Kirby & the Amazing Mirror: Difference between revisions
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|caption = Box cover for the North American version of ''Kirby & the Amazing Mirror'. | |caption = Box cover for the North American version of ''Kirby & the Amazing Mirror'. | ||
|developer = Flagship | |developer = Flagship | ||
|publisher = [[Nintendo]], HAL | |publisher = [[Nintendo]], [[HAL Laboratory]] | ||
|distributor = | |distributor = | ||
|designer = | |designer = |
Revision as of 12:11, July 16, 2010
Kirby & the Amazing Mirror | |
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File:Kirby & the Amazing Mirror.jpg Box cover for the North American version of Kirby & the Amazing Mirror'. | |
Developer(s) | Flagship |
Publisher(s) | Nintendo, HAL Laboratory |
Released | JP: April 15, 2004 EU July 2, 2004 |
Genre(s) | Platform |
Mode(s) | Single-player, Multiplayer |
Ratings | ESRB: E Pegi: 3+ |
Platform(s) | Game Boy Advance |
Kirby and the Amazing Mirror is a game in the Kirby series. It is the only game in the Kirby series that doesn't feature King Dedede.
The game takes place in a mirror world, where a Dark Meta Knight appears. He cuts Kirby into four different Kirbies and fights Meta Knight and defeats him. Kirby and his copies procede to defeat him.
In the Super Smash Bros. Series
Unusually, the Super Smash Bros. Series does not take content from this game; rather, the opposite happens. Master Hand and Crazy Hand appear as the final bosses in Candy Constellation. Master Hand and Crazy Hand also appear three times as a miniboss - in Rainbow Route, Radish Ruins and Candy Constellation. The music Forest / Nature Area is in Brawl and is the only GBA music to be unchanged.
Trivia
- When Kirby "swallows" Master Hand or Crazy Hand, he gains the ability known as Smash. The Smash ability features special moves that Kirby has in the Super Smash Bros series.