Super Mario 64 DS
Super Mario 64 DS |
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Also known as: Shényóu Mario DS / 神游马力欧 DS (CN) This game has unused areas. |
Super Mario 64 DS ist ein Remake von Super Mario 64 für den DS, berühmt dafür das es neue Charaktere, Minispiele, Texturen und eine Menge unbenutzte Sachen enthält.
To do:
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Contents
- 1 Unterseiten
- 2 Kartenauswahl
- 3 Build Date
- 4 Crash Debugger
- 5 Unbenutzte Areale
- 6 Unused Actors
- 7 Unused Actor Parameters
- 8 Unused Actor Behaviors
- 9 Unused Entrances
- 10 Unused Graphics
- 11 Hidden Graphics
- 12 Naming Oddities
- 13 Coincentration
- 14 Level Oddities
- 15 Pre-Render Oddities
- 16 Regional Differences
- 17 Revisionale Unterschiede
Unterseiten
Unbenutzter Text Rest oder ursprünglich erwähnt. |
Kartenauswahl
Das Spiel enthält einen Kursauswahlbildschirm, der mit den unten stehenden Action Replay-Codes wieder aktiviert werden kann. Er erscheint beim Laden einer Speicherdatei und ermöglicht den Zugriff auf jede Karte im Spiel, einschließlich der Testebenen. Das Build Date des ROMs wird am oberen Rand des Bildschirms angezeigt.
Um die Kursauswahl zu verwenden, geben Sie den Action Replay Code 2202???? 00000002 ein, wobei "????" der Wert ist, der Ihrer Version entspricht.
Japan | USA | Europa | US Kiosk Demo |
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A07C | 9E00 | AED8 | A098 |
Japan Revision 1 | USA Revision 1 | Korea | China |
A0B4 | A0B8 | 9EB8 | C208 |
Wenn Sie im Kursauswahlmenü ein Kurs auswählen, die keinen Sternauswahlbildschirm hat, erscheint ein einfacher Bildschirm mit einem hölzernen Bowser-Emblem. Außerdem wird beim Laden der Bowser-Kurse ein Bowser-Jingle (mit Lachen) anstelle des normalen Level-Jingles abgespielt.
Build Date
Im ROM befindet sich eine Textdatei mit dem Namen BUILDTIME, die die folgenden Erstellungsdaten enthält:
USA | Japan | US Revision 1 | Japan Revision 1 |
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2004-10-15 23:29:24 Administrator | 2004-10-25 18:50:33 Administrator | 2004-11-05 21:13:01 Administrator | 2004-11-09 12:31:12 Administrator |
US Kiosk Demo | Europa | China | Korea |
2004-11-11 11:16:17 Administrator | 2005-01-13 08:50:39 Administrator | 2007-05-16 11:41:10 yosimoto | 2007-05-18 22:30:30 Administrator |
Crash Debugger
Dieses Spiel verfügt über einen Crash-Debugger, der ähnlich wie der in Ocarina of Time ausgelöst wird. Dieser ist etwas weniger technisch und informativer, aber viel weniger ausführlich.
Um auf den Crash-Dump-Bildschirm zuzugreifen, beenden Sie das Spiel (z. B. durch Auswerfen der Spielkarte). Danach:
- Halten Sie L + R + A + Links, dann loslassen.
- Halten Sie Unten + B, dann loslassen.
- Halten Sie Start + Select.
Dieser Bildschirm existiert auch in Animal Crossing: Wild World und New Super Mario Bros. Es wurde von den Entwicklern zum Debuggen von Abstürzen und anderen Fehlern im Spiel verwendet, da es dabei hilft, genau zu bestimmen, wo im Code ein Problem aufgetreten ist.
Hier ist eine Erklärung zu einigen der Informationen:
- Die Textdatei BUILDTIME wird oben auf dem Bildschirm angezeigt.
- **StageNo** - Interner Name der Bühne.
- **PlayerID** - Der Charakter, der zum Zeitpunkt des Absturzes verwendet wurde.
- **LayerNo** - Unbekannt.
- **RoomNo** - Unbekannt.
- **LoopProc** - Gibt an, welcher Teil der Hauptschleife zum Zeitpunkt des Absturzes ausgeführt wurde; entspricht einer spezifischen virtuellen Funktion des problematischen Akteurs.
- **ProfName** - Identifiziert, welcher Akteurstyp das Problem verursacht hat. Die erste Zahl ist die Typ-ID (im obigen Screenshot ist es 3, was STAGE entspricht). Die zweite Zahl ist unbekannt.
