly affect your rank or time. Watch for the signs along the way warning where large rocks might fall on you."
Mario Kart DS
- American website: "This mountain path is brimming with hazards. Whether you're dodging a boulder or testing your nerve along a cliff edge, Choco Mountain is no joke."
- European website: "If Choco Mountain was a chocolate bar, it would be the kind with teeth-breaking crunchy bits inside, rather than a smooth and creamy centre. Here, deadly rockslides knock the unwary driver into an abyss, while you fight to maintain control over the undulating terrain."
Sponsors
Mario Kart 64
Mario Kart DS
- Luigi GP (Signs)
- Nintendo (Signs)
- Yoshi Kart (Signs)
Gallery
N64 appearance
- MK64-icon-ChocoMountain.gif
The icon from the menu.
- Mk64chocomountain1.jpg
Entering Choco Mountain.
- Mk64chocomountain2.jpg
Falling off the cliff into the track below.
- MK64 ChocoMountain.JPG
Chocolate rocks can pose a threat.
DS appearance
- MKDS-CourseIcon-N64-ChocoMountain.png
The track icon in Mario Kart DS.
- ChocoMountainDS.PNG
The course as it appears in Mario Kart DS.
Names in other languages
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | チョコマウンテン[?] Choko Maunten |
Choco Mountain | |
Chinese | 巧克力山[?] Qiǎokèlì Shān |
Chocolate Mountain | |
German | Schoko-Sumpf[?] | Choco Swamp | |
Italian | Cioccocanyon[?] | Choco Canyon | |
Korean | 초코 마운틴[?] Choko Mauntin |
Choco Mountain | |
Spanish | Monte Chocolate[?] | Mount Chocolate |
Trivia
- The music of this course plays in Block Fort and Double Deck (in Mario Kart 64) during Battle mode.
- Choco Mountain looks similar to the Choco Island racecourses from Super Mario Kart.