Germane
Germane | |
---|---|
Species | Tetris Ningen |
First appearance | Super Mario (Super Mario Land 2) (1989) |
- “オレはテトリス
王国 の入り口 を守 る.しゅう長 の ゲルマンだ. (I'm the guardian of the Tetris Kingdom! I'm Chieftain Germane!)” - —Germane, Super Mario Land 2
Germane[1] is one of the major antagonists of the first act in the Super Mario Land 2 manga from the Super Mario series published by KC Deluxe. He is the chief of the Tetris Ningen and guardian of their kingdom.
He is a tall dark-skinned human, wearing Aztecan-like clothing, including a feathered headgear that only he has, symbolizing his leader role. As a member of the Tetris Ningen, he is capable of changing form from a human to a Tetrimino with human limbs and face (a yellow I-Tetrimino, in his case).
Mario, Princess Peach, and Goro, in search of the fabled treasure of Tetris, find its temple, along with a Goomba, Lakitu, and Hammer Bro that were following them. They all barge into the temple, where they are welcomed by Germane to try his challenge to access the treasure: the challenge consisting of a real-life Tetris match with Tetriminos falling from a waterfall, on top of which he stands on a platform, giving orders to his people to throw Tetriminos and monitoring everything. Germane also explains that failing the challenge may lead them to end up like Luigi, who, earlier, tried the challenge, and he is now in a comatose state at the bottom of the waterfall's basin.
The Koopa Troop trio goes first and uses the Tetriminos to create a stair to the top, only to be eaten by a statue that then takes them to the other losers of the challenge, turning them into slaves. With notes from Luigi, Mario puts together that, to pass the challenge, they need to clear 100 blocks. While Mario and his friends are progressing the game, Germane reads a manga, until one of his men informs him that the heroes are winning. Afraid that someone will put their hands on their treasure, Germane attempts to flatten Peach with a boulder, but Goro saves her (but also falling into the basin and getting itself eliminated). He then laughs at Mario when he remains alone after Peach sacrifices herself by taking the place of a T-Tetrimino. Mario, using Peach's ribbon as a whip to better guide the Tetriminos into position, latches onto Germane's wrist and pulls him down into a gap as a replacement for a I-Tetrimino, clearing more lines and allowing him to pass the challenge, bringing his friends and Luigi back into the game.
As the group enters a newly opened passage, Germane emerges from the rubble in I-Tetrimino form and follows them. As the heroes learn of his new form, they mock him and bully him. Angered, Germane activates a ceiling trap, but his new tall form prevents the spiked ceiling to fall on the heroes. Instead, due to the pressure, the floor collapses, and they all end up into the canal system. Mario and Germane are separated from the others and arrive in a room where they meet King Tetris, the first ruler of Tetris, whom Germane treats with respect, unaware that he is just Bowser under a disguise. Germane, being asked by the king to give him the treasure, takes him and Mario to two waterfalls where they face each other in a Tetris duel. Germane once again cheats by helping King Tetris by telling him which Tetriminos are about to fall next for him, much to Mario's displeasure.
Luigi, Peach, and Goro end up on top of the two waterfalls, and Goro ends up cutting off King Tetris' water, letting Mario clearing the space. Germane attempts to fix the situation, ordering the three to leave immediately. When they refuse, Germane orders him men to turn into Tetriminos and fuse together into the Gattai Tetris Ningen, scaring them away from the waterfall. Using some nearby mine carts that the slaves fill with Tetriminos for the challenges, Luigi then kicks them at the amalgamation, destroying it.
Gallery[edit]
Germane fusing with the Tetris Ningen in the Gattai Tetris Ningen
Names in other languages[edit]
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | しゅう Shūchō no Geruman |
Chieftain German; "German" is a common name in Russia, where Tetris was developed. |