- **file-id** - Unbekannt, möglicherweise die letzte Datei-ID, die aus dem Dateisystem der ROM gelesen wurde.
Unbenutzte Areale
Test Kurse
Es gibt zwei Testlevel im Spiel. Entweder gibst du die auf der Notizenseite aufgeführten Action Replay-Codes ein und hältst beim Laden einer gespeicherten Datei die Taste Select gedrückt, oder du verwendest die Kursauswahl. Die Level haben keine richtigen Sternenauswahlbildschirme, daher wird nur Text aus anderen Teilen des Spiels angezeigt. Die Namen der ungenutzten Kurse stammen jeweils aus dem Crash-Debugger/Kursauswahl und den Modell-/Verzeichnisnamen.
Testkurs (test_map)
To do: Erweitern der verschiedenen Funktionen der Objekte/des Terrains in den Levels, einschließlich Informationen darüber, welche Objekte während welcher Missionen erscheinen. |
Hier gibt es viel zu sehen. Ganze Terraine und normale Test-Level-Eigenschafften lassen sich hier finden.
Die Schachbrett Texturen von Super Mario Sunshine's Debug Raum machen hier ihre dritte Erscheinung. Sie müssen wirklich sehr weit herum gekommen sein.
In der oberen rechten Ecke der Karte befinden sich einige Kacheln mit japanischen Schriftzeichen. Jeder zeigt beim Betreten das Verhalten des entsprechenden Bodentyps:
- Obere Reihe - 雪 (Schnee), 花 (Blume), 氷 (Eis)
- Mittlere Reihe 水 (Wasser), 土 (Erde), 木 (Holz)
- Untere Reihe - 岩 (Stein), 砂 (Sand), 草 (Gras), 無 (Nichts)
Dieser Level besteht größtenteils aus einer flachen Schachbrettebene mit einem Haufen herumtrudelnder Tox-Boxen. Diese Karte wurde verwendet, um sie zu testen, da der Name "Onimasu" (オニマス) der japanische Name für Tox Box ist.
In der oberen linken Ecke des Kurses befindet sich außerdem ein Symbol für die Stachelkugeln aus dem Kampf gegen Bowser.
In the original game, the room containing The Princess' Secret Slide is a small hexagonal room with a sign and three stained-glass windows of Peach. The DS remake replaced this with a much larger room in a separate map with the sign, two stained-glass windows - with the one on the right warping to the slide, doors that allow you to swap characters, and a door going to Peach's Rec Room.
Despite this, the original room is still a part of the castle model, complete with the sign and Secret Slide warp, though most of the textures are incorrect and it doesn't have any collision. The sign has the same settings as the final room.
By removing the warp behind the door in the foyer that goes to the map containing the new room, setting the door so it goes to area 6 (the area the original room is in), and adding collision data, the player can enter it.
In the early room, the setting of the exit that defines the entrance the player returns to after losing a life or getting a star is set to entrance 0x00 - standing on the center of the main castle floor, which is also used when the player exits a level via the pause menu. In the final room, the exit is set to entrance 0x0 - falling down to the center of the main castle floor, which is also used for when you lose a life or get a star in the "? Switch" level. The warp is also smaller in the early room, to fit the smaller window.
Unused Actors
To do: There are four unused Tick Tock Clock mechanical objects. Document them and check if they exist in the original game. (source: Fiachra) |
Cap Blocks (0x0021 to 0x0023)
Internal Name | Object | Actor | Files |
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/data/normal_obj/obj_hatena_box/
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The game contains three M/L/W blocks that give the corresponding character's cap when hit. These objects work perfectly but are unused in the final game. However, they can be found in the Test Map. They won't release anything unless the character is already unlocked, or the cap object exists in the level via object 254.
Action Replay code (ersetzt Bäume): 1210443a 000000xx d2000000 00000000
Block | USA Code | Europe Code |
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M Block | 1210443A 00000017 | 021130EC 00000021 |
L Block | 1210443A 00000018 | 021130EC 00000022 |
W Block | 1210443A 00000019 | 021130EC 00000022 |
Rock Triangle (0x00B6)
To do: This piece of rock is used under the falling pillars in Jolly Rodger Bay. Can it be seen? |
Internal Name | Object | Actor | Files |
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/data/special_obj/ki_hasira/
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A rock triangle only solid on top. Yay.
