Riverside Station: Difference between revisions

From the Super Mario Wiki, the Mario encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
m (New names)
Line 126: Line 126:
*In the Japanese version of Riverside Station, the block below the hidden block that contains a Thunder Rage is a breakable block. Breaking the block will cause it to stay broken until the player leaves Riverside Station. The international versions made this block unbreakable.
*In the Japanese version of Riverside Station, the block below the hidden block that contains a Thunder Rage is a breakable block. Breaking the block will cause it to stay broken until the player leaves Riverside Station. The international versions made this block unbreakable.
**The unbreakable block in international versions does not bounce upon being hit like other empty blocks do.
**The unbreakable block in international versions does not bounce upon being hit like other empty blocks do.
*Some train pictures can be seen on the walls in various places inside the station building.  In the [[Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door (Nintendo Switch)|Switch remake]], the train depicted in the pictures more closely resembles the [[K64]] train from the original Paper Mario, which suggests that an engine of its design operated on the railway before being replaced with the current Excess Express.


{{PMTTYD}}
{{PMTTYD}}

Revision as of 18:42, May 29, 2024

Riverside Station
Riverside Office.png
Mario grabbing pipes to cross.
First appearance Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door (2004)
Greater location Rogueport's surrounding areas
Inhabitants Poison Pokeys, Ruff Puffs, Spiky Parabuzzies, Smorgs
The train pulling into the station

Riverside Station is an old, deserted train station in the game Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door, and the only known stop the Excess Express makes between Rogueport and Poshley Heights; the train typically stops at this station so it can be refueled before its commute continues. Following its abandonment, a large swarm of Smorgs have taken up residence amid the station's dilapidated interior. The station proper contains a hub area, an elevator, a clock room, and an old office and archives in the station's basement. While Mario and his team were travelling to Poshley Heights to find the Garnet Star in Chapter 6, an unknown entity lifted the station's drawbridge, which the Excess Express needs to cross; a Riverside worker informs Mario of the dilemma and gives him a key, granting him access to the otherwise locked station. From there, Mario must access the station's basement to obtain the Ultra Boots. Using his newly acquired boots, Mario must hit the switch inside the station to reactivate the drawbridge, allowing it to fall back into place so the Excess Express can continue its commute. The Smorg horde stowed away on the train shortly after the dilemma was resolved and attacked the train the next morning, but was eventually defeated by Mario and his team.

As aforementioned, the station seems all but abandoned (sans the many enemies inhabiting it) and without any signs of upkeep, despite having two known workers. There was once a river that flowed beneath the bridge here (hence the name "Riverside Station"), but it dried up at an undisclosed time before Mario's arrival and the area has since become a pasture. The station's decommission was quite possibly a result of the Smorg infestation or other enemies that invaded.

Enemies

Formations

For enemy formations in Riverside Station, see here.

Items

Item Icon Found In
Close Call P Sprite of the Close Call P badge in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door. In the first room, it's on the ledge on the northwest walls.
Dried Shroom Dried Shroom TTYD.png In the maze area in the deep place, it's in the garbage can down the maze.
Elevator Key Sprite of the Elevator Key of Riverside Station in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door. In the storeroom area in the deep place, it's on top of a ledge inside a cage in the storeroom.
HP Plus Sprite of the HP Plus badge in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door. In the sunset area, it's on a ledge on the northwest wall.
P-Up, D-Down Sprite of the P-Up, D-Down badge in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door. In the maze area in the deep place, it's in a small cave inside the big maze.
Shine Sprite A Shine Sprite from Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door Near the wall corner in the right of the sunset area in Riverside Station.
On top of the stairs above the records shelf in the low-west room of Riverside Station.
Star Piece A sprite of a Star Piece. To the north of the second room, it's behind the last gear.
Station Key Sprite of a three-holed Station Key in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door. Outside Riverside Station, it's got from the Toad worker near the bridge.
Station Key Station Key.png To the north of the second room, it's on the last platform in the gear room.
Thunder Rage The Thunder Rage from Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door In the sunset area, it's in an invisible block on top of the question block on the north side.
Ultra Boots The Ultra Boots from Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door In the storeroom area in the deep place, it's in a chest in the rooftop above the storeroom.

