Spiral Mountain: Difference between revisions
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*While Gruntilda's appearance, the state of various manufactured landmarks around the mountain, and the presence of collectibles imply that this is the ''Banjo-Kazooie'' version of Spiral Mountain, several inaccuracies can be found upon scrutiny, such as the presence of Buzzbombs (and lack of vegetable enemies), the locations of Bottles' molehills, and rock formations at the edges of the valley. | *While Gruntilda's appearance, the state of various manufactured landmarks around the mountain, and the presence of collectibles imply that this is the ''Banjo-Kazooie'' version of Spiral Mountain, several inaccuracies can be found upon scrutiny, such as the presence of Buzzbombs (and lack of vegetable enemies), the locations of Bottles' molehills, and rock formations at the edges of the valley. | ||
**In Banjo & Kazooie's showcase video, the reason [[Masahiro Sakurai]] gives for the Buzzbomb's inclusion is that their wings allow them to float into the stage. Given the humorous tone of his other statements within the video, however, it is likely that he was purely joking. Instead, its appearance on this stage may reference the opening sequence of the game, which features a Buzzbomb flying in the sky before it crashes into the Rareware logo and falls into a lake in an unidentified grassy area somewhat resembling Spiral Mountain. | **In Banjo & Kazooie's showcase video, the reason [[Masahiro Sakurai]] gives for the Buzzbomb's inclusion is that their wings allow them to float into the stage. Given the humorous tone of his other statements within the video, however, it is likely that he was purely joking. Instead, its appearance on this stage may reference the opening sequence of the game, which features a Buzzbomb flying in the sky before it crashes into the Rareware logo and falls into a lake in an unidentified grassy area somewhat resembling Spiral Mountain. | ||
**Some rock formations around the edge directly reference ''Banjo-Kazooie: Nuts & Bolts'', implying that said formations were present in the original game | **Some rock formations around the edge directly reference ''Banjo-Kazooie: Nuts & Bolts'', implying that said formations were present in the original game but not apparent due to low a low level of detail. However, in no game in the series was Banjo's house fully viewable from the peak of the mountain (due to a protruding wall), and a wall behind the stump area, present in every ''Banjo-Kazooie'' game, is missing from the ''Smash'' version. | ||
but not apparent due to low a low level of detail. However, in no game in the series was Banjo's house fully viewable from the peak of the mountain (due to a protruding wall), and a wall behind the stump area, present in every ''Banjo-Kazooie'' game, is missing from the ''Smash'' version. | |||
*Though still fairly minor, this stage is Tooty's most prominent appearance since her debut in the original ''Banjo-Kazooie''. While she appears in both ''Banjo-Tooie'' and ''Nuts & Bolts'' in easy-to-miss cameo photos inside Banjo's house, only this stage and ''Banjo-Kazooie'' feature her as an active character. | *Though still fairly minor, this stage is Tooty's most prominent appearance since her debut in the original ''Banjo-Kazooie''. While she appears in both ''Banjo-Tooie'' and ''Nuts & Bolts'' in easy-to-miss cameo photos inside Banjo's house, only this stage and ''Banjo-Kazooie'' feature her as an active character. | ||
*The [[ink]] left behind by {{SSBU|Inkling}}'s [[Splat Roller]] will aesthetically rotate with the stage, but its effects on grounded movement remain in place, which causes a minor visual discrepancy. | *The [[ink]] left behind by {{SSBU|Inkling}}'s [[Splat Roller]] will aesthetically rotate with the stage, but its effects on grounded movement remain in place, which causes a minor visual discrepancy. |