Swirlypod: Difference between revisions

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==Names in other languages==
==Names in other languages==
{{foreign names
{{foreign names
|Jap=マイマイ<ref>[https://www.ndw.jp/mario-book-231226 2023年12月28日発売! 圧巻の640ページに凝縮された「スーパーマリオブラザーズ ワンダー 完全攻略本」 – Nintendo DREAM WEB]. ''Nintendo DREAM WEB''. Retrieved December 26, 2023.</ref>
|JapR=Maimai
|JapM=Snail
|Ita=Kiocciola<ref>[[Swamp Pipe Crawl]]'s Italian name: "Kiocciole sui tubi paludosi"</ref>
|Ita=Kiocciola<ref>[[Swamp Pipe Crawl]]'s Italian name: "Kiocciole sui tubi paludosi"</ref>
|ItaM=Pun on "chiocciola" (snail)
|ItaM=Pun on "chiocciola" (snail)

Revision as of 06:33, December 26, 2023

The title of this article is official, but it comes from development data such as an internal filename. If an acceptable public source is found, then the article should be moved to its appropriate title.

Swirlypod
Custom render of a Swirlypod from Super Mario Bros. Wonder
Rendered game model of Snail
First appearance Super Mario Bros. Wonder (2023)
Variants
Comparable

Snails are enemies from Super Mario Bros. Wonder that are introduced in the level Bulrush Coming Through!. They are green snails with a pink shell. As snails, they move slowly both on the ground, on the sides of a pipe and on floating blocks, but some are also seen climbing up background walls of Semisolid Platforms front side. When stomped, they are launched out of their shells, much like Beach Koopas, and, after recovering from the dizziness, attempt to get back in it. When Snails are eaten by Maw-Maws, their shells are spat out. Similar to Koopa Shells, their shell can then be picked up and used as a weapon or projectile against other enemies.

They are more prominent in the level Swamp Pipe Crawl, where the emerging pipes reveal they can withstand the poison without repercussion.

Big variants also appear in some levels with them with the same characteristics.

Gallery

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning
Japanese マイマイ[1]
Maimai
Snail

Italian Kiocciola[2]
Pun on "chiocciola" (snail)

Trivia

  • The snails' bulbous, striped antennae strongly resemble the green-banded broodsac, a parasitic flatworm that infests the eyestalks of snails.

References