Multiplayer Stairs and Barrier (0x0128 & 0x0129)
Internal Name | Object | Actor | Files |
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/data/special_obj/
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The multiplayer Peach's Castle features direct reproductions of the stair and barrier objects as part of the level model, therefore the separate objects are unused.
There is an Action Replay code for the USA version here (will appear near you): Multiplayer Stairs: 021130ec 00000128 Multiplayer Barrier: 021130ec 00000129
Fire Ring (0x0141)
This needs some investigation. Discuss ideas and findings on the talk page. Specifically: Use the debug menu to debug the crash. |
Internal Name | Object | Actor | Files |
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FIRERING |
321 |
281 |
Unknown |
There is an object called FIRERING that crashes the game. There are no objects that fit this description in either the original or the remake.
This object's actor code is contained in an overlay that isn't loaded via the regular system. Maybe it was meant to be loaded and used as a sub-object by something?
This Koopa shows different behavior than the standard green version. It runs into the player rather than fleeing from them, though it doesn't hurt the player. When knocked out of its shell, it will chase after it. When defeated while shell-less, it gives a blue coin, just like green Koopas.
The shell obtained from knocking a Red Koopa cannot be ridden or picked up. The player can kick it to launch it in one direction; it then continues following a straight line, knocking out enemies in its path, until it crashes into a wall and disappears in a puff of smoke. If Yoshi eats a red shell, he can spit fire, as he could in Super Mario World.
Red Koopa Troopas can be added to a level by changing a Koopa's Parameter1 to 0x0001. They can also be seen with the following Action Replay codes.
Version | Code |
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USA Revision 1 (replaces trees with Red Koopas) |
1210443A 000000CB |
Europe (will appear near you) |
021130EC 00000215 |
Europe (makes a red shell appear near you) |
021130EC 00000254 |
Unused Actor Parameters
- Tox Boxes are able to follow regular paths, and that's what they do in the second test map (Onimasu Test Map). However, in Shifting Sand Land, the only used level where they appear, this ability isn't used; they follow hardcoded paths instead.
- If the Power Flower object has Parameter1 set to 1, it acts like the Wing. At some point in development, the Wing Cap may have been obtained from a Power Flower instead of causing Mario to float.
Unused Actor Behaviors
To do:
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- Princess Peach, as she appears in the ending, has a behavior for being talked to; you can do this by placing Peach in a map with a level editor and going up to her and pressing A or B. When talked to she goes into her default pose of standing completely still and upright, which looks quite awkward, and says the same lines Bowser says at the start of the final boss battle. This does not necessarily mean that you could have talked to Peach at some point in development; the behavior could just have been put there for some technical reason. Peach also has animations for running, being idle, and jumping, possibly indicating a scrapped playable role.
- Eisblöcke, Schiebbare Blöcke und die CCM Ski Lift kann von Spielern zerschlagen werden in Mega form.
Unused Entrances
To do: rewrite this, adding images and listing which stages do/don't have the unused entrances |
Most levels have four entrances grouped around their starting point, out of which only one entrance is used for single-player levels, leaving the other three unused. The exceptions are the character painting levels and the Play Room, which suggests that they were created late in development.
Frühe Aufnahmen sahen mehrere Spieler in Bob-Omb Battlefield.
The presence of the unused entrances indicates that the full 4-player mode was scrapped after most of the levels were already made, which is actually not that early in the game's development cycle. Since Super Mario 64 DS was one of the console's launch titles, it is quite probable that the cooperative mode was scrapped due to lack of time to finish it. Or simply due to technical constraints; note that Super Mario 64 DS is one of the rare games that includes Download Play but not multi-card play.
In the final game, it was replaced by a competitive game limited to scaled-down versions of four small courses.
It's worth noting that a full-game multiplayer mode was, according to some interviews, planned for the original Nintendo 64 game (and its canceled 64DD expansion), using the split-screen variation. It appears that they originally intended to revive the concept in this remake.
Unused Graphics
Goomba Low-Model
An unused low-polygon model for a Goomba. It's possible that the game was meant to switch out the normal model with this one at a certain distance from the camera, as is common in many 3D games, but the low draw distance for objects rendered it useless. Although coins do use a low-model when viewed from a distance, this may be because there are often many on-screen at once.
Unused Star Select Screen
An unused, rather simple Bowser-themed variant for the star select screen. Used in the unused map select.
Battle Fort Painting
Its filename (for_vs_cross.bmd) implies that it was made for the Battle Fort level. It goes unused since the only entrances to the Battle Fort are a hole in the Courtyard and through VS Mode (which uses a generic sky painting). The painting object can be set to display this graphic.
