The Pikmin games take place over the course of several days. Dangerous creatures roam at nighttime, so exploration on the Pikmin planet only happens during the daytime, from 7 AM to 7 PM.[1] The number of days spent on the planet is also important in some games: in Pikmin, Captain Olimar has 30 days before his life-support systems fail and he's stranded on the planet permanently, and in Pikmin 3 the number of days left is determined by how many bottles of fruit juice are left, for a maximum of 99 days. Pikmin 2 has no day limit, and in New Play Control! Pikmin and Pikmin 3, the player is given the ability to go back in time and retry from a certain day of their adventure. A common challenge run in the Pikmin games is to complete the game taking the least amount of days possible.
The Sun Meter at the top of the HUD indicates the amount of daylight left, so effectively, the time the player has left on the current day. A number on the top right corner indicates the current day. In the Pikmin series, a day lasts between 13 and 16 real-life minutes, depending on the game and version, as explained here. In Pikmin's Challenge Mode though, every area has its own duration. As the day goes by, the lighting on the area changes much like it does on Earth, but enemy behavior and area layout remains constant all throughout.
Any important objects that are moved from their original spot will remain in the new spot on any following day. When a smaller enemy is killed, it respawns in its original place on the very next day. This is not true for larger enemies like Red Bulborbs, which take more days to respawn. Some enemies only appear in certain days. Some of the most notable enemies with this characteristic are the Smoky Progg, which disappears after day 14, the Ujadani, that only appear every 30 days, and the Goolix and Mamuta on The Impact Site, that appear in alternating days. For a list of all enemies that appear in exclusive days, please read the list of enemies on the corresponding area article.
Sunset
When the sunset arrives, all leaders and Pikmin must stop what they are doing, retreat into the Onions and ship, and spend the night in low-orbit, due to the fact that many predators become active at night.
Safe Pikmin
When the sunset arrives, any Pikmin that are considered to be "safe" will be able to board their Onion, spend the night above the surface, and be ready to be picked up the following day. When the day ends, be it normally or from the pause menu, Pikmin will be considered safe if:
- They're in a leader's group.
- They're close to an activated Onion.
- They're close to an inactivated Onion, in Pikmin 2[2] and Pikmin 3 only.
- They're transitioning between sections of the area, in Pikmin 3.
It doesn't matter which Onion the Pikmin is close to, even if the Pikmin's type does not match the Onion's type.
In addition to these, any Pikmin that is buried will stay in that spot, and will not be harmed over the night. Any other Pikmin that isn't safe or buried will be left behind on the surface, and will be devoured by enemies during the night.
While in the first two games, it is difficult to tell if a Pikmin is considered safe, Pikmin 3 added some ways to know for sure. For starters, a large white circle appears around all activated Onions on the area. Although unactivated Onions do not show the circle, the safety radius still exists, and if a dormant Onion is activated after the sunset warning period begins, the circle will still not appear, but nearby Pikmin will still be counted as safe. This radius can also be seen on the radar. A small counter will appear on the top-right corner of the HUD to alert the player of how many Pikmin are in danger of being left behind. On the KopPad, what types of Pikmin that are idle are displayed near the top of the map, along with how many. Pikmin icons will also appear larger on the radar when the sunset is approaching, and the icons of those that are in risk of being left on the surface will also appear flashing on the radar. Finally, when the player attempts to finish the day from the pause menu, a warning will show up saying that Pikmin will be left behind, if there are indeed any Pikmin considered not safe when the player tried to end the day.
Phases
Warning
Some minutes before the sun is down, a message will appear on-screen warning the player that they need to gather their Pikmin. From here on, the music changes to a calmer remix. It is also at this point that the KopPad changes, and the Onions get their safety limits shown, in Pikmin 3. From Pikmin 2 onward, the normal area music fades out a couple of seconds before this phase begins.
Countdown
Some time after the warning, a countdown from 10 takes place. Each digit takes a couple of seconds to pass, and is presented on-screen, slowly fading away to make way for the next one. 0 also appears, and the day isn't over until some seconds after 0 shows up. Interestingly, in Pikmin, after the counter reaches 4, the player is no longer able to interact with the S.S. Dolphin.
Gathering
When the countdown finishes, two cinematic sequences take place. The first scene starts with all conscious leaders and safe Pikmin walking up to the landing site. The main leader then dismisses and orders every Pikmin to get on their Onions or ship. Any Pikmin that is near an Onion, but away from the landing site will still climb to their Onion, despite not being shown. Any Pikmin that are buried will remain buried in the same spot, and can be plucked on another day. After everyone is apparently gathered, the leader(s) climb on board of the ship.
