Silver Card
- This article is about item in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door. For information about the silver cards in the Super Mario Trading Card Collection, see Super Mario Trading Card Collection § Categories.
Silver Card | |
---|---|
Paper Mario description | A card Koopa Koot gave you. Use it to play in the Playroom. |
The Thousand-Year Door description | A parlor card that lets you play the Paper Mode game. (GCN) A Member's Card that lets you play the Paper Mode game. (Switch) |
- “This here's a Silver Credit. It'll let you play once you're inside the Playroom.”
- —Koopa Koot, Paper Mario
The Silver Card, originally known as the Silver Credit, is a special item in the Paper Mario series used to unlock specific mini-games.
In Paper Mario, if Mario completes two favors for Koopa Koot, he gives Mario the Silver Credit as a token of appreciation for helping him in his elderly years. He says that the Silver Credit is for playing at a place called the Playroom, a place players can gain Coins by playing one of the two minigames there. If Mario shows the Silver Credit to the Toad, the Toad lets him open up a Warp Pipe that leads to a minigame called Jump Attack. There is another item similar to this called the Gold Credit.
In Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door, the Silver Card allows Mario to play the Paper Game at the Pianta Parlor as well as to be able to trade several items there. To receive it, Mario must take on Pine T. Jr.'s trouble and save his father on floor 18 of the Pit of 100 Trials.
Names in other languages
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | シルバーカード[1][2] Shirubā Kādo |
Silver Card | |
Chinese (simplified) | 银卡[?] Yín Kǎ |
Silver Card | |
Chinese (traditional) | 銀卡[?] Yín Kǎ |
Silver Card | |
French | Carte argent[?] | Silver Card | |
German | Silber-Karte[?] | Silver Card | |
Italian | Carta gioco F[?] | Game card F | |
Korean | 실버카드[?] Silbeo Kadeu |
Silver Card | |
Spanish | Tarjeta Plata[?] | Silver Card |
References
- ^ "Paper Mario: From Japanese to English". (June 17, 2013). The Mushroom Kingdom. Retrieved February 4, 2015.
- ^ "Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door From Japanese to English". (June 1, 2014). The Mushroom Kingdom. Retrieved February 2, 2015.