It appears to depict an early design of the course, most notably the sides are multicolored and there are no squares on each edge.
5 Sterne Tür
Sternen Grafiken für eine Tür die fünf Sterne braucht um freigeschalten zu werden... außer diese Tür Objekt hat keine solche Variation.
Powerup Item
File | Texture inside nsbmd |
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/data/normal_obj/
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The name for the Power Flower actor is obj_powerup_item, so it is likely that this was a placeholder graphic for the Power Flower.
Coincentration Graphics
The sprite set from the minigame Coincentration contains some Mario and Luigi sprites from Super Mario Advance 4 which obviously aren't used in the final game. There's also an unused "defeated" Wario frame, which presumably would have been used before he falls on his back.
Hidden Graphics
To do: Is this an oddity, or do they need to be this shape to achieve the shimmering effect? |
The left and right edges of the shape used for the shimmering water of the file select screen are spiky, but the edges are always offscreen so they can't be seen.
Naming Oddities
VS Painting Room
The model data for the room where the Yoshis jump into a painting in Vs. mode is named e3_start_map_r00.bmd. E3 likely refers to the event of the same name; presumably, the room was originally created for the demo version shown at E3, and then kept around and reused in the final version.
8-Star Door
The only Star door in the DS game which does not also exist in the original N64 version is the 8-Star one that leads to the Mario painting. Its graphics file is obj_door0_star10, indicating that this door went through some adjustments during development.
Coincentration
The "Coincentration" minigame's internal name is "wrecking_crew", a reference to the NES game.
Level Oddities
Multiplayer Castle's Outdoor Garden
It is actually possible to go on top of the roof without glitches (by using Yoshi's flutter ability namely), and there it's possible to notice a few differences from the main game's map:
- The towers and hills have a different kind of coding which makes them way more slippery (the towers especially), making it hard to get on the roof.
- The central tower lacks collision, so does the extension of the roof where Peach's stained glass is. The roof's collision also doesn't match the model, namely the area adjacent to the hill.
- The castle's back, which normally is entirely modeled, is missing here.
- The boxes, fences, and 1-ups are missing.
Unseen Chunk
There's a weird grey chunk floating just outside the entrance to the Big Boo Battle room. It is made from three triangles and serves no purpose. There's no collision mapped where it's positioned. The developers probably left this in as a mistake.
Strange Hitboxes
This needs some investigation. Discuss ideas and findings on the talk page. |
While these are technically used, in Tall Tall Mountain and possibly more levels, many of these strange invisible hitboxes are hidden out of bounds on the map. They can only be interacted with if you have the Super Mushroom, and show a number when standing in them. If you kill an enemy before touching one of them, the number above your head will increase, otherwise, it will just show the number 1. They play a "box breaking" sound when hit. They cannot be found in the level files meaning they are most likely hard-coded into the game. It is important to note that these are not duplicates of the secrets as they function differently (for example, secrets can be hit regardless of whether you have a mushroom or not, and the number they show isn't based on the number of enemies you hit).
Pre-Render Oddities
Castle's Outdoor Garden
This render uses a different skybox (which turns out to be based on the N64 version of the desert background), and lacks both of the towers' flags, the sign, and fence near the flower bed, the two trees near the sandy slope on the left, as well as the sandy slope itself(!). The central tower also appears to be much shorter, and the surrounding hills on the left much higher.
There is also a black square on the right castle wall which can be seen in pre-release footage to be an alcove containing a cannon hole.
Castle's Outdoor Garden
While the render itself is accurate aside from missing the trees, it's the way the texture is used in-game that is quite an oddity. Indeed it shows the lake being on the right while the little clearing is on the left, which is due to the texture being accidentally flipped in-game.
Castle's Courtyard
Here the trees and signs are missing... that's pretty much it really.
Bob-omb Battlefield
This render uses a different skybox, which looks overcast as opposed to clear and sunny. The floating island is also missing, so does the bridge leading to the higher part of the mountain (though it could actually be there, the compression got in the way).
Whomp's Fortress
While this render keeps the original N64 render's orthographic view, this one did add the two floating islands which used to be missing... except their position still isn't accurate.
Tall Tall Mountain
Much like in the original N64 render, there are additional mushrooms that do not exist in-game. The skybox is also different, lacking the far-away islands and having different cloud formations. The portal to the mountain's slide also appears completely white, as opposed to being hidden as a regular wall.
