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In the [[Pikmin Park]], a Pikmin that is following a line while heading towards an obstacle to clean up may trip. This temporarily slows the line down behind it, but the Pikmin will get up on its own shortly after, and speed up to catch its place. This is purely aesthetic, and has no impact on the progression of the park's cleanup. | In the [[Pikmin Park]], a Pikmin that is following a line while heading towards an obstacle to clean up may trip. This temporarily slows the line down behind it, but the Pikmin will get up on its own shortly after, and speed up to catch its place. This is purely aesthetic, and has no impact on the progression of the park's cleanup. | ||
== Oddities == | |||
* Given unknown circumstances, a Pikmin in ''Pikmin'' may trip, get up quickly, trip towards a [[bridge]], and then start working on the bridge as soon as it touches it.{{cite web|https://www.twitch.tv/mokaygee/clip/RefinedMuddyCarrotPastaThat|Twitch clip|Twitch|published={{date|14|September|2019}}|retrieved={{date|14|September|2019}}}} | |||
== Gallery == | == Gallery == |
Revision as of 08:53, September 14, 2019
In the Pikmin games, a Pikmin that is moving can randomly fumble, and either fall down face-first (referred to as tripping), or stumble forward a bit (referred to as stumbling). When this happens, the Pikmin is usually unusable until it recovers. A Pikmin that trips or stumbles runs the risk of being forgotten, hurt by enemies, or flung into an obstacle[1], making it important for the player to pay attention to the whole group and use whatever tools they have to get the Pikmin back to normal quickly.
Tripping was introduced in the first game, where it is fairly common. It carried over to Pikmin 2, where the chances for a Pikmin to trip got reduced, but stumbling was added. Both mechanics were removed entirely in Pikmin 3. Tripping was later re-added for Hey! Pikmin but it has been made less punishing – Pikmin only trip in specific spots, and they get up faster.
Details
The following article or section is in need of assistance from someone who plays Pikmin 2. |
The following article or section is in need of assistance from someone who plays Hey! Pikmin. |
In Pikmin, a Pikmin that trips lands face-first, stays there for a while, shakes its head, and gets up. It stays in this tripped state for roughly 4.5 seconds, from the moment it begins falling forward to the moment it starts moving again. All throughout, the Pikmin is considered a normal part of Olimar's group, so the player is able to pick up and throw the Pikmin, or even dismiss to cause it to instantly get back up and join its type's group. The player can use these two actions to get back into action faster, instead of waiting for the Pikmin to get up.
In Pikmin 2, tripping is roughly the same as in Pikmin. Stumbling makes the Pikmin jut forward in whatever direction it was moving, for a roughly fixed distance, and for some seconds. In this game however, nothing can be done to return the Pikmin to normal faster, for either tripping or stumbling. While the Pikmin is still considered a part of the group, it is actually in a special state where the leader cannot interact with it. Dismissing will keep that Pikmin in the group, spraying will not affect that Pikmin, and the HUD's standby icon calculation will skip over that Pikmin (meaning the icon can even show the "no Pikmin" symbol if that was the only member of the group).
Triggers
To do: Confirm, for both games, that swarming increases the chances. |
Pikmin can only trip or stumble if they are following the leader somewhere, or if the player is moving the group. The chances for a Pikmin to trip or stumble, as well as the moment the game decides that, are not known.
Although unconfirmed, it is rumored that moving the group increases the odds of a Pikmin tripping.[source needed]
Purple Pikmin have a lower chance of stumbling compared to other Pikmin types.[2]
At least in Pikmin, cutscenes do not make the Pikmin immune to tripping, since it is possible for a Pikmin to trip in the sunset gathering cutscene.[3] Pikmin carrying bomb rocks are also unable to trip.[4]
Hey! Pikmin tripping spots
The following article or section is in need of assistance from someone who plays Hey! Pikmin. |
In Hey! Pikmin, during gameplay, Pikmin are only be able to trip in very specific places. These are sections of an area where there is a lot of room to walk in, and there are no real dangers nearby. These spots are purposely chosen by the area designers, by placing a stumble_space
object on top of the line of terrain they want. The following is a list of all such objects:
- Cavern of Confusion:
- The stretch after the dirt block, below the Sparklium Seeds.
