Ice Land
- Not to be confused with Land of Ice or GBA Snow Land.
Ice Land | |
---|---|
Game | Super Mario Bros. 3 |
Level(s) | 14 |
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- “Be careful in the ice world. The creatures trapped in the ice will come to life if warmed.”
- —Princess Toadstool, Super Mario Bros. 3
Ice Land[1][2] (alternatively Iced Land,[3] Winter Wonderland,[4] the Ice World,[5] or Ice Country[6]) is the sixth world in Super Mario Bros. 3.
History
Super Mario Bros. 3
Ice Land is accessed after completing Sky Land. It is the largest world in the game, with ten levels, three Hammer Brothers, three fortresses, three Spade Panels, two Toad Houses, and a castle that has been taken over by an airship. As the world's name implies, it is a frozen wasteland covered with slippery floors and frozen lakes, with many structures and platforms made of Ice Blocks in various sizes. Lemmy Koopa takes over this icy kingdom by stealing the royal magic wand and turning the king of Ice Land into a seal (a Monty Mole in the game's remakes). The map in the Game Boy Advance version shows that Ice Land is north of Dark Land and east of Pipe Land. Ice Land is also the only world that is possible to go backwards from using a Magic Whistle, as using it in the sixth world will allow one to return to the fifth. However, in Worlds 5 and 8, using it can cause one to return to the current world.
In the Game Boy Advance version the path to the second Toad House is altered so that it is accessible at the fork after World 6-4 instead of only accessible through World 6-5.
Ice Land has the following levels:
Image | Name | Description
|
---|---|---|
World 6-1 | The first level of Ice Land, where the ground is covered in ice and Ptooies are introduced. | |
World 6-2 | An autoscrolling level with moving cloud platforms. | |
World 6-3 | A level made up of small Ice Block platforms. | |
World 6-Fortress 1 | The first fortress level of Ice Land, this level has a platform on a track in the first room. | |
World 6-4 | A level with many Rotary Lifts on Ice Block pillars. | |
World 6-5 | An underground cove with Buster Beetles that requires a flight power-up to finish. | |
World 6-6 | An underground stage that is partly underwater. | |
World 6-7 | An autoscrolling level with Donut Lifts. | |
World 6-Fortress 2 | The second fortress level made up of Ice Blocks and several sliding Thwomps. | |
World 6-8 | A long grassy level with many hills, Spikes, Walking Piranhas, and Buster Beetles. | |
World 6-9 | Another underwater cavern stage. | |
World 6-10 | A long ice level with many frozen coins and White Blocks. | |
World 6-Fortress 3 | The third fortress level, made up of many Conveyor Belts and Stretches. | |
World 6-Airship | Lemmy Koopa's Airship, containing Bolt Lifts and uneven platforms. | |
World 6- | Three sets of Hammer Brothers traverse the map. Each of them have two rows of seven bricks and a floor made of ice. The first set will give up a Hammer when defeated, the second set will drop a Starman, and the third set will leave behind a Lakitu's Cloud. If the player meets the requirements for the Treasure Ship, a Hammer Brother will be replaced with that ship. |
The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3
In The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3, Ice Land, though never referred to as such, only appeared in the episode "Life's Ruff" (which is the only episode where this world is shown as the title card), where it had a different ruler named King Windbag. He bullied his servants and never said "please", but when Hip and Hop came, they stole his wand and turned him and Luigi into dogs and harassed them for a bit, but were eventually defeated and returned to Dark Land. The castle is depicted with igloos around it.
Super Mario World television series
An icy tundra, referred to as "Ice Land", appears in the first episode of the Super Mario World television series, "Fire Sale". Here, it is under the control of Kootie Pie, who had stolen Mama Fireplant to make it warmer. However, Ice Land began to melt because of the heat, and Mario, Luigi, Princess Toadstool, and Yoshi arrived to save both Mama Fireplant and Ice Land.
Gallery
Ice Land as seen in Super Mario All-Stars
World 6 as seen in BS Super Mario Collection
Tanooki Mario in Ice Land
Music
An arrangement of Ice Land's map theme, "Slowly, Slowly", plays in Mario Party during the Pedal Power and Ghost Guess minigames. A more faithful arrangement plays whenever Mario receives anonymous e-mails in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door. The map theme's melody is incorporated in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate into the "Fortress Boss - Super Mario Bros. 3" arrangement alongside the map theme for Dark Land and the titular Fortress Boss theme.
Names in other languages
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | ワールド6 Wārudo6 Kōri no Kuni |
World 6: Ice Land (alternatively "Iced Land"[9] in-game) | |
French | Pays glace[?] | Ice land | |
Pays-gel (Super Mario Bros. 3 instruction booklet)[?] | Freeze-land | ||
German | Eisigland[?] | Icyland | |
Italian | Mondo del Ghiacci[10][11] | Ice World | |
Terra di Ghiaccio (Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3)[?] | Ice Land | ||
La terra di ghiaccio[12] | The ice land | ||
Portuguese (NOA) | Terra Gelada[13] | Iced Land | |
Romanian | Ținutul înghețat (Super Mario World television series)[?] | Frozen land | |
Spanish | Tierra Congelada[?] | Frozen Land |
References
- ^ Nintendo (1990). Super Mario Bros. 3 instruction booklet. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 33.
- ^ Super Mario Bros. 3 North American re-release and European ending.
- ^ Super Mario Bros. 3 North American original, Super Mario All-Stars and Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 International ending.
- ^ June 1990. Nintendo Power Volume 13. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 3 and 53-62.
- ^ June 1990. Nintendo Power Volume 13. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 6, 52, 54, and 60.
- ^ June 1990. Nintendo Power Volume 13. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 62.
- ^ Nintendo (1988). スーパーマリオブラザーズ3 (Sūpā Mario Burazāzu Surī) instruction booklet. Nintendo (Japanese). Page 33.
- ^ Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario 3 + Mario Bros. Japanese ending (in kana).
- ^ Super Mario Bros. 3 and Super Mario Collection Japanese ending.
- ^ Super Mario Bros. 3 Italian manual. Page 33.
- ^ Club Nintendo (Italy) Volume 3 - 1991 Issue 6. Page 18.
- ^ November 15, 2018. Super Mario Bros. Enciclopedia. Magazzini Salani (Italian). ISBN 889367436X. Page 39.
- ^ November 1991. VideoGame magazine, issue 8A. Editora Sigla (Brazilian Portuguese). Page 13.