During this cinematic, a song plays that's a bit different between games. In Pikmin, it's a bit slow, and has a part that repeats twice. The cutscene is also notably long. In Pikmin 2, there are 4 songs that can play during this cinematic:
- If the player obtained no treasure, even if they gathered Pokos from enemies, a simple and quiet remix of the main "end of day" theme plays.
- If the player has collected some treasures, the regular song takes place.
- A third, more upbeat version of the song will play when the player has collected 15 or more treasures during the day.
- The final theme plays when both leaders are down or a Pikmin extinction occurs. It's a sad and lower-beat version of the main "end of day" theme.
Lift off
The second cinematic shows the ship preparing for lift off, while wild creatures draw near. If any Pikmin were left behind, they'll be shown running towards the ship in an attempt to be saved. However, it is too late, and the wandering enemies will quickly dispose of them. The ship then takes off, and the stats for that day are shown. This is when the player may save the game, and read Olimar's voyage log, mail, or the Koppaites' voyage log. The following is a list of enemies that appear in each area in Pikmin and Pikmin 3, given that in Pikmin 2, the game picks randomly from the enemies that can appear in the area, with more Pikmin left behind resulting in more enemies:
- Pikmin
- The Impact Site: Red Bulborbs.
- The Forest of Hope: Red Bulborbs.
- The Forest Navel: Wollywogs.
- The Distant Spring: Shearwigs.
- The Final Trial: Red Bulborbs.
- Pikmin 3
- Tropical Wilds: Whiptongue Bulborb.
- Garden of Hope: Red Bulborb.
- Distant Tundra: Spotty Bulbear.
- Twilight River: Orange Bulborb.
- Formidable Oak: Red Bulborb.
In the Super Smash Bros. series
This article or section is a short summary on the Final Smash. |
In Super Smash Bros. Brawl, Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and Wii U and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, Olimar's Final Smash is called End of Day. It shows Olimar jumping into his ship then rocketing off into space as night approaches. The stage below becomes infested with mature Bulborbs that deal heavy damage to foes; following this, the ship crashes and explodes, hurting all nearby enemies. Strangely, Pikmin will be left behind and are immune to the predators, but not to other players.
Brawl trophy
Smash 4 trophy
This trophy is only available in the Wii U version.
File:EndofDayTrophySSBU.jpeg | US description:
“On the planet Olimar is investigating, the native creatures become extra violent at night, forcing him to retreat to orbit every evening. His Final Smash works the same way: night falls and Olimar takes to the sky, leaving his foes to the mercy of the wildlife below. Olimar returns when dawn breaks and you can adjust his less-than-safe landing!”
| ||
EU description:
“On the planet of the Pikmin, the native creatures get quite violent come nightfall, so Olimar retreats to orbit every evening. That's how his Final Smash works, too: Olimar takes off in his trusty Dolphin[sic], then in come the beasties to take care of the other fighters. When Olimar returns, make sure he touches down, er...safely!”
| |||
How to obtain: Complete All-Star mode with Olimar or Alph. | Type: Final Smash | Trophy Box: 92. Final Smashes 3 |
Durations
The exact duration of a day, the sunset stage, etc. varies between game, and sometimes between versions. Because the European version of the GameCube original Pikmin runs at a lower framerate, events actually take longer than in other versions of the game. The following table lists the real-world time that some states last for, in a mm:ss
format.
Game | Whole day | Half day | Sunset | Countdown |
---|---|---|---|---|
US/JP Pikmin | 13:30 | 06:46 | 01:06 | 00:30 |
EU Pikmin | 16:12 | 08:06 | 01:21 | 00:38 |
Pikmin 2 | 13:02 | 06:29 | 01:05 | 00:32 |
Pikmin 3 | 13:00 | 06:30 | 02:10 | 00:32 |
The day is measured from the end of the landing cutscene's to the start of the sunset cutscene. Half day is measured from the moment the end of the landing cutscene to the moment the mid-day chime plays. The sunset is measured from the moment the warning appears on-screen to the start of the sunset cutscene. The countdown is measured from the moment the first digit appears on-screen to the start of the sunset cutscene. These times are measured without pausing, and without doing anything throughout the day, to ensure there are virtually no lag frames.
First day
To do: Write an expansive list of changes. |
The first day of each game is a bit special in that it serves as a tutorial of sorts. Because of this, some of the game's rules are changed for this day only:
- Time does not pass, and there is no Sun Meter. The day only ends when a certain task is completed.
- There is no normal way to kill Pikmin or reach an extinction.
- The player may be prohibited from doing certain actions, like whistling or dismissing until the game gives instructions on how that can be done.
- Unimportant or extra mechanics, like lying down in Pikmin or maturity changes in Pikmin 3 may be disabled all throughout the day.
