Egg Plant

Revision as of 12:45, September 11, 2018 by FanOfYoshi (talk | contribs) (Ah! I didn't do anything i forgot to add it while i putted the description before!)
Split-arrows.svg It has been suggested that this page be split into the following: Egg-Plant, Needlenose-Plant. (discuss)

Template:Species-infobox Egg-Plants[1] are flowers that are found in Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island, Yoshi's Island: Super Mario Advance 3, Yoshi's Island DS, Yoshi's New Island and Yoshi's Woolly World. These flowers normally spit out normal Yoshi Eggs. They are very common and appear in almost every level. They spit out Yoshi Eggs one at a time, but if a Yoshi Ground Pounds near one, the plant will either shoot out several at once or start shooting them out more quickly. The Yoshi can also lick the eggs to catch them. Since the Yoshi can only carry six eggs each, the Egg-Plant won't produce more eggs anymore until the Yoshi uses one of the Yoshi Eggs on something.

The Egg-Plant's name comes from the eggplant, a type of fruit. It also shares its name with a type of nightshade (hence the appearance).

Some Egg-Plants known as Needlenose-Plants[citation needed] will spit out Needlenoses, but as long as a Yoshi has six eggs, it can't spit any out. There are four of these plants in the Island Museum. They can be viewed in the botanical enemy exhibit.

An unused variaton that spits out Bubbles was intended to appear, but was removed for unknown reasons.[2] Like the Bull's-Eye Bill, it is fully functional.

An Egg-Plant appears in the Super Mario-Kun volume 14, where it helps Mario, Yoshi, and Luigi by providing eggs in their fight against Burt the Bashful.

In Yoshi's Woolly World, Egg-Plants are knitted, and in replacement for eggs, they shoot out Yarn Balls of multiple colors. Egg-Plants appear less frequently in the game, with only a few appearances, including the Bonus Game. Notably, the game does not feature the variation that spits out Needlenoses.

Gallery

Names in other languages

Egg-Plant

Language Name Meaning
Japanese タマゴフラワー[3][4][5]
Tamago Furawā
Egg Flower

Needlenose-Plant

Language Name Meaning
Japanese サンボフラワー[3][6][7]
Sanbo Furawā
Pokey Flower

References