Whammino Mountain

From the Super Mario Wiki, the Mario encyclopedia
Revision as of 22:26, June 30, 2024 by Super Mario RPG (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigationJump to search
Level
Whammino Mountain
Pmssguide44.png
View of the final segment of the level.
Level code W1-5
World World 1
Game Paper Mario: Sticker Star
<< Directory of levels >>

Whammino Mountain is a mountainous level and the secret exit of Water's Edge Way in Paper Mario: Sticker Star. This cliffside level has the second Sticker Shop and the first Super Star in the game. Completing this level unlocks Goomba Fortress. Whammino Mountain is one of two standard levels that do not have to be entered to complete the game, along with Hither Thither Hill, though either of them must be completed to unlock Goomba Fortress.

Layout[edit]

Screenshot of Whammino Mountain, from Paper Mario: Sticker Star
Mario in front of the gate before finding the scrap.

The level begins with a dim grass patch, followed by rocky steps up to another, more mountainous area. This winding path contains the only Lakitu in the game. It endlessly throws Spinies at Mario, similar to the unreachable Lakitu in Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars. Nearby is a rare Super Star, which can be used to defeat the Spinies. After the cliff steps, the next room contains a white gate, with its center missing. Mario must continue to the mountaintop to find the gate scrap on an unreachable mountain platform. A tree must be hammered to make the platform tilt and drop the scrap, allowing Mario to paste it back into its rightful place. In the chain reaction cutscene, parts of the Super Mario Bros. theme can be heard in rhythm as the terrain tilts, jumps, drops, and more to reveal the white gate scrap. A pipe can also be found here, leading back to the beginning of the level.

Screenshot of the sticker shop in Whammino Mountain, from Paper Mario: Sticker Star
The Whammino Mountain Sticker Shop.

After the White Gate is back into place, a helpless Blue Toad can be found pasted to a low-flying cloud. After rescuing him, he opens up his sticker shop. Shortly after this, the very top of the level can be accessed, where the Comet Piece is found.

Secret Door[edit]

The spot for a Secret Door sticker is located in the underground passage accessed via Warp Pipe which can used to obtain the Bellows thing.

Sticker upgrade spots[edit]

To the right of the sticker shop, above a flower that can be bloomed using the hammer.

Enemies[edit]

Things[edit]

Sticker Shop[edit]

Image Name Price Note(s)

Jump Sticker PMSS.png Jump 3 coins Available from the start
Hammer Sticker PMSS.png Hammer 3 coins Available from the start
PoisonMushroomPMSS.png Poison Mushroom 2 coins Available from the start
MushroomPMSS.png Mushroom 15 coins Available from the start
Fire Flower Sticker PMSS.png Fire Flower 20 coins Available from the start
ShinyFireFlowerPMSS.png Shiny Fire Flower 30 coins Available after collecting One Royal Sticker
FlashyFFPMSS.png Flashy Fire Flower 40 coins Available after collecting three Royal Stickers
Ice Flower sticker Ice Flower 20 coins Available from the start
ShinyIceFlowerPMSS.png Shiny Ice Flower 30 coins Available after collecting one Royal Sticker
FlashyIceFlowerPMSS.png Flashy Ice Flower 40 coins Available after collecting three Royal Stickers

Profiles[edit]

  • Tattles
    • Mountain Areas: This is my first time mountain climbing! Look! I'm a mountain sticker!
    • Sticker Shop Area: Wow, all this in the clouds! Not bad!

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning
Japanese ドンバラ山
Donbara-san
Portmanteau of「ドン」(don, onomatopoeia for crushing sound) and「バラバラ」(barabara, "scattering") +「山」(san, "mountain")

Chinese 咚啪啦山
Dōngpālā Shān
Transliteration of Japanese name

French (NOA) Mont Boummino
Boummino Mountain
French (NOE) Mont Badaboum
Bang Mountain
German Kawummino-Gebirge
Kawummino Mountains
Italian Monte Roboante
Mount Bombastic
Spanish Montaña Domiplúm
Domiplúm Mountain. From dominó ("domino") and the onomatopoeia plúm, denoting something heavy hitting the ground