Talk:Trampoline

This is an extremely confusing article, and inacurate. This should be split; the Spring is called a Springboard I believe. Hyper Toad

Irony
It says that the springs were in Donkey Kong, but on the trophy information, it says they are jacks. Now how Ironic is that.

Trampoline?
I'm not familiar with the Super Smash Bros. series, but do we really need two separate articles about this and Trampoline? 07:02, 14 December 2008 (EST)

I don't see the point of having seperate articles for them either; They're pretty much the exact same thing. I say merge.
 * Agree, the game even tells that Springs originate from Donkey Kong Jr., it's just another name for Trampolines. The same goes for Magic Vines and Beanstalks, they should be merged as well. --Grandy02 10:04, 14 December 2008 (EST)


 * Or Trampoline is another name for Spring. (That is, trampoline should be merged to this article).  --
 * You know, you guys like to say stuff you never do.
 * Don't call on others to do it, just do it yourself. 12:11, 22 December 2009 (EST)

Jack
Aren't the "springs" in the original Donkey Kong actually jacks? Not only the Brawl trophy says that. In the manual for Donkey Kong Classics (and probably also in the manual for the NES Donkey Kong) they are called jacks. --Grandy02 12:42, 24 January 2010 (EST)
 * The manual does refer to them as jacks, but I also found it referring to it as a springboard."*HIGH JUMP (SECOND ROUND) A well-timed press of the 'A' button will allow you to jump all the way to the moving island using the springboard." Do you suggest the articles be split? --
 * Yes, I do. What you cited refers to Donkey Kong Jr., which is indeed the debut of the spring(board). --Grandy02 13:06, 24 January 2010 (EST)

Merge Spring and Trampoline into "Springboard"
They are basically the same thing a in some Mario games, the "Trampolines" called called Springboards.

Proposer:IGGY7735 Deadline: March 14, 2011, 23:59 GMT

Support

 * 1) Per Me.
 * 2) I am Zero! Per Iggy. Zero signing out.
 * 3) Who cares that those are different? Per proposer.
 * 4) As long as we're not also merging the Jacks from Donkey Kong, I'm in (Brawl specifically stated the Jacks were different).
 * 5) They do the same things and the Trampolines act like springs :D.
 * 6) Per all.
 * 7) A spring is a metal coil thing, a springboard is a board that has a spring in it.
 * 8) They both serve the same main purpose, don't they? Per all.
 * 9) Per all.

Oppose

 * 1) They are different things.

Comments
@Pokemon Trainer Mario: They don't have to be two different things. They have related effects thats all.

Why does the top of this article say, "Not to be confused with Trampoline"? 23:44, 3 March 2011 (EST)
 * Those "not to be confused" messages are a bit like informal versions of, but it's best to use the actual template, so I replaced it here. Either way, the point of the message to make sure people find the page they are actually looking for even if they inadvertently search for the wrong term or if someone else linked them to the wrong page. - 13:15, 4 March 2011 (EST)

Split High Spring and Long Spring from this article
Yes, I know that these are all similar in that they bounce characters, but that's the only similarity they have. High Springs and Long Springs from the Mario vs. Donkey Kong series look very different from usual Springboards (Springboards fold more like an accordion, while High Springs and Long Springs have two beady eyes, different color schemes, and coil springs) and act different too (The player can control how high the character bounces with Springboards, a feat not possible with High Springs and Long Springs. Players can also carry Springboards, while they can only add and remove High Springs and Long Springs at designated locations.). Therefore, I propose we split both High Spring and Long Spring into their own articles.

Proposer: Deadline: August 14, 2018, 23:59 GMT

Support

 * 1) They look different, they act different, and they're used differently. I'd say that's enough for a split.

Comments
Different appearances is not a good reason to me. In the article, the springboard has varied appearances as well as varied levels of interaction. Within the Paper Mario series, for instance, the springs look completely different and have different functions (and they don't control Mario's jumping either). In Club Nintendo, it's a coil spring. There's also the Super Mario Run springboard which isn't pressure-triggered and it also looks a lot different. The springs still have their straightforward purpose of launching characters higher than normal. That characters can't control how high they jump isn't a deal breaker to me, nor are their different appearances. But if we're going to split those two specific ones, you have to justify why those springboards I mentioned need to stay in the article. 13:59, 31 July 2018 (EDT)