Yoshi's Woolly World 5-8

The lowest-priced brand-new, unused, unopened, undamaged item in its original packaging (where packaging is applicable). Packaging should be the same as what is found in a retail store, unless the item is handmade or was packaged by the manufacturer in non-retail packaging, such as an unprinted box or plastic bag. Jun 25, 2015 Yoshi's Woolly World is a 2.5D side-scrolling game for the Wii U by Good-Feel. It is the fifth main platform game starring Yoshi and the first Yoshi home console game since Yoshi's Story. The game takes place in a handcrafted universe, similar to the one in Kirby's Epic Yarn, which was also developed by Good-Feel. It follows the adventure of a Yoshi tribe trying to pursue and defeat the evil.

Level
Snifberg the Unfeeling's Castle
World-Level5-8
GameYoshi's Woolly World
Poochy & Yoshi's Woolly World
BossSnifberg the Unfeeling
MusicCastle Course
Vs Snifberg the Unfeeling
<<List of levels

Snifberg the Unfeeling's Castle is the eighth level of World 5 in Yoshi's Woolly World and Poochy & Yoshi's Woolly World.

  • 2Collectibles

Layout[edit]

The level begins with a segment containing Ice Snifits. It then escalates into a segment with ice blocks, turning onto one side at a time, similar to how Tox Boxes and Grumblumps move. The path leads to a door, which in turn leads to smaller moving ice blocks and the first checkpoint. More moving ice blocks lead to an area with more Ice Snifits as well as a Shy Guy-spawning warp pipe. This area leads to another door, which in turn leads to an area with more moving ice blocks, along with the second checkpoint. Even more moving ice blocks follow, along with giant ice blocks and the boss door.

Collectibles[edit]

Smiley Flowers[edit]

  • Smiley Flower 1: In a hidden Winged Cloud just after the first set of moving ice blocks.
  • Smiley Flower 2: In a Winged Cloud immediately after the second Wonder Wool.
  • Smiley Flower 3: Within a hidden alcove immediately after the second checkpoint. Yoshi must flutter jump onto a moving ice block to reach the alcove.
  • Smiley Flower 4: Immediately after the fifth Wonder Wool, in the path of another ice flow. Yoshi must simply ride a moving ice block to reach it.
  • Smiley Flower 5: Just before the boss door, in a hidden Winged Cloud right above the trough at which to hide from the giant moving ice blocks.

Wonder Wools[edit]

Snifberg the Yoshi
  • Wonder Wool 1: In a hidden Winged Cloud just before the first set of moving ice blocks.
  • Wonder Wool 2: In a Winged Cloud above the moving ice blocks just after the first checkpoint.
  • Wonder Wool 3: Just above the Shy Guy-spawning warp pipe, there is a warp pipe outline that Yoshi can fill in and enter. Inside, Yoshi must hit a Winged Cloud on the left side to reveal the Wonder Wool on the right side, all the while avoiding the giant moving ice block.
  • Wonder Wool 4: Not long after the Shy Guy-spawning warp pipe, there is a door above the normal one that Yoshi can use a Spring Ball via a Winged Cloud behind the hidden alcove to reach. Yoshi must then follow the corridor and jump atop the moving ice blocks to reach the Wonder Wool.
  • Wonder Wool 5: Immediately after the third Smiley Flower, there is a flow of moving ice blocks. Yoshi must ride one down to the end, then get off once he collects the Wonder Wool.

Collecting all of the Wonder Wools knits Snifberg the Yoshi back together.

Enemies[edit]

  • Snifberg the Unfeeling (boss)

Names in other languages[edit]

