Hoot

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Not to be confused with Hootz or Hoo.
Hoot
Hoot in Mario Party Advance.
Hoot as seen in Mario Party Advance
Species Owl
First appearance Super Mario 64 (1996)
Latest appearance Super Mario 3D All-Stars (2020)
“Whooo's there? Whooo woke me up? It's still daylight--I should be sleeping! Hey, as long as I'm awake, why not take a short flight with me?”
Hoot, Super Mario 64

Hoot,[1] or the Owl,[2] is a friendly owl who sleeps in a tree near Whomp's Fortress in Super Mario 64 and Super Mario 64 DS. When Mario climbs into his tree, Hoot complains that Mario woke him up when it is still during the day, but he will then offer to give Mario a ride to the top of the fortress. If the player wants Mario to ride Hoot, they should press and hold the A Button button (B Button in the DS remake) on the controller. If the player wants Mario to let go, they should simply let go of the A Button/B Button button, and Hoot will then return near his tree (and will remain awake for the rest of the mission). If Mario hangs on to Hoot for too long, Hoot will complain that Mario's weight is making it difficult for him to carry him for so long. He will then drop Mario, telling him to "lay off the pasta," and return near his tree. Depending on where in the sky Mario is, Hoot's action of letting him go could result in Mario's death.

It should be noted that Hoot appears in Whomp's Fortress only during missions 3–6 (or missions 3–7 in the remake). If Mario is in this course during missions 1–2 and climbs Hoot's tree, Hoot will not appear.

In the DS remake, Hoot also appears on Cool, Cool Mountain during all missions; in Snowman's Land and on Tall, Tall Mountain during all but the first mission; and on the huge part of Tiny-Huge Island during all but the first two missions. In this game, Mario, Luigi, Wario, and Yoshi can all hang on to him.

Two owls resembling Hoot appear in Mario Party 3 on the board Woody Woods; one is mid-flight, and the other is sleeping within a tree.

Hoot appears as an unlucky gambler in Mario Party Advance. Hoot tells the player that he has a losing streak at the Jungle Game Hut, and he needs the player to help him. Once the player wins, the reward is the minigame Stop 'em. The ending states that he cannot stop shaking his head.

Gallery

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning
Japanese フクロウ
Fukurō
Owl

Italian Guffy
From "gufo" ("owl")

Trivia

  • In Super Mario 64 DS, the music played while the player hangs on to Hoot is a variation of the Wing Cap/Vanish Cap theme.

References

  1. ^ M. Arakawa. Super Mario 64 Player's Guide. Page 29.
  2. ^ (June 10, 1998). Course 2 - Star 4: Red Coins on the Floating Isle. Nintendo: Super Mario 64 Strategy (Internet Archive: Wayback Machine). Retrieved February 23, 2018.