Talk:Mega Goomba

Connections with Grand Goombas
Are Mega Goombas related to Grand Goombas in any special way? Because they are both reletivly the same, both are just bigger Goombas.

You're right; Mega Goombas and Grand Goombas are relatively the same enemy--although Mega Goombas are larger than Grand Goombas. Also note that when stomped, a single Mega Goomba transforms into two Grand Goombas.

They are SIMILAR, but Grand and Mega Goombas are technically not the same. But you do make a good point. PiranhaBomb

Luigi U
I dont have New Super Luigi U, so I dont know if Mega Goombas appeared in it. Can someone please tell me if they did? 14:57, 5 August 2013 (EDT)

Mario Party 10
Wouldn't it make more sense to classify that with the NSMBDS one, since there's only one and it's a boss? I mean, yeah, it's smaller than the one from NSMBDS, but Petey Piranha was the size of a small house in his first appearance, and King Boo's been anywhere from the size of an ordinary Boo to the size of a Big Boo. 20:58, 16 August 2017 (CT)
 * No. The NSMB boss has a different Japanese name than the recurring enemy, and the minigame's name in Japanese uses the latter. 00:37, 17 August 2017 (EDT)
 * Only looking at the names is bad; it's also necessary to look at the behavior between the two and compare and contrast. With that said, I'm not particularly familiar with either NSMB or MP10. 00:46, 17 August 2017 (EDT)
 * I don't see how what you're bringing up is relevant. The Gritty Goombas are a case of two palette-swapped enemies in the same game having the same name, which is not what we're dealing with here. There's not much to say about the two Mega Goomba bosses behavior-wise; they just kinda walk around, and you have to jump (MP10) or Ground Pound (NSMB) on them multiple times to defeat them. In other words, they're giant Goombas that behave like giant Goombas, so that doesn't really help. Furthermore, the behavioral differences argument doesn't really hold up when talking about games in different genres. 02:13, 17 August 2017 (EDT)
 * They're both platformers (not the entirety of MP10, but the MP10 minigame). The point is that the species was split in the first place because of behavioural differences in the first place, so if someone was interested in moving a section from one to another, a name shouldn't be the only thing to look at. 09:00, 17 August 2017 (EDT)

Mega Goomba is Big Goomba
The current state of the article is erroneous. If you look through the page history, the wiki considered the "Mega Goomba" species to appear in New Super Mario Bros. Wii as early as 2010 - however, the Prima guide of that game doesn't mention it at all, so the name seems to be an extrapolation based on the previous boss. Encyclopedia Super Mario Bros. also has different Japanese names for them: 「こでかクリボー」 (145 & 209) Kodeka Kuribō for what we have as Big Goomba, and 「でかクリボー」 (145 & 210) Deka Kuribō for what we have as Mega Goomba; however, Deka Kuribō is the usual name for a Big Goomba, meaning Kodeka Kuribō is a separate middle size. Moreover, we do have an English name that we overlooked for "Kodeka Kuribō" - Hefty Goomba, from the New Super Mario Bros. U PRIMA Official Game Guide.

28


 * Big Goomba


 * These giant Goombas seem scary, but they can be stomped just like regular Goombas. When you stomp a Big Goomba, though, it splits into two smaller Hefty Goombas! Use fireballs to defeat Big Goombas with less hassle.

32


 * Hefty Goomba


 * Hefty Goombas are larger than normal Goombas, but smaller than Big Goombas. Stomp a Big Goomba, and it will split into two Hefty Goombas. Stomp a Hefty Goomba, and it will split into two regular Goombas. Talk about split personalities! You can defeat Hefty Goombas more easily with fireballs and iceballs.

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 * Hungry for 1-Ups? This is a perfect place to rack them up! Simply hold the jump button and bounce off the many Big Goombas here, and just keep bouncing off the Big Goombas as they divide into Hefty Goombas and regular Goombas. Bounce off all of the various Goombas without touching the ground, and you’ll score a ton of 1-Ups!

In other words, Big Goombas are always the biggest size of standard Goomba, and the occasional intermediate phase is known as Hefty Goomba; Mega Goomba is the name of the boss Goomba from the original New Super Mario Bros. as well as the name of the Big Goomba from the Mario Party and Paper Mario series. LinkTheLefty (talk) 22:00, 29 April 2018 (EDT)
 * Then what is Kyodai Kuribō? Doc von Schmeltwick (talk) 22:57, 29 April 2018 (EDT)
 * The original name for Big Goomba, as referenced in the Color Splash line "PRETTY BIG, RIGHT?" LinkTheLefty (talk) 23:30, 29 April 2018 (EDT)
 * Darn it, Nintendos, keep your various words for "big" straight! This is worse than the still not-fully-resolved situations surrounding Boss Bass and Piscatory Pete combined! Doc von Schmeltwick (talk) 23:34, 29 April 2018 (EDT)
 * How about Super Mario Maker where the "Big" Goombas were the Hefty Goombas? Doc von Schmeltwick (talk) 17:36, 30 April 2018 (EDT)
 * I was also thinking that enemy would be a Hefty Goomba, but on second thought, the name "Kodeka Kuribō" indicates it's a state in between big and normal forms. It's approximately the size of the original Grand Goomba from Super Mario Bros. 3, and the "Big" sizes have ranged wildly depending on the game, so it can be considered a Big Goomba. On the other hand, the sound effect for stomping one is closer to the sound effect when stomping on a Hefty Goomba instead of a Big Goomba, and coupled with the same action of splitting into two normal Goombas, that suggests it's a Hefty Goomba. LinkTheLefty (talk) 18:00, 30 April 2018 (EDT)
 * Except the 3DS version apparently calls it a Big Goomba directly.... Doc von Schmeltwick (talk) 19:46, 30 April 2018 (EDT)
 * In that case, I guess we should keep the Super Mario Maker enemy as a Big Goomba until we can check the Japanese version to see if it is just a mistake in the English version. LinkTheLefty (talk) 21:13, 30 April 2018 (EDT)