Yurarin: Difference between revisions

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|Jap=ユラリン<ref>''Super Mario Land'' Japanese instruction booklet, page 17.</ref>
|Jap=ユラリン<ref>''Super Mario Land'' Japanese instruction booklet, page 17.</ref>
|JapR=Yurarin
|JapR=Yurarin
|JapM=Derived from「ユラユラ」(''yurayura'', an onomatopoeic term meaning "swaying") and diminutive symbol「りん」(''-rin'')
|JapM=Derived from「ゆらり」(''yurari'', an onomatopoeic term meaning "swaying") and suffix「りん」(''-rin'')
|Dut=Yurarin<ref>''Club Nintendo'' (Netherlands) ''Classic'', page 8.</ref>
|Dut=Yurarin<ref>''Club Nintendo'' (Netherlands) ''Classic'', page 8.</ref>
|DutM=
|DutM=

Revision as of 06:26, May 19, 2022

Yurarin
Character artwork of a Yurarin.
First appearance Super Mario Land (1989)
Variants

Yurarin[1][2] are seahorse enemies found in the Muda Kingdom in Super Mario Land, described as Dragonzamasu's underlings.[1] Yurarin's attack patterns are very simple and easy to dodge. They simply float around at a slow speed, trying to hit Mario. Mario is awarded 400 points for shooting one twice with torpedoes supplied by his Marine Pop. They are only found in World 2-3 of the Muda Kingdom, the Marine Pop's stage. The big brothers of Yurarin, named Yurarin Boos, appear exclusively in the same kingdom as well. The only real difference between a Yurarin and a Yurarin Boo is that Yurarin Boo have the ability to shoot fire while Yurarin do not.

Profiles

Super Mario Land

  • Instruction booklet: "This underling of Dragonzamasu lives in the water and trembles as it swims along. 2 torpedoes will defeat it."[1]
  • Game Boy Player's Guide: "You’ll meet seahorses underwater."[2]
  • 3DS Virtual Console manual: "This underwater underling of Dragonzamasu trembles as it swims along. Defeat it with two torpedoes."

Gallery

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning
Japanese ユラリン[3]
Yurarin
Derived from「ゆらり」(yurari, an onomatopoeic term meaning "swaying") and suffix「りん」(-rin)

Dutch Yurarin[4]
 
German Yurarin
-
Spanish Yurarin
-

References

  1. ^ a b c Super Mario Land English instruction booklet, page 15.
  2. ^ a b M. Arakawa. Nintendo Game Boy Player's Guide. Page 5.
  3. ^ Super Mario Land Japanese instruction booklet, page 17.
  4. ^ Club Nintendo (Netherlands) Classic, page 8.