Steamer

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Steamer
A preview for Western Land in Mario Party 2
Steamer in the preview for Western Land in Mario Party 2
Species Train
First appearance Mario Party 2 (1999)
Latest appearance Mario Party DS (2007)
“Hit the block and choose a direction, would ya? A Goomba will be a-sendin' ya backwards.”
Steamer, Mario Party 2

Steamer is a steam locomotive found only in some of the games of the Mario Party series. It speaks with a Southern American English accent, particularly that of a precious metals prospector, and is usually seen lugging a small wooden train car behind it on which characters can stand as it moves about. It also has a lamp on the top of its "face," a red "nose" where a unit number would appear on a normal steam-powered train, and a thick gray mustache with matching eyebrows (while not having visible eyes), giving it the appearance of an elderly person. It is the main attraction in Western Land in Mario Party 2, where it makes its debut. The characters can ride Steamer by hitting a block. If the character hits the block and gets a Toad, Steamer goes forward, but if a Goomba appears, Steamer goes backward. Riding Steamer allows characters to move farther than they normally could with hitting the Dice Block. Characters who are on the track and get hit by Steamer are sent back to the start of the map. Since Mario Party 2, Steamer has been associated with ramming into characters and sending them flying. When on the move, Steamer makes a sound resembling that of a high-pitched train whistle and steam shoots from its sides.

Steamer makes a cameo appearance in Mario Party 3 in the Duel minigame End of the Line. In this minigame, the players get knocked onto its trailing car and must guide it through three pairs of tunnels to safely make it to the station, where one tunnel leads them off a cliff and the other keeps them on the track.

Steamer makes another, minor cameo on the Mario Party 4 board Toad's Midway Madness, where it moves around the train tracks in the background.

In Mario Party 5's Super Duel Mode, the player can assemble a machine that heavily resembles Steamer by combining the Choo-Choo Body, Choo-Choo Tires, and Choo-Choo engine. These parts together provide high speed and very poor control, stats that are consistent with Steamer's behavior in the other Mario Party games.

In Mario Party DS, a toy Steamer makes an appearance in the 1-vs-3 minigame Track Star. One player stands on the toy train, and the rest stand on the rails and try to escape it.

Western Land returns in Super Mario Party Jamboree, and Steamer can be seen parked at the station closest to the starting position.

Gallery[edit]

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese シュッポー[?]
Shuppō
From「シュポシュポ」(shupo-shupo, an onomatopoeia for the sound of a departing steam-engine train)
French Loco[1] From "locomotive"
German Dampfbert[2] ?
Italian Ciuf Ciuf[3] Choo Choo
Portuguese M-fumaça[4] From Maria-fumaça (lit. "Smoke Mary"), Brazilian colloquialism for steam locomotives
Spanish Vapor[?] Steam

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Tout le monde à bord de Loco ! [...]" – description for Western Land. Super Mario Party Jamboree. Nintendo (French). Retrieved September 28, 2024.
  2. ^ "Tschu-tschuuu! Bitte alle einsteigen, Dampfbert wartet schon![...]" – description for Western Land. Super Mario Party Jamboree. Nintendo (German). Retrieved September 28, 2024.
  3. ^ "Ciuf-ciuf! Tutti a bordo! Prendi il biglietto del treno Ciuf Ciuf, muoviti sul tabellone a tutto vapore e non dimenticarti di fare sosta al bar di Torcibruco. [...]" – description for Western Land. Super Mario Party Jamboree. Nintendo (Italian). Retrieved September 28, 2024.
  4. ^ "U-uuu! Todos a bordo do M-fumaça![...]" – description for Western Land. Super Mario Party Jamboree. Nintendo (Portuguese). Retrieved September 28, 2014.