Sunshine Isles
Once again the skybox is entirely different, alongside the small isles being closer to the larger central one.
Rec Room
This texture of the floor is different, namely missing its purple spots. A few stars were also moved here and there, and some are colored differently.
Loves Me...?
This render is missing both the trees, sign, and the fences (a piece of the fence still remains near the flower bed, though).
Regional Differences
International | Japan | Korea | China |
---|---|---|---|
The Japanese logo features metal around the text and a more emphasized "DS" with a black outline around the letters. The Korean logo has slightly darker colors. The logo used in international versions is closer to the original design of the Super Mario 64 logo, with wood around the letters and gold around the "64". The "DS" is also less emphasized. Strangely, the word "Super" is all cyan rather than multicolored. The background gradient was also changed to match this cyan, whereas the Japanese version uses a deeper blue that matches the bottom screen colors. The Chinese version breaks tradition by rendering the majority of the title in Chinese, rather than using a subtitle. The Korean version lacks a Rec Room, as seen in the image above. Strangely enough, while the Korean logo is based on the Japanese logo, the background on the bottom screen is the same as the international version.
Korean Version
To do: Look into exact ROM data changes. |
- In Korea, there are very strict anti-gambling laws that assign any game with some form of interactive gambling content an "Adults Only" rating. Possibly to avoid this, the Rec Room and all of its associated mini-games were removed in the Korean version of Super Mario 64 DS. This also means that the bunnies that give out keys that unlock mini-games when captured and the Toad that appears in the Rec Room inside Peach's Castle are missing.
- The Korean version lacks a backlight setting.
- There is a new object on top of the castle: a ! Block that gives unlimited extra lives when hit from below and acts like a normal solid object when hit from above or from the side. The ? Block was moved to make room.
- The upper lives limit was changed from 99 to 100.
Revisionale Unterschiede
To do:
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US Revision 1
The following bugs/mistakes were fixed in this version:
- There are various bugs related to Yoshi's eating ability. Generally, if Yoshi or an object changes state while he's eating (e.g. a Power Flower disappears, or Yoshi takes damage), the game can glitch in various ways or freeze entirely.
- In Tall Tall Mountain, when Yoshi licks and eats a character transformation hat while Ukiki is jumping in the air, the game will freeze just before Yoshi finishes his transformation process.
- If the player collects or eats a transformation hat and their animation state changes (e.g. by collecting a Power Flower or grabbing hold of a ledge), then the transformation hat will remain stuck to the character's feet until another hat is collected or the player leaves the course.
- In Shifting Sand Land, if the player is wearing a transformation hat and lets Klepto bump into them while they are standing still and holding an item, the game will freeze.
- In Bob-omb Battlefield and Tiny-Huge Island, the Koopa Troopa and small Koopa Troopa (respectively) lack the ability to climb some steep surfaces, and will just walk in place.
- In Whomp's Fortress, if you grab the Super Mushroom, warp to the top of the fortress, make your way to the wooden plank and run up to the side of it, you'll get a constant stream of extra lives.
- In Dire Dire Docks, when the submarine is present, you can jump under one of the back fins and immediately ground pound to be pushed through the water surface, allowing you to walk underwater.
Europe
The European version inadvertently presents some new bugs.
- In Star 5 of Snowman's Land, "Snowman's Silver Stars", entering and exiting the igloo after collecting all five Silver Stars will cause them to respawn. Collecting one will cause everything but Mario to freeze (or cause the game to freeze if you're riding on a Koopa shell).
- A glitch was introduced that allows you to carry Stars by jumping on a Goomba and eating a Star as Yoshi. They have basic physics when spat out, sliding along the ground.
- One form of the Yoshi tongue glitch is possible in Jolly Roger Bay by licking up a cap and getting squashed by a pillar before the cap goes into Yoshi's mouth.
Korea
The Korean version fixes the game freeze part of the Silver Star glitch, but the rest of the glitch still occurs.
- Pages missing developer references
- Games developed by Nintendo EAD
- Pages missing publisher references
- Games published by Nintendo
- Pages missing date references
- Games with unused areas
- Games with hidden development-related text
- Games with unused enemies
- Games with unused objects
- Games with unused models
- Games with unused items
- Games with unused text
- Games with debugging functions
- Games with hidden level selects
- Games with regional differences
- Games with revisional differences
- To do
- To investigate
- Mario series
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Cleanup > Pages missing developer references
Cleanup > Pages missing publisher references
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