Hidden ? Block

Main article: List of hidden blocks in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door
Item Description Image Image (block revealed)
The Thunder Rage from Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door
Thunder Rage
Outside, in the area with Poison Pokeys, is a lone ? Block. Jumping up from it will reveal the hidden ? Block. Screenshot of Mario at a hidden ? Block location in Riverside Station, in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door. Screenshot of Mario revealing a hidden ? Block (containing a Thunder Rage) in Riverside Station, in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door.

Area Tattles

  • "This is Riverside Station. It's one of the places where the Excess Express stops. This place is famous for its scenic beauty... It's the sunsets, you know. Just one more of the many pleasures Excess Express passengers get to enjoy."
  • "We're inside Riverside Station. It's an old brick building with natural warmth. Its antique elevator is totally charming, too. I am in LOVE with that thing! You think it works, though? I'm not that fond of getting trapped in elevators..."
  • "We're inside Riverside Station. This place has been out of use for a while, I think. I love those solitary lightbulbs hanging from the ceiling. It's so shabby chic."
  • "This is the other side of the big clock. Lots of endlessly moving gears... A lonely clock, counting out the endless progression of hours, heard by no one..."
  • "We're on the outer stairs. A door at the bottom leads to an underground office. But listen, Mario... Don't spend time worrying about posters that blow away in the wind. Let's just take in this killer sunset for a while before our next bad-guy appointment."
  • "This is the Riverside Station garbage dump. Talk about an annoying place to navigate! And it smells like rotting Goomnuts... It's amazing how much people throw away. There should be a door to the underground office somewhere down here."
  • "This is the Riverside Station office...but there doesn't seem to be anyone here. Hey, and now that I think of it, why would they put an office down here anyway? ...Or was I not supposed to bring that up?"
  • "This is the Riverside Station records room. They file all station business here. ...Or at least I think they do. Yup, these are probably files. Not to change the subject... But did you know you have to hit some switches a certain number of times? Yeah, that kind of came out of left field, but I was just wondering if you knew that..."
RogueportPetalburgPetal MeadowsHooktail CastleThe Great TreeBoggly WoodsPirate's GrottoKeelhaul KeyTwilight TownTwilight TrailFahr OutpostCreepy SteepleMoonX-Naut FortressGlitzvillePoshley SanctumRiverside StationPoshley HeightsA map of Rogueport and the surrounding areas visited during Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door.
Click an area to open the relevant article.

In-game map description

  • A station the Excess Express must stop at in order to refuel. Long ago, a river flowed beneath the suspension bridge, but it has since dried up. The view of the setting sun from here is unrivaled, according to locals.

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese リバーサイド駅[?]
Ribāsaido Eki
Riverside Station
French Gare de Riverside[?] Riverside Station
German Tulpenbach[?] Tulip Creek
Italian St. Rocca Fluviale[?] Rock River Station
Spanish Estación de Riverside[?] Riverside's Station

Trivia

  • The face of the station's clock tower is only visible during cutscenes, and displays the time based on that of the GameCube's internal clock.
  • The ordinary Goombas in the records room have several oddities that may indicate they were added very late in development: they are an early-game enemy and much weaker than other enemies encountered in the station, they do not thematically fit in with the area like the other enemies do, and despite being located in the records room, they use a battle background depicting the hallway upstairs. No enemies are found in the hallway, so the background may possibly have been leftover from a cut battle with Beldam and Marilyn in this chapter and repurposed for the Goombas.
  • In the Japanese version of Riverside Station, the block below the hidden block that contains a Thunder Rage is a breakable block. Breaking the block will cause it to stay broken until the player leaves Riverside Station. The international versions made this block unbreakable.
    • The unbreakable block in international versions does not bounce upon being hit like other empty blocks do.
  • Some train pictures can be seen on the walls in various places inside the station building. In the Switch remake, the train depicted in the pictures more closely resembles the K64 train from the original Paper Mario, which suggests that an engine of its design operated on the railway before being replaced with the current Excess Express.