LanguageNameMeaning
Japaneseビッグアイスムーチョのおしろ
Biggu Aisu Mūcho no Oshiro
Big Ice Snifit's Castle
Korean거대아이스무우쵸의 성
Geodaeaiseumuuchyo'ui Seong
Snifberg the Unfeeling's Castle
[Edit]
Yoshi's Woolly World / Poochy & Yoshi's Woolly World
ProtagonistsPlayable charactersYoshis • Poochy*
AlliesBouncie • Fluffin' Puffin • Gold Lakitu* • Poochy • Poochy Pup*
LocationsWorldsWorld 1 • World 2 • World 3 • World 4 • World 5 • World 6 • Wonderful World of Wool (★-S)
Otheramiibo Hut • Boss Tent • Craft Island • Poochy Hut* • Scrapbook Theater • Yoshi Hut • Yoshi Theater*
Poochy Dash levels*Galloping Green Meadow • Hotheaded Lava Fields • Stitchy Scramble • Zippy Lagoon • Bobsledding Peaks • Fort Bombs Away
Items and objectsArrow Lift • Bead • Chomp Rock • Egg-Plant • Fire watermelon • Flipper • Goal Ring • Heart • Ice watermelon • Invincibility Egg • Item Balloon • Key • Number Platform • Paddle wheel • Pencil Patch* • Post • Power Badge • Present Box • Smiley Flower • Spring Ball • Stamp Patch** • Transformation Door • Warp Pipe • Watermelon • Winged Cloud • Wonder Wool • Yarn Ball • Yarn Basket
BossesBig Montgomery • Knot-Wing the Koopa • Burt the Bashful • Bunson the Hot Dog • Miss Cluck the Insincere • Naval Piranha • Snifberg the Unfeeling • Kamek • Baby Bowser / Mega Baby Bowser
EnemiesBill Blaster • Bomb Guy • Boo Guy • Bull's-Eye Bill • Bullet Bill • Bullet Bill Patch • Bumpty • Burrbert • Burt • Cheep Cheep • Clawdaddy • Fang • Flightless Goonie • Flightless Skeleton Goonie • Flooff • Fluffy Phantom • Fly Guy • Fooly Flower • Frame Boo • Frame Chomp • Gargantua Blargg • Goonie • Gusty • Hook Guy • Hot Dog • Ice Snifit • Koopa Paratroopa • Koopa Troopa • Lakitu • Lava Drop • Li'l Smooch Spider • Little Mouser • Lunge Fish • Miss Cluck • Monty Mole • Monty Mole Patch • Nep-Enut • Nipper Plant • Nipper Spore • Nipper Spore Patch • Peeply • Pharaoh Guy • Piranha Plant • Pokey Pom • Ruffin' Tumble • Ruffin' Tumble Patch • Seedy Sally • Short Fuse • Shy Guy • Shy Guy Tower • Skeleton Goonie • Smooch Spider • Snag-Stitch • Snifit • Snoot • Snow Guy • Spray Fish • Stalking Piranha Plant • Stilt Guy • Tap-Tap • Wall Lakitu • Wik • Wild Ptooie Piranha • Woollet Bill • Woozy Guy
*Only in Poochy & Yoshi's Woolly World • ** Only in Yoshi's Woolly World
Yoshi's Woolly World / Poochy & Yoshi's Woolly Worldlevels
World 1World 2World 3
Yarn Yoshi Takes Shape!
Bounceabout Woods
Sponge Cave Spelunking
Big Montgomery's Fort
Knitty-Knotty Windmill Hill
Shy But Deadly
Clawdaddy Beach
Burt the Bashful's Castle
Hang Tongue!
Across the Fluttering Dunes
Duplicitous Delve
Walk the Chomp to Unwind
Knot-Wing the Koopa's Fort
Spiky Stroll
Lava Scarves and Red-Hot Blarggs
The Desert Pyramid Beckons!
Bunson the Hot Dog's Castle
Perils of the Perplexing Pyramid
Yoshi and Cookies
Wobble Mobile Jaunt
Scarf-Roll Scamper
Big Montgomery's Bubble Fort
Fluffin' Puffin Babysitting
A-Mazing Post Pounding
Fanciful Fluff and Feathers
Miss Cluck the Insincere's Castle
Woollet Bill's Last Ride
World 4World 5World 6
Monkeying Round and Round
Lakitu Peekaboo
Rollin' Down the River
Knot-Wing the Koopa's Aqua Fort
Sunset at Curtain Falls
Spooky Scraps! Don't Get Spooked!
Yoshi Branches Out
Naval Piranha's Sewer
Naval Piranha 2: Now It's Personal!
Fluffy Snow, Here We Go!
Frozen Solid and Chilled
Flying-Carpet Cruise
Big Montgomery's Ice Fort
A Little Light Snowfall
Up Shuttlethread Pass
Snowy Mountain Lift Tour
Snifberg the Unfeeling's Castle
Yoshi's Curtain Call
Lair of the Smooch Spiders
Snag-Stitch Mountain
Vamoose the Lava Sluice!
Knot-Wing the Koopa's Sky Fort
Yoshi, the Terror of All Boos
Feel Fuzzy, Get Clingy
Kamek's Last-Ditch Flyby
King Bowser's Castle
Skeleton Goonies' Lava Lair
World ☆
Wonderful World of Wool
Retrieved from 'https://www.mariowiki.com/index.php?title=Snifberg_the_Unfeeling%27s_Castle&oldid=2560160'
(Redirected from Yoshi's Egg)
Yoshi
Developer(s)Game Freak
Publisher(s)Nintendo
Director(s)Satoshi Tajiri[1]
Producer(s)Shigeru Miyamoto
Tsunekazu Ishihara
Designer(s)Satoshi Tajiri
Composer(s)Junichi Masuda
SeriesYoshi
Platform(s)NES/Famicom, Game Boy
Release
  • NES/Famicom
    • JP: December 14, 1991
    • NA: June 1, 1992
    • EU: December 10, 1992
    Game Boy
    • NA: July 10, 1992
Genre(s)Puzzle
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Yoshi, known as Mario & Yoshi in PAL regions, and as Yoshi's Egg (ヨッシーのたまご, Yosshī no Tamago) in Japan, is a puzzle video game developed by Game Freak and published by Nintendo. The game was released for the Nintendo Entertainment System and Game Boyconsoles. Both versions were first released simultaneously in Japan on December 14, 1991, and released in all other regions the following year.

