Fairy Land
The title of this article is official, but it comes from a Japanese source.
If an acceptable English name is found, then the article should be moved to the new title.
- This article is about the forest of fairies in the Super Mario Kodansha manga. For the Super Smash Bros. stage based off a location called "Fairyland", see PAC-LAND.
| Fairy Land | |
|---|---|
| Appears in | Super Mario Kodansha manga (Mario & Wario) (1994) |
| Greater location | Karakara Sabaku (Kumotori Yama region) |
| Ruler | Alice |
| Inhabitants | Fairies Card soldiers |
Fairy Land is a magical forest populated by fairies, potentially their native land. It appears in the Mario & Wario manga of the Super Mario Kodansha series.
Fairy Land is a forest protected by a dome and guarded by playing card soldiers. It is ruled by the fairy queen Alice and the local trees are able to talk.
While fighting Wario, Mario makes the mistake of awakening the Giant Unbaba, starting a fiery cataclysm that will result in the end of the world. Chiyōrō-sama suggests using the Tottemo Oishikute Hoppe ga Ochite Shimau Kinomi in Fairy Land to remedy the situation. Once there, the guards prohibit Mario and his non-fairy friends from entering, as only fairies are allowed in. By attaching fake wings on their backs, they cross Fairy Land's gate. Alice welcomes the group, but informs them that they cannot part with their rare fruits, but she is willing to take them with Fairy Land, as she will soon bubble it up to take it to space, away from the end of the world. While Mario and friends decide to stay with their planet, one of the talking trees, the Fairy Land no Seiboku, decides to follow them, and even offers them one of its fruits, although it needs to convey their will and feelings to properly bloom it. Mario and his friends oblige, but their will is not enough, but when Alice and the entire Fairy Land, that decided to give them a chance at saving the world, does the trick.
With the Giant Unbaba defeated, Fairy Land returns to the ground.
Gallery[edit]
Names in other languages[edit]
| Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Japanese | Fuearī Rando |
Fairy Land |