Spindrift: Difference between revisions

From the Super Mario Wiki, the Mario encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
m (→‎Trivia: Minor fix.)
m (Text replacement - "{{[Ss]pecies-infobox" to "{{species infobox")
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Species-infobox
{{species infobox
|title=Spindrift
|title=Spindrift
|image=[[File:Spindriftmario64ds.png]]
|image=[[File:Spindriftmario64ds.png]]

Revision as of 21:42, April 20, 2022

Spindrift
Spindrift
First appearance Super Mario 64 (1996)
Latest appearance Super Mario 3D All-Stars (2020)
Comparable
Notable members

A Spindrift,[1] or Flower Head,[2] is a hovering enemy from Super Mario 64. Spindrifts have spinning flowers on their heads that allow them to hover around. They also have yellow cones at the bottoms of their heads. Green leaf-like capes top the first halves of the yellow cones. A Spindrift's head is just a white sphere with two eyes and a small mouth. In the Nintendo DS remake, Spindrifts' heads now have a peach-yellow color, their flowers on their heads are somewhat bigger, and their mouths are now darker. They can also hover above water in the DS version.

A Spindrift in Super Mario 64
A Spindrift in a prototype version of New Super Mario Bros.

If Mario, Yoshi, Luigi, or Wario jumps on the creature, the Spindrift releases three coins, and the player character spin-jumps in the air. This technique can be used to get to other areas in new ways. Spindrifts appear in both snow courses: Cool, Cool Mountain and Snowman's Land. In the latter course, several of them make their home inside an igloo.

Spindrifts were supposed to appear in New Super Mario Bros. but were taken out of the final version, where Spin Blocks fulfill their function.

While standard Spindrifts do not appear in Super Mario Odyssey, one of the game's bosses, Torkdrift, is a mechanical Spindrift.

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning
Japanese フワフワさん[3]
Fuwafuwa-san
From「フワフワ」(fuwafuwa, fluffy) and「さん」(san)

Chinese 飘飘花 [4]
piāopiāohuā
From 飘飘然 (light and airy) + 花 (flower)

German Propy
From propeller
Italian Spindrift[5]
-
Korean 둥둥이씨
Dungdung-i-ssi
From 둥둥 (dung-dung, floating); 이 and 씨 are honorific terms

Trivia

  • The Japanese and Korean names for the mission Into the Igloo imply that the igloo is the home for the Spindrifts.

References

  1. ^ Pelland, Scott, and Dan Owsen. Super Mario 64 Player's Guide. Page 10.
  2. ^ (June 10, 1998). Course 4 - Star 6: Wall Kicks Will Work. Nintendo: Super Mario 64 Strategy (Internet Archive: Wayback Machine). Retrieved February 23, 2018.
  3. ^ Shogakukan. 2015. Super Mario Bros. Hyakka: Nintendo Kōshiki Guidebook, Super Mario 64 section, page 86.
  4. ^ Guide posted on forums describing how to beat Mission 4 of Snowman's Land
  5. ^ Super Mario Bros. Enciclopedia, pag. 86