In Yoshi, the player is tasked with clearing monsters from the on-screen playing field. The monsters fall in from the top of the screen to build vertical stacks; the player must prevent a stack from growing too high such that it exits the play field. In order to do so, the player swaps and moves the stacks about such that falling monsters collide with identical monsters stationed atop the stacks, causing them to be removed from play. Yoshi offers both a scoring-focused single-player mode and a competitive two-player mode.

Gameplay[edit]

The playing field is divided into four columns in which blocks fall from the top to the bottom.

Yoshi is a falling block game in which the player is given a playing field that is divided into four columns. The objective is to match Yoshi egg shells to hatch them and prevent the four stacks, which pile up from the falling monsters, from growing too tall. The player character, Mario, swaps the stacks around such that the falling monsters will be eliminated by coming into contact with the blocks they match.

Monsters, which consist of various Mario enemies, appear at the top of the screen and fall into each the columns, turning into blocks as they land and creating stacks that incrementally grow in height. The main objective is to prevent the four stacks from growing too high by eliminating blocks from the field; a game over occurs when any of the stacks crosses the black line drawn across the top of the play field.[2]

To eliminate a block from the top of a stack, it must come in contact with a falling monster that matches it. For example, if a Goomba falls directly onto a Goomba block, both will be removed. The player controls Mario, who resides below the playing field and has the ability to swap the positions of any two adjacent stacks at a time. Thus, the player is required to switch around the stacks to ensure that the monsters fall into the correct places. Points are awarded for each set of monsters that are eliminated.[2]

In addition to the four different types of monsters, two halves of a Yoshieggshell will also fall. The bottom eggshell half behaves like a monster: it disappears when it comes into contact with another bottom half. However, if a falling top half comes into contact with a bottom half, the two will join and hatch a Yoshi, earning the player bonus points. Furthermore, if a stack of monsters grows atop a bottom half and a top half is then added, all monsters between the halves will be encased and eliminated. Larger Yoshi characters will hatch depending on the number of monsters encased, which also increases the number of bonus points awarded.[2] If a falling top half does not have any bottom half to join to in the stack it touches, it is automatically removed and no points are awarded.

The single-player mode has two variations: A-Type and B-Type. In A-Type, the game is played indefinitely until the player receives a game over. In B-Type, the player plays a series of levels in which the player is required to completely clear the playing field of all the blocks. The initial number of blocks inside the playing field grows as the player progresses. In multiplayer mode, a second player controls Luigi. The two players play simultaneously in separate playing fields using the traditional rules. A player wins the match by clearing all the blocks in the field or when the other receives a game over; the first player to win three matches wins overall.[2]

Release[edit]

The NES version of Yoshi was made available for purchase on the Virtual Console service. The first one is for the Wii in 2007. The game was then re-released on September 1, 2011 as a downloadable title on the Nintendo 3DS, available only to members of the Nintendo Ambassador program.[3]Yoshi was made available for purchase in the Nintendo eShop on August 22, 2012 in Japan, on February 21, 2013 in North America and on May 2, 2013 in Europe. It was also released for the Wii U on June 12, 2013 as the part of the 30th anniversary of the Famicom with the price of 30 cents which become the regular price starting on July 12, 2013. Yoshi was also released on Nintendo's new NES online subscription service through Nintendo Switch Online on September 18, 2018.

