Moon



"When the Moon hits your eyes like a big pizza pie, that's amore!"

- Mario's face

The Moon is a celestial body that presumably orbits Mushroom World. If it is to be thought of as similar to Earth's moon, then it reflects light from the sun and supplies light during nighttime.

The Moon's first appearance is in Super Mario World, where it made a very minor cameo in the background of the Star World map. In this cameo, the Moon was anthropomorphic in that it gave a smile and was shown to be in its crescent stage.

The moon, also smiling (although its expression could be changed based on completion of a secret level) and in a crescent stage, later appeared as a playable area in Super Mario Land 2: 6 Golden Coins, in which it was one half of Space Zone (actually two thirds if one counts the aforementioned secret stage). It was populated by many Cannon Pigs, and this was the first time any character ever explored it; when on the moon (and anywhere in the Space Zone) Mario was forced to become Space Mario, and the Moon had more gravitational affect on Space Mario than the star where Tatanga was fought did.

In Super Mario 64 and Super Mario 64 DS, The Moon can be seen in the background outside the mansion of Big Boo's Haunt.

The Moon next appeared in Yoshi's Story, where it was seen in the background during the fight against Cloudjin. A cardboard moon with two eyes and a nose can also be seen in the background of some stages.



The Moon was later given an appearance in Luigi's Mansion, where it appeared in the background of the Observatory. Luigi, in his quest to find Mario's Star and progress in the mansion, ended up blowing the Moon up with a Meteor Ghost shot from his Poltergust 3000, which quite conveniently created a path of debris leading to the Star he was looking for. Very oddly, after this, the Moon could still be seen from the outside rooms and managed to show up in other games. It is therefore likely that Luigi destroyed a fake moon.

The Moon was supposed to appear in the prototype Forever Forest in Paper Mario in the background, though when Forever Forest was changed to its current appearance, it was removed.

In Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door, this is where the X-Naut Fortress is located. It can only be accessed via a cannon at Fahr Outpost or the Teleporter located in Rogueport Sewers. According to Goombella, a Goomba landed on the Moon in '69. Finally, a brilliant view of a melancholy Moon is also given outside Creepy Steeple. A much smaller Moon also appears in World 5-8 of Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island; Raphael the Raven was combated on this Moon (Generic Ravens also used Moon-like planetoids as their native turf). Due to the size of this Moon, though, it is assumed that it is different than the more-common one progressed in many screens; this small Moon was given artwork in Tetris Attack (where it never actually appeared in-game) in a panorama featuring Raphael trotting it once more. After Baby Bowser is defeated and returns to his normal size, Kamek takes him and flies to the Moon for some unknown reason. This Moon also strangely resembles a baseball due to its stitches. Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island's moon also appears in the background of the Yoshi's Island stage in Super Smash Bros. Brawl.

The Moon appears in many Mario Party games. Twila, a character from Mario Party 6, could be considered the physical manifestation of the Moon. Crane Game from Mario Party and Mario Party 2 also takes place on the actual Moon.

In Super Mario Galaxy, the boss Kamella comes from the moon on the Deep Dark Galaxy, the second time she is fought.

Enemies (Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door)

 * Mini-Z-Yux
 * Moon Cleft
 * Z-Yux

Trivia

 * Goombella's comment about a Goomba landing on the moon in '69 is a reference to the Apollo 11 landing; the first manned landing on the real world's moon in 1969.
 * The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! episode "Count Koopula" showed that, if a Koopa Troopa stared at the moon when it was full, they would make the horrific transformation into a Wereturtle.
 * There seems to be some inconsistency as to whether there is atmosphere on the moon. In Super Mario Land 2: 6 Golden Coins, Mario is wearing a helmet when he goes to the moon (though admittedly he is traveling through space at the time), while in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door, Mario and his partners don't need helmets when they go to the moon.