Yoshi's Woolly World Music

World

Yoshi
Yoshi's Woolly World
Woolly World

Woolly World in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U.
UniverseYoshi
Appears inSSB4 (Wii U)
Home stage toYoshi
AvailabilityStarter
Crate typePresents
Maximum players8 (Ω form only)
Music
Bolded tracks must be unlocked
for Wii UYoshi's Island
Yoshi's Woolly World
Obstacle Course (Yoshi's Island)
Yoshi's Story Ver. 2
Ending (Yoshi's Story)
Flower Field
Wildlands
Main Theme (Yoshi's New Island)
Bandit Valley (Yoshi's New Island)
Yoshi's Woolly World
Paper Mario Medley
Try, Try Again
Tough Guy Alert!
Tournament legality
Smash 4Singles: Banned
Doubles: Banned
Article on Super Mario WikiWoolly World

Woolly World (ヨッシー ウールワールド, Yoshi Wool World) is a stage based on Yoshi's Woolly World that appears in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U. The level follows the fabric-like aesthetic of the game it is themed from. It was first spotted in the October 2014 50-Fact Extravaganza, and then officially unveiled in the Director's Room on November 6. On the Miiverse post revealing the stage, director Masahiro Sakurai noted that the stage was added to the game late in development.

  • 1Stage overview

Stage overview[edit]

The stage starts in a felt hill area, with a windmill and trees in the background. Clouds and a rocket make up the platforms, and they teeter depending on the weights of the fighters on them. After some time, the stage warns the players that the stage will transition, and the level moves into the sky. The ground disappears, and the only ground the fighters can stand on are the clouds and rocket. The stage transitions into a third area, coming back down to the ground. The area is different, consisting of toy blocks. After this, the ground disappears as the stage takes to the sky; here, the background changes to show various blocks and clouds and even a rainbow wheel. Like in the second phase, the clouds and rocket, plus the scale that balances them are the only platforms the stage has. After this, the stage transitions back to the beginning felt hill area.

Ω form[edit]

The Ω form is set in the 'Knitty Knotty Windmill Hill' section of the stage; it will not change into any other form. Smaller platforms and walk-off areas are removed.

Origin[edit]

The windmills in Yoshi's Woolly World.

The areas of this stage are combined from multiple levels in Yoshi's Woolly World. The background of the initial area is based on World 1-5, Knitty-Knotty Windmill Hill. The mobile-like platforms above the ground which persist into the sky section of the stage are based on World 3-2, Wobble Mobile Jaunt; the second landing area also resembles that stage.

Yoshi's Woolly World was released several months after the release of SSB4, making this stage being the only instance in the Smash series of a stage based on a then-unreleased title.

Update history[edit]

1.0.6

  • Added 8-player mode version of the stage's Ω form.

Tournament legality[edit]

This stage is banned from tournaments due to it containing walk-off blast lines, which encourage camping and allow for early KOs. The stage also forces players to fight on the platforms created by the clouds and rocket, which makes gameplay very difficult.

Gallery[edit]

  • The beginning area of the stage.

  • The sky part of the stage.

  • The third area of the stage.

Trivia[edit]

  • Woolly World's stage prefix uses the beta logo for Yoshi's Woolly World, as the the game's final logo was not revealed until after Super Smash Bros. for Wii U was released.
  • Prior to renaming Yoshi's Island (SSB) to Super Happy Tree in Ultimate, this was the only stage from the Yoshi universe to not contain 'Yoshi' in its name.
  • When setting a Pitfall in place on this stage, it can be seen that the ground where it is set makes it somewhat visible due to the ground being 'pressed on' when someone or something is on it.
  • This is the only non-DLC stage in the series to be based on a game released after the Super Smash Bros. installment in which it first appeared.
  • When an extreme amount of weight is pressed on the platforms, the platforms may occasionally 'snap', the top platform will be tilted so low that the rocket and cloud will go through it.
  • Woolly World is one of five stages from Super Smash Bros for Wii U not to return in Ultimate, the others being Orbital Gate Assault, Pyrosphere, Jungle Hijinxs and Miiverse.
    • This is also the only Yoshi stage that is not in Ultimate.