- The first day will always be sunny in Pikmin 3.
In addition, in Pikmin 3, the player can go back to any previous day, and going back to day 1 effectively resets the story: some otherwise permanent information, like all charted locations of an area on the radar, and the code used for the Secret Files, are reset when the player goes to day 1, finishes it, and saves the game.
Precipitation
In Pikmin 3, almost all days will have a random chance of rain, or in the case of the Distant Tundra, snow. This change only has aesthetic impacts:
- Rain drops and snowflakes fall from the sky, naturally.
- Rainy days are darker (but not snowy days).
- The area's music is replaced with a moody theme.
- Wet surfaces and creatures are considerably shinier.
The weather change is randomly picked when the area is loading, meaning that if the day is restarted from the pause menu, it could load with a different weather condition.
Some days will be forced to have a specific weather:
- The first day will always be sunny.
- The first time Alph and Brittany land on the Distant Tundra, it will always be snowing.
- On the days when the Quaggled Mireclops or the Plasm Wraith are ready to be fought, the weather is forcefully rainy. This helps set the mood and, for the Mireclop's case, helps justify the creation of puddles on its swampy arena. Even if the boss is fought on a sunny day, the battle will happen in exactly the same way, however.
Daylight
As time goes by, the daylight changes much as it would on Earth, with the area being slightly foggy during the morning, the most lit during the middle of the day, and darker near the night.
In Pikmin, the shadows under Pikmin and Olimar point to different directions as the day goes by. At the start of the day, they point to the southwest, at midday, to the south, and near the end, to the southeast. This is similar to sun-cast shadows on planet Earth, given that the sun rises on the east (and hence, the shadows are cast to the west), and sets on the west. In order to avoid rendering too many shadows at once and slowing the game down, Pikmin shadows are completely omitted if there are 51 or more Pikmin on the field.
In Pikmin 2, the shadow limit does not exist, but shadows do not change direction as the day progresses, and are cast directly under the leaders or Pikmin. In Pikmin 3, all objects cast shadows, but shadows mainly remain directly below objects to more easily judge location and depth; they only elongate very near sunset.
Gallery
This article or section is in need of more images. |
- Leftbehind.jpg
Red and Rock Pikmin being left behind.
Trivia
- The sunset cutscenes cannot be skipped in the US version of Pikmin, but they can in the European version, as well as all New Play Control! ports.
- In the Wistful Wild at sunset, a Gatling Groink can shoot at and damage the leaders. They cannot be knocked down with this method, however.
- The End of Day trophy description in Super Smash Bros. Brawl is worded in a way that makes it sound like Olimar uses the Onion, with all of his Pikmin on board; neither of these are true, as Olimar uses the Hocotate ship and some Pikmin can get left behind. This is the case for both the Final Smash and the Pikmin series mechanic.
- Similarly, the European trophy description in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U incorrectly claims that Olimar uses the S.S. Dolphin during his Final Smash, when in reality, it is the Hocotate ship.
- In Pikmin 2, there is a small delay before the day time continues, when unpausing the game. By repeatedly pausing and unpausing, one can gain a slight bit of time.[3]
- In Pikmin 2, the text for the message "Hurry! Gather your Pikmin!" changes color depending on how much time is left. From 10 to 7 it is white, from 6 to 4, yellow, and from 3 to 0 it is a reddish orange.
- In Pikmin 3, if the Master Onion was in the process of beaming up something while the sunset cutscene starts, the effects for the beaming will remain throughout the cutscene, until it sucks in its "legs".
- In Pikmin 3, if all leaders become unconscious while the safety zone rings are visible, they will stay visible throughout the sunset cutscene.
- In Pikmin 3, thanks to the KopPad, it is possible to watch the sunset[4]
Names in other languages
Language | Name | Meaning |
---|---|---|
French | Jour | Day |
German | Tag | Day |
Italian | Giorno | Day |
Spanish | Día | Day |
See also
References
- ^ Data inside
/user/Abe/time/time.ini
, in Pikmin 2. The following three lines indicate the initial hour, final hour and day duration in seconds:{fp00} 4 7.000000 # ゲーム開始時刻 {fp01} 4 19.000000 # ゲーム終了時刻 {fp02} 4 1560.000000 # 1日の時間秒)
- ^ YouTube video showing how Pikmin left near an inactivated Onion survive the sunset, in Pikmin 2, published on June 25th, 2018, retrieved on Template:26
- ^ YouTube video demonstrating how it is possible to gain a small bit of time by continuously pausing and unpausing the game
- ^ YouTube video demonstrating how it is possible to watch the sunset in Pikmin 3
Hazards | ||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||||||||||||||||||
Other hazards |