Cool, Cool Mountain

Cool, Cool Mountain, also known as the Snow World, is the fourth course of Super Mario 64 and Super Mario 64 DS. The entrance to the level is behind the ★ door to the left of the first floor of the Mushroom Castle, near the room with the entrance to the Bob-omb Battlefield. Three Power Stars are needed to unlock this door, and the center painting takes the player to Cool, Cool Mountain, with the other two simply being decoration.

Layout
The player starts off on the top of the mountain next to a cottage. The cottage chimney contains an entrance to the Cabin's Snow Slide, and it also has a large penguin to race against from the third mission onward. Above the cottage is a small penguin, and behind the cottage is a platform with a Spindrift, as well as a snowball for completing the fifth mission. To the right of the starting area is a broken bridge that warps the player's character to the bottom of the mountain, and to the left is a large slide that winds about halfway down the mountain.

At the bottom of the slide is the Headless Snowman along with a couple of Spindrifts below a ledge. The large bridge nearby contains two jumping Mr. Blizzards that the player must avoid to make it across. Beyond this bridge is a broken bridge that leads to the course's Star Marker and a series of ramps that lead to the bottommost portion of the mountain.

Both the ramp and the aforementioned broken bridge warp bring the player to roughly the same spot at the bottom of the mountain. To the left is an empty snowfield with a Red Coin at the end in the original game, though the DS version also has a trio of Goombas that wear the player characters' caps in this area. To the right is the Mother Penguin that Tuxie belongs to as well as the end of the cottage's slide, which is a one-way exit. The chairlift farther to the right brings the player character to the area with the Headless Snowman, though a floating platform with a Bob-omb Buddy (and the Star Switch in the DS version) is in the center off to the side of the chairlift's path. Near the chairlift's starting position is a cannon that can fire the player character to an area beyond a large gap. This area has a couple of Spindrifts on a narrow ledge along with a large cave that Mario has to wall-jump up to reach the sixth Power Star.

Statistics from Super Mario 64

 * Total Number of Coins: 154
 * Caps Found: (none)
 * Spinning Heart: Underneath Star 6, before the player starts wall-kicking.
 * Cannons: 3
 * 1UP Mushrooms (6):
 * Homing Mushroom : #1 In a tree by the Headless Snowman's head.
 * Static Mushrooms : #2 & #3 In the slide's shortcut.
 * Box Mushroom : #4 It is found near a Red Coin near the Ice above and behind the Headless Snowman's head. #5 After the player navigates the slide through the secret shortcut on a platform. #6 The third one can be found near the Headless Snowman's head.
 * Warps:
 * The broken bridge at the top of the mountain can transfer Mario to the L-shaped bridge to the right of the house at the bottom.

Trivia

 * In Super Mario 64 DS, it is possible to get 255 coins (the maximum number of coins allowed) by entering the cabin again and again and defeating the Goombas with caps and/or destroying the Bricks next to the bodiless snowman. This is also true in Snowman's Land, by entering and exiting the igloo.
 * This is one of the two courses in the game to have more than one cannon, the other being the Bob-omb Battlefield. However, it is possible to get every Star without using any of them.
 * The music that is played here (as well as the music for Snowman's Land) is a Christmas-themed iteration of the cover of The Princess's Secret Slide's music. A remix of the music also appears as the music for the Dream Snowball Fight event in the Wii version of Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games.
 * In the Super Mario Mash-up in Minecraft, one of the paintings that can be hung on a wall is the Cool, Cool Mountain painting.
 * The name of the 100-Coin Star is Dough in the Snow.
 * One of the 1-Up Mushrooms in the slide shortcut clips out of bounds before the player can collect it in Super Mario 64, but it was fixed in Super Mario 64 DS.