Stages in Super Smash Bros. 4
Both games (new)Battlefield ·Boxing Ring ·Duck Hunt ·Final Destination ·Gaur Plain ·Midgar ·Super Mario Maker ·Suzaku Castle ·Umbra Clock Tower ·Wily Castle
Both games (familiar)Dream Land (64) ·Hyrule Castle (64) ·Peach's Castle (64)
3DS version (new)3D Land ·Arena Ferox ·Balloon Fight ·Dream Land ·Find Mii ·Gerudo Valley ·Golden Plains ·Living Room ·Magicant ·Mute City ·Pac-Maze ·Paper Mario ·PictoChat 2 ·Prism Tower ·Rainbow Road ·Reset Bomb Forest ·Spirit Train ·Tomodachi Life ·Tortimer Island ·Unova Pokémon League
3DS version (familiar)Brinstar ·Corneria ·Jungle Japes ·Distant Planet ·Flat Zone 2 ·Green Hill Zone ·Mushroomy Kingdom ·WarioWare, Inc. ·Yoshi's Island
Wii U version (new)Big Battlefield ·Coliseum ·Flat Zone X ·Gamer ·Garden of Hope ·Jungle Hijinxs ·Kalos Pokémon League ·Mario Circuit ·Mario Galaxy ·Miiverse ·Mushroom Kingdom U ·Orbital Gate Assault ·Pac-Land ·Palutena's Temple ·Pilotwings ·Pyrosphere ·Skyloft ·The Great Cave Offensive ·Town and City ·Wii Fit Studio ·Windy Hill Zone ·Woolly World ·Wrecking Crew ·Wuhu Island
Wii U version (familiar)Kongo Jungle 64 ·Onett ·Temple ·Yoshi's Island ·75m ·Bridge of Eldin ·Castle Siege ·Delfino Plaza ·Halberd ·Luigi's Mansion ·Lylat Cruise ·Mario Circuit (Brawl) ·Norfair ·Pirate Ship ·Pokémon Stadium 2 ·Port Town Aero Dive ·Skyworld ·Smashville
OtherΩ form ·Stage Builder
FightersYoshi (SSB ·SSBM ·SSBB ·SSB4 ·SSBU)
StagesSuper Happy Tree ·Yoshi's Story ·Yoshi's Island (SSBM) ·Yoshi's Island (SSBB) ·Woolly World
EnemiesShy Guy ·Fly Guy
OtherKamek
Trophies, Stickers, and SpiritsTrophies (SSBM ·SSBB ·SSB4) ·Stickers ·Spirits
MusicBrawl ·SSB4 ·Ultimate
Related universesMario
Yoshi
Retrieved from 'https://www.ssbwiki.com/index.php?title=Woolly_World&oldid=1385491'

