Land of the Cragnons

From the Super Mario Wiki, the Mario encyclopedia
Revision as of 19:10, June 29, 2024 by Super Mario RPG (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigationJump to search
Land of the Cragnons
Muth
Mario near Downtown of Crag
First appearance Super Paper Mario (2007)
Capital Downtown of Crag
Ruler Big Rock Who Watches, Marbald*, King Croacus IV*
Inhabitants Cragnons, Floro Sapiens, Muths, Clubbas, Pokeys, Putrid Piranhas
“This is land of Cragnons. Me Cragnon, him Cragnon, this land of Cragnons.”
Jasperoid, Super Paper Mario

The Land of the Cragnons (called Crag by the Cragnons) is the setting of Chapter 5 in Super Paper Mario. Mario, Princess Peach and Bowser reach it by entering Flipside's light blue door. It is the home of the Cragnons, a prehistoric race of primitive people with televisions and stereo CD players seemingly made of rocks. It is also home to the enemies of the Cragnons, the Floro Sapiens, who live underground with their king, who is the boss of Chapter 5.

The setting of this Chapter is similar to Chapter 5's in the original Paper Mario. In both Chapters, Mario must venture into a mountainous area (in Paper Mario, it was Mt. Lavalava, and here, it was the Gap of Crag), they both featured a comically-incompetent adventurer accompanying him during the Chapter (in Paper Mario, it was Kolorado, while in Super Paper Mario, it was Flint Cragley), and both had a plant boss (in Paper Mario, it was Lava Piranha, while in Super Paper Mario, it was King Croacus IV). Mario also gets a kind of hammer in both areas (in Paper Mario, it was an Ultra Hammer, while in Super Paper Mario, he gets a hammer-like Pixl named Cudge.)

Near the end of the game, during the final battle with Super Dimentio, the Land of the Cragnons is destroyed by The Void, but is restored following the destruction of the Chaos Heart along with all other demolished dimensions.

Chapters and locations

Template:Content description

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning Notes
French Pays Cragnon[?] Cragnon Country
German Klippulo[?] Derived from Klippe ("Crag") and the masculine suffix "-ulo"
Italian Terra dei Cromagnoidi[?] Land of the Cragnons
Korean 스톤스톤랜드[?]
Seuton Seuton Raendeu
Stone Stone Land
Spanish Comarca Rocolita[1] Cragnon Region

References