| |||
---|---|---|---|
![]() | |||
Number | 64 (US and Europe) | ||
Series | Tortured Artist Series | ||
Value | ![]() | ||
Weight | 10 | ||
Maximum carriers | 20 Pikmin | ||
Location | Awakening Wood | ||
Challenge Mode levels | Lost Toy Box, Creator's Garden |
| |||
---|---|---|---|
![]() | |||
Number | 63 (Japan) | ||
Series | Tortured Artist Series | ||
Value | ![]() | ||
Weight | 10 | ||
Maximum carriers | 20 Pikmin | ||
Location | Awakening Wood | ||
Challenge Mode levels | None |
Decorative Goo Pikmin 4 treasure | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Series | Soulful Artist Series |
Value | ![]() |
Weight | 3 |
Maximum carriers | 6 |
Locations | Secluded Courtyard |
Dandori Challenge stages | None |
Dandori Battle stages | None |
Total amount | 1 |
The Decorative Goo (オレの色?, lit.: "My Color") is a treasure found in Pikmin 2 and Pikmin 4. It is a tube of blue "Mario Paint", (referencing the game Mario Paint). It is apparently used and is bent. The treasure is found in the Awakening Wood and right near the location of the Blue Onion. It has the Japanese writing あおいろ? (lit.: "blue") on it in the Japanese version of the game.
Collecting the treasure
The following article or section contains guides. |
It can be easily achieved once Olimar obtains ten Blue Pikmin. This is also where the Radiation Canopy was found in Pikmin.
Collecting the treasure (Pikmin 4)
It is sitting atop a ledge at the top of Sublevel 1 of the Secluded Courtyard in the Blossoming Arcadia. To collect this treasure, you must throw 3 Pikmin at it. You can also knock it down with a Rush from Oatchi.
Notes
Olimar's journal
Sales pitch
Treasure Hoard appearance
Oddly, depending on the region and area, the treasure will appear differently when viewed in the Treasure Hoard. In the Japanese version, the treasure always appears correctly. In the US version, the treasure always appears to float above the floor. In the European version, in all areas except the Perplexing Pool, the treasure again appears at ground level, but it lacks a shadow; in the Perplexing Pool, it looks the same as in the US version. All of these differences can also be found in the respective Wii re-releases for each region.
The reason for this is because in the US version, something unknown changed in the treasure's geometry, making it appear slightly above its origin point, compared to the Japanese version. The US developers did not realize this, and so the treasure is visually floating in that version. For the European version, this oversight was caught, but instead of correcting the model's data, the developers altered the spawn position of the treasure to be five units below floor level.[1] While this does visually place the tube on the floor, it also means its shadow doesn't appear, since the object's Y coordinate is technically under the floor, and there is no floor below that to project a shadow onto. The coordinates for the Perplexing Pool have not been changed since it is very hard to even notice the problem, given that the treasure is underwater.
Gallery
Trivia
- A blue stain can be found where this treasure is located, suggesting that part of the tube's contents was dumped out, likely by the Blue Pikmin found lurking near it.
- The Decorative Goo is found near Blue Pikmin in both games it appears in, a trait carried over into the Soulful Artist Series with other colors.
Names in other languages
Language | Name | Meaning |
---|---|---|
Japanese | オレの色? Ore no Iro |
My Color |
Dutch | Decoratieve brij | Decorative paste |
French | Enduit Décoratif | Decorative Primer |
German | Dekorative Schmiere | Decorative Goo |
Italian | Intruglio creativo | Creative Concoction |
Spanish | Plasta decorativa | Decorative paste |
See also
References
- ^ The coordinates for each Treasure Hoard area, bar the Perplexing Pool, are 0,-5,0, as seen in
/user/Yamashita/zukan/pal/*/arc.szs/data/setting.ini
.