Yoshi's Woolly World Soundtrack

http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/YMMV/YoshisWoollyWorld

Go To

  • Awesome Music: The game's developed by Good-Feel; this is only to be expected.
    • Yarn Yoshi Takes Shape!, a laidback song with a 'lazy summer day' feeling.
    • Clawdaddy Beach is heavily reminiscent of the beach levels from Kirby's Epic Yarn, or the overall soundtrack of Super Mario RPG.
    • Lava Scarves and Red Hot Blarggs. It's a freakin' rock song in a Yoshi game. And it's catchy as all hell, to boot.
    • Snifberg the Unfeeling. EDM in a Yoshi game?!
    • King Bowser's Castle - Halls is just amazing.
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    • The Special Course song is beautiful, almost negating the feeling of wanting to tear you hair out from frustration with the Special Courses.
    • Fluffin' Puffin Babysitting is one of the cheeriest songs in the game. It sounds a bit like the 'triumphant' song in a musical.
  • Anticlimax Boss: The first Baby Bowser phase. Kamek supplies you with plenty of yarn balls in the hallway before, and a large portion of the fight's difficulty is due to yarn ball starvation. The Boss Rush version and phase two more than make up for it.
  • Broken Base:
    • One side is looking forward to the changes and new potential gameplay options, while others wanted a true sequel to Yoshi's Island instead. Some of the base is writing off this game for sharing the same yarn concepts as Kirby's Epic Yarn. The final game turned out to play very similarly to Yoshi's Island while still having a charming wool aesthetic, alleviating much of this.
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    • The 3DS port has made many who don't own a Wii U excited for the new features, or want to play the game on the go happy; however, it's left a bitter taste in the mouths of some who already own the Wii U version, because the 3DS version appears to be superior in every way but graphics. The overall lack of new Wii U exclusives recently and the subsequent discontinuation of the console in Japan has only worsened resentment towards the 3DS port.
  • Genius Bonus: Bunson's name is quite clever. Most will take away the obvious pun (Bunson the Hotdog). However, anyone who's studied and worked with chemistry will know the name is fitting in another way as well.
  • Idiot Plot: Kamek somehow forgets to just Baleful Polymorph the 2 remaining Yoshis as well, thus allowing the adventure to even begin.
  • It's Easy, So It Sucks!: Mellow Mode, which allows the player to fly in levels and bypass every challenges, and even to skip levels altogether. Classic Mode, however, offers a challenge very similar to the first Yoshi's Island game, especially as you delve into the last couple of worlds, some of the post-credits content, and the secret courses the game has on offer. Checkpoints? What are those?
  • Memetic Mutation:
      Advertisement:
    • _____ YoshiExplanation
      • It's a double Yoshi exploshi!
    • This game came out months ago.Explanation
  • Polished Port: Broken Base towards its existence aside, the 3DS version is a pretty solid port. Like the Donkey Kong Country Returns port before it, the graphics had to be downgraded, but the game still runs fine, and even adds extra content not in the Wii U release.
  • Rescued from the Scrappy Heap: Poochy. This time around the dog is more useful compared to its debut, being able to follow your steps from a lower platform and catch unaccesible yarn pieces just like a play of fetch.
  • Suspiciously Similar Song: The theme for Yoshi and Cookies sounds suspiciously similar to the theme to Flower Fields from Kirby's Epic Yarn. Justified as both games were made by Good-Feel, and both songs were composed by Tomoya Tomita.
    • The backing track to 'Shy but Deadly' is quite similar to 'Everybody Wants to Rule the World'. So much so that there's a mashup for it here, as well as another on SiIvaGunner alongside The Beatles' 'Revolution'.
  • Surprise Difficulty: Just like Kirby's Epic Yarn, the game's later levels can be a stark contrast with the adorable aesthetics.
  • Surprisingly Improved Sequel: After lukewarm games like Yoshi's Island DS and Yoshi's New Island, this game finally broke the streak as many Yoshi fans consider it to be as good or even better than the original Yoshi's Island.
  • Sweet Dreams Fuel:
    • You thought yarn Kirby was cute? Say hello to crochet doll Yoshi!
    • Even more adorable is the E3 interview where both leads of Good-Feel and creator of Yoshi show off their own crochet doll Yoshis. Now, with the introduction of Yarn Yoshi amiibo, you can have one too!
      • They even released a special giant Yarn Yoshi which is about the same size as most plush bears or similar, and just as cuddly.
    • A trailer shows off amiibo functionality with the Super Smash Bros., Toad, and Splatoon figures. The crochet doll Yoshis will adopt a pattern related to that character. The results are adorable.
    • You know a game is adorable when even Bowser is cute. Baby Bowser has long been beady-eyed and after some Art Evolution is almost indistinguishable from Bowser Junior, but this game makes him out of yarn and gives him nubby little arms with no hands. Watching him hang off his curtains and bounce around his room is delightful. He does get actual fingers with claws when he's mega-sized.
    • The 3DS port adds to the already adorable yarn Yoshi toy with a yarn Poochy.
    • Also from the 3DS version, the stop-motion shorts are insanely adorable.
  • Tastes Like Diabetes: A serious contender for the cutest game ever made.
  • That One Boss:
    • The Boss Tent turns nearly every boss into this by doubling their speed, as well as making you start each fight with no eggs and only three hits to your name.
    • The rematch of Knot-Wing Round 2 is almost impossible to no-damage, as his belly flops come down on you lightning fast, and he's simply too wide to give you much room to avoid multiple ones in a row. Clearing the fight is seemingly dependent on just taking the hits in the first two phases and avoiding the one fast belly flop in the final one.
    • The rematch of Knot-Wing Round 3 takes the cake, as his only weakness is smacking the tiny cannon on his back with an egg, and he exposes it for the absolute briefest of moments with his increased speed. Unless you've mastered quickly aiming your shots (and utilizing spitting) while simultaneously dodging attacks, he's going to wall you out.
  • That One Level:
    • 5-6: Up Shuttlethread Pass. In this stage, you're constantly shifting between the 'front side' and 'back side' of the level, not unlike the earlier level Duplicitous Delve. Unlike in the delve, you can't see between the two sides of the stage. The stage itself is heavily mazelike, and you'll have to flip between the two sides of the level constantly to progress. Since your perception of the whole stage is mirrored every time you flip sides, it's very easy to become disoriented. And since it's a vertical level, accidentally falling can undo loads of your progress as you must climb back up. The level can easily become a Marathon Level if you try to sniff out every secret. Perhaps it's not for nothing that this level has the quietest and calmest music in the game.
    • 5-8: Snifberg the Unfeeling's Castle. Almost the entirety of the stage is covered in Frictionless Ice, and it's filled to the brim with ice blocks that slowly roll on an axis like the giant blocks in Shifting Sand Land. Expect countless deaths from getting pinched by one as it rolls over while you're trying to get out of its way. Then they become enormous and then they roll fast into the foreground in such a way it's difficult to judge their depth. The collectibles aren't easy to reach, either. At least the boss isn't that bad once you figure out his weakness.
  • Visual Effects of Awesome: They made sure to make the yarn look like actual yarn, and it looks amazing. Heck, there are even those tiny fibers that stick out of yarn all about the Yoshis.
  • Win Back the Crowd: After the middling-to-hostile reception towards Yoshi's New Island and the general downturn Nintendo had been taking for much of the 2010's, Yoshi's Woolly World was praised as a much-needed return to form for both Yoshi games and Nintendo platformers in general.

World Music Youtube

Yoshi's Woolly World was one of our favourite games on the Wii U, partly because you can't go wrong with a nice dose of Yoshi cuteness, but also largely because of its truly wonderful soundtrack. Explore the world by using yarn to weave wool patterns and warp pipes to reach new areas, and gleefully unravel its secrets and puzzles by pulling yarn walls apart. Add a little color to Yoshi's life with a spectrum of yarn balls. Then team up with a friend to have a ball together in this wild and woolly world.