Crystal Ball

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It has been requested that this article be rewritten. Reason: make subsections for Super Mario Bros. 2, Paper Mario, Luigi's Mansion, Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door, Mario vs. Donkey Kong, Mario Party 6, and Super Paper Mario

This article is about the item. For the treasure from Wario World, see List of treasures in Wario World § Horror Manor.

Template:Pmitem-infobox Crystal Balls[1] are items featured in many games throughout the Mario franchise.

History

Super Mario Bros. 2

Crystal Balls are first seen in Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic and its update, Super Mario Bros. 2. They are found at the end of most levels. Picking one up will open the Mask Gate and allow the player to proceed to the next level. They are usually guarded by Birdo. In the NES version of Super Mario Bros. 2, Birdo can be seen holding the Crystal Ball in front of her during battle. In later versions, it seems to come out of her snout upon defeat.

Paper Mario series

They are seen in Paper Mario as the main magic tool for Merlon's family. There is an Ultra Stone variant. It is also seen with Merlon in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door.

In Super Paper Mario, when Chapter 5 is complete, the player can go see Merlee at Flopside. She claims that she wants a Crystal Ball from Merluvlee, and wishes the player to go get it for her. After doing the task, Merlee rewards the player with a free charm and a key that opened a storehouse containing Piccolo the Pixl.

Other appearances

File:MadameClairvoya42.png
The Crystal Ball in Luigi's Mansion.

Madame Clairvoya uses one to see the future and other things in Luigi's Mansion. Mini-Marios are also encased in one as packaging of sorts in Mario vs. Donkey Kong. Another is used in Mario Party 6, in the Seer Terror minigame. Bowser uses it to see a player's "future," which usually is something bad. Occasionally, however, the player receives Coins or a Mushroom. Kamek used one in Yoshi's Island DS.

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning
Japanese 水晶丸[2]
Suishō Dama
水晶[3]
Suishō
ミニマリオカプセル[4]
Mini Mario Kapuseru

Crystal Ball

Crystal

Mini-Mario Capsule (Mario vs. Donkey Kong)

German Kristallkugel
-
Italian Sfera di cristallo
Crystal Ball
Spanish Bola de Juguete de Mini-Mario[5]
Mini-Mario Toy Ball (Mario vs. Donkey Kong)

References

  1. ^ Nintendo Power Volume 1, page 18.
  2. ^ Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic instruction booklet, page 28.
  3. ^ Shogakukan. 2015. Super Mario Bros. Hyakka: Nintendo Kōshiki Guidebook, Super Mario USA section, page 70.
  4. ^ Mario vs. Donkey Kong Shogakukan book
  5. ^ Official Mario vs. Donkey Kong website (Guías Nintendo)

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