Yoshi's Woolly World Guide

Reception[edit]

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
AllGame[4]
GameSpot5/10 (VC)[5]
IGN5/10 (VC)[6]
Nintendo Life[7]
N-Force4/5[8]

Yoshi received a mixed reception, with common criticism directed towards its perceived repetitive gameplay and dependence on luck, which led to short replay value. Brett Alan Weiss of Allgame called Yoshi a 'surprisingly dull game,' noting that while the game's controls are unique, 'the novelty wears off after a while.'[4]

Reviews of Yoshi's Virtual Console release on Wii in 2007 were also mixed. Both Frank Provo of GameSpot and Lucas M. Thomas of IGN rated Yoshi 5 out of 10. Thomas regarded the gameplay as 'slow' and the controls 'cumbersome,' and concluded that the game is a 'beginner's puzzler, holding little appeal for experienced players'.[6] While Provo complimented both the game's graphics and music, he stated that the gameplay did not involve much strategy, inciting little reason to play more than a few minutes.[5] Nintendo Life felt that Yoshi was 'uninspired', rating the game 4 out of 10.[7]

Woolly

Several websites that covered recent Virtual Console releases recommended that players refrain from purchasing Yoshi. Nintendo World Report stated that 'there's too much luck and chance in the game to make playing it satisfying,'[9] and Joystiq also stated that 'while [the gameplay is] admittedly a pretty interesting way to spend an afternoon, it still feels like kind of a ripoff.'[10] Jeremy Parish of 1UP.com stated that the gameplay in Yoshi was 'not enough to justify the asking price [of 500 points],'[11] though he later stated that, compared to the 'uninspired' Yoshi's Cookie, Yoshi was 'decent and actually had some relationship to the Mario series.'[12]

Yoshi

On the more positive side, the Europress gaming magazine N-Force stated in a preview for the game in its September 1992 issue that 'basically [the game] is great. The fun of Tetris, but with colour and sound effects. Just as hard, maybe harder – definitely just as addictive.'[13] It later rated the game 4 out of 5 in the Buyers' Guide for its January 1993 issue, summarizing that 'Yoshi is great fun. Gameplay's nothing new – Tetris all over again! Graphics are a treat. Lots of fun – in short bursts.'[8]

Yoshi sold 500,000 copies in Japan on its first day on sale.[14]

References[edit]

  1. ^Peterson, Helen (November 15, 1999). 'King of Craze Too Shy For Spotlight Pifather Is an Introvert'. Daily News. Mortimer Zuckerman. Archived from the original on August 15, 2011. Retrieved January 28, 2010.
  2. ^ abcdYoshi Instruction Booklet. Nintendo. 1992. NES-YM-USA.
  3. ^Thomas, Lucas M. (August 3, 2011). 'Nintendo 3DS Ambassadors, Behold Your Final Five NES Rewards – DS Feature at IGN'.
  4. ^ abWeiss, Brett Alan. 'Yoshi – Review'. Allgame. Archived from the original on December 11, 2014. Retrieved April 27, 2015.
  5. ^ abProvo, Frank (July 26, 2007). 'Yoshi'. GameSpot.
  6. ^ abThomas, Lucas (July 17, 2007). 'Yoshi Review'. IGN.
  7. ^ abCalvert, Darren (May 17, 2007). 'Yoshi (Wii Virtual Console/NES) Review'. Nintendo Life.
  8. ^ ab'Christmas Crackers!'. N-Force. Europress (7): 64. January 1993.
  9. ^Rodriguez, Steven (July 10, 2007). 'Virtual Console Mondays: July 9, 2007'. Nintendo World Report. Retrieved September 9, 2011.
  10. ^McElroy, Justin (July 9, 2007). 'Mach Rider, Yoshi and Air 'Zonk' appear on Virtual Console'. Joystiq. Retrieved September 12, 2011.
  11. ^Parish, Jeremy (July 23, 2007). 'Retro Roundup 7/23: Paper Mario, Kirby, Zonk, Shining Force'. 1UP.com.
  12. ^Parish, Jeremy (April 8, 2008). 'Retro Roundup 4/8: Yoshi's Cookie and Bases Loaded'. 1UP.com.
  13. ^'Pre-Play! NES Yoshi'. N-Force. Europress (3): 28–29. September 1992.
  14. ^'Season 1 Special Episode: Pokémon - Satoshi Tajiri interview'. GameCenter CX. Fuji Television.

External links[edit]

  • Yoshi on NinDB (archived June 26, 2010 at the Wayback Machine)
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Yoshi_(video_game)&oldid=944522152'