Honen

From the Super Mario Wiki, the Mario encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
Not to be confused with Fish Bone or Honebon.
Honen
Character artwork of a Honen.
Artwork from Super Mario Land
First appearance Super Mario Land (1989)
Variant of Torion
Comparable

Honen,[1] also known as Honhen[2] or Bone Fish,[2] are enemies in Sarasaland that appear in Super Mario Land. According to the game's instruction manual, they are the skeletons of Torion eaten by Tatanga.

History

Super Mario Land

Honen jump vertically out of the waters of the Muda Kingdom at regular intervals. They can easily be defeated by being jumped on or by simply standing above them, or by hitting them with a Superball. Defeating one is worth 100 points. They appear in World 2-1 and World 2-3. They are one of two undead enemies to appear in the game, the other being Pionpi.

Super Mario Land (manga)

In the Super Mario Land manga, Tatanga creates three Honen after eating some Torion that dared to make jokes about his relationship with Daisy, which he then sends to Muda Kingdom. While avoiding two of the Honen, Mario is bitten by the third one on the bottom. The pain makes him jump out of his pants, leaving him naked and exposed, flustering Mecha Kuribō (who is Princess Peach in disguise). Mario then retrieves his overalls and stomps on the enemy.

Profiles

Super Mario Land

  • Instruction booklet: The skeleton of a Torion after it's been eaten by Tatanga. It always flies vertically up from the water. A superball can't stop it.
  • Nintendo 3DS Virtual Console manual: This skeleton of a Torion after it has been eaten by Tatanga always flies up vertically from the water. It can't be defeated by a Superball.

Perfect Ban Mario Character Daijiten

Template:PEGMCE profile

Gallery

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese ホーネン[3]
Hōnen
Derived from「骨」(hone, "bone") and「トリオン」(Torion)
Dutch Honen[4] -
French Honen[5] -
German Honen[?] -
Italian Honen[6][7][8] -
Spanish Honen[?] -

References

  1. ^ 1989. Super Mario Land instruction booklet. Nintendo of America (English). Page 15..
  2. ^ a b 1991. Nintendo Game Boy Player's Guide. Nintendo of America (English). Page 5.
  3. ^ 1989. スーパーマリオランド (Sūpā Mario Rando) instruction booklet. Nintendo (Japanese). Page 17.
  4. ^ Club Nintendo (Netherlands) Classic. Page 8.
  5. ^ Super Mario Land French instruction booklet. Page 15.
  6. ^ Super Mario Land Italian manual. Page 15.
  7. ^ Super Mario Land (Nintendo 3DS - Virtual Console) Italian e-manual. Page 14.
  8. ^ Super Mario Bros. Enciclopedia. Page 47.