- The stretch where the Spornet attack cutscene takes place.
- Mushroom Valley:
- The stretch after the Crested Mockiwi, after climbing up a small ledge.
- Back-and-Forth Road:
- The stretch where the Yellow Spectralid cutscene takes place.
- Serene Stream:
- The stretch after going up a ramp, after the scared Crumbug cutscene.
- The Shallow End:
- On top of the pre-built bridge after the Blue Pikmin that are playing with a ball.
- Crystal Tunnels:
- Echo Cavern:
- The floor where the Seedbagger roams.
- The stretch above the first Crammed Wraith, after climbing the vines. (3 objects total.)
- The flat ground with a bush, below the Numerical Monument.
- The two sticks that are blocked by several cobblestone blocks and bomb rocks. (2 objects total.)
- The floor after climbing down the vines next to the Gigaton Bag. (2 objects total.)
- The stretch to the left of the first Rock Pikmin stone.
- Springpetal Cave:
- TBD
- TBD
- The Burning Sky:
- TBD
- TBD
- TBD
- TBD
- Steel Pipe Forest:
- TBD
- TBD
- TBD
- TBD
- TBD
- TBD
- Pollution Pool:
- In the flat section with the first electric gate.
- TBD
- Drenchnozzle Den:
- TBD
- TBD
- TBD
- Downpour Thicket:
- TBD
- TBD
- Scorched Earth:
- TBD
- TBD
- TBD
- TBD
- TBD
- TBD
- Lights in the Darkness:
- TBD
- TBD
- TBD
- Terror Trench:
- TBD
- TBD
- Barriers of Flame:
- TBD
- TBD
- TBD
- TBD
- Sizzling Precipice:
- TBD
- Below the Ice:
- TBD
- Frozen Hazard:
- TBD
- TBD
- TBD
- TBD
- Septic Swamp:
- TBD
- TBD
- Burning Bog:
- TBD
Outside of gameplay
To do: Add cases from the Short Movies. |
Tripping is also used in other parts of the franchise outside of a random gameplay mechanic.
In the Pikmin Park, a Pikmin that is following a line while heading towards an obstacle to clean up may trip. This temporarily slows the line down behind it, but the Pikmin will get up on its own shortly after, and speed up to catch its place. This is purely aesthetic, and has no impact on the progression of the park's cleanup.
Oddities
- Given unknown circumstances, a Pikmin in Pikmin may trip, get up quickly, trip towards a bridge, and then start working on the bridge as soon as it touches it.[5]
Gallery
This article or section is in need of more images. |
Animation of a Red Pikmin tripping in Pikmin 2.
See also
References
- ^ Twitch video (language warning) on Twitch, published on June 10th, 2019, retrieved on June 11th, 2019
- ^ Fan-driven research
- ^ YouTube video where a Pikmin trips in the sunset gathering cutscene (at 15:19), published on December 28th, 2015, retrieved on June 8th, 2019
- ^ By changing the game's RNG to always return a high value, one can force the Pikmin to always trip. Bomb rock Pikmin will never be affected.
- ^ Twitch clip on Twitch, published on September 14th, 2019, retrieved on September 14th, 2019
Pikmin | |
---|---|
Types | Red Pikmin • Yellow Pikmin • Blue Pikmin • Purple Pikmin • White Pikmin Rock Pikmin • Winged Pikmin • Ice Pikmin • Bulbmin • Glow Pikmin |
Biology | Candypop Bud • Idle • Maturity • Onion • Flarlic • Pellet Pikmin extinction • Trip • Sprout • Seedling • Soul • Squad |
Abilities | Carry • Dig • Dodge • Fight • Hide |
Controls | Charge • Dismiss • Swarm • Pluck • Throw • Whistle |
Other | Decor Pikmin • Leafling • Mushroom Pikmin • Pikpik carrot |