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User:Waddlez3121/Sandbox

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Revision as of 09:36, 13 December 2023 by ShadowKirby (talk | contribs) (Removing redlinks that don't seem to be heading anywhere, plus very minor changes to Done In draft)
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Sandbox Shenanigans

I do stuff here. Cool.

If you're here from the Butterfly chat, I have two proposals here. They are noted by their number in their page headings. As I have done on other wikis, I will leave most things short.


Kumazaki's Butterfly (Proposal 1)

Insert the contents of Butterfly here.

Butterflies (Proposal 1)

This is a page dealing with butterflies in general across the Kirby series. You may be looking for:

Morpho Knight: A parasitic deity who hides as a butterfly, introduced in Star Allies
Flutter: A butterfly "enemy" from Kirby's Dream Land 3 and Kirby 64: The Crystal Shards
[[Kumazaki's Butterfly]]: A particular type of scarlet and amber butterflies found in Shinya Kumazaki's entries into the series.

Stuff

Things

Appearances

Insert stuff denoting any and all appearances of butterflies here.

TABLE TITLE HERE

Game | Has Butterflies? | Which ones?

KDL | YES | REGULAR

KDL3 | YES | Flutter

KSqSq | MAYBE | IDK

KRtDL(D) | YES | REGULAR, [[KUMAZAKI'S BUTTERFLY]]

KSA | YES | REGULAR, [[KUMAZAKI'S BUTTERFLY]], Morpho Knight


Butterfly (Proposal 2)

This is a page dealing with butterflies in general across the Kirby series. You may be looking for:

Morpho Knight: A parasitic deity who hides as a butterfly, introduced in Star Allies
Flutter: A butterfly "enemy" from Kirby's Dream Land 3 and Kirby 64: The Crystal Shards

Types of Butterfly

There are several types of butterfly, some with more importance than others. Butterflies can be yellow with orange-lined wings, yellow with red-lined wings, white with black-lined wings, (etc.)

Kumazaki's Butterfly

Once he took over the direction of the Kirby series, Shinya Kumazaki decided to continually implement butterflies into games he directed. These particular butterflies feature amber wings lined in scarlet, and one of them may be Morpho Knight.


Done In

Waddlez3121/Sandbox
Various arrangements of "Done In".
Details
Debut appearance Kirby's Dream Land (1992)
Last appearance Kirby's Return to Dream Land Deluxe (2023)
Other appearance(s) various
Composer(s) Jun Ishikawa
 This box: view  talk  edit 

Done In is a short jingle that usually plays when Kirby (or Player 1, if another character) is defeated, typically as they fall off of the screen. It, like the 1-Up jingle, is one of the most common themes in the Kirby series, known for giving the feeling of a casual error rather than a catastrophic failure. In most games, the music stops abruptly for about a second before the jingle plays, but this method of focus is abandoned in the Kirby Fighters series.

Composition

Kirby, hit and KO'd.

"Done In" is a short musical period in 3/8 featuring a chromatically descending passage from a C with a jump to E-flat, ending in a somewhat goofy rising G octave. The movement of the melody reflects how Kirby's defeat animation plays out.

Game appearances

Since the jingle has appeared in almost every game in one form or another, this list only discusses the most important evolutions of the theme.

Kirby's Dream Land

Kirby's Dream Land was the debut of this jingle, and is unsurprisingly the most simple version. This version laid the foundation for defeat as a whole in the Kirby series.

Kirby's Adventure

Kirby's Adventure uses a very similar arrangement to the previous entry. (Editors, confirm if identical?)

Kirby's Dream Land 2

Unchanged from Dream Land in both use and sound.

Kirby Super Star

As an SNES game, Super Star received important hardware freedoms compared to previous games, and upgraded the theme because of it. The jingle gets different instruments.

Kirby's Dream Land 3

Dream Land 3 uses a slightly altered set of instruments, as it did in every other piece of music.

Kirby 64: The Crystal Shards

The Crystal Shards uses an uncommonly dramatic version of the theme, using very different instruments and a slower tempo as Kirby flops over.

Kirby's Return to Dream Land

The first three games directed by Shinya Kumazaki, those being Return to Dream Land, Triple Deluxe, and Planet Robobot, all use the same audio clip for their version of Done In. It features high-quality instruments, but otherwise is only notable for being one of the first versions to be a pre-made audio file instead of being sequenced.

Kirby Fighters

This spin-off series, as mentioned above, puts very little emphasis on the jingle - it's typically played fast and quiet, with no interruption of gameplay or music, so the other players can focus on the battle.

Names in Other Languages