PNF-404 DOESNT EXIST
The planet as Earth
room is left for ambiguity
<nowiki>ion]] of a random color drops from the sky at times. A Pellet Posy also grows at certain times, and, if hit enough, it'll drop its pellet. If the fighters grab a pellet and throw it at an Onion, items will spawn from the Onion, with the amount depending on the pellet's number (leaving a Pellet Posy alone slowly upgrades it from a 1 to a 5 and then 10) and whether it matches the Onion's colour. Damaging an Onion enough will cause it to fly away prematurely.
As with many Smash Bros. stages, a few liberties have been taken from the original source. Firstly, rain pours from time to time, which does not occur in the Pikmin series until Pikmin 3. Secondly, a Cloaking Burrow-nit can be seen in the background, despite this area being based on The Forest of Hope. The stage could be based on the Awakening Wood as well, however. Finally, the Red Bulborb is much larger in Brawl than in the Pikmin games, at about four or five times the size.
Gallery
The planet as seen in the Pikmin 2 intro cut-scene. The Ship's engine glows over what appears to be somewhere in Africa as it lands.
- Distantplanet1.PNG
In Super Smash Bros. Brawl, the Planet of the Pikmin is a stage known as Distant Planet.
Trivia
- The name "PNF-404" fits the naming nomenclature used by NASA to identify less important planets. The letters and numbers that make up the name, however, have a special meaning: 404 is an HTTP status code that means "Page Not Found".
- In Pikmin 3, the landmasses appear different than those in Pikmin 2. These new landmasses appear to represent Pangaea Ultima, a hypothetical supercontinent in the future. Each of the areas appear to be on a distinct region: the Tropical Wilds on Antarctica, the Garden of Hope on Australia, the Distant Tundra on Asia, the Twilight River on the Americas, and the Formidable Oak on India. Given that Pangaea Ultima appears 250 million years in the future, though, most relics of humankind should have long since perished.
See also
External links