Yoshi’s New Island Red Coins, Flowers & Stars Locations Guide
Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island is a platforming video game developed and published by Nintendo for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. It is a sequel to Super Mario World which was Yoshi's first appearance. Instead of playing as Mario, the player takes control of various Yoshis while Mario appears as a helpless infant. Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island. Puts a Red Watermelon in Yoshi's mouth. Hit one with an egg to make stairs, five Stars, one Flower, a Beanstalk, or a platform appear. If a Winged Cloud is supposed to yield Stars and you have the maximum 30 seconds on the Countdown Timer, you'll get Coins instead.
Welcome to the Yoshi’s New Island Red Coins, Flowers & Stars locations guide that helps you find 100% of the Red Coins, Smiley Flowers & Stars locations for the Xbox 360, PS3 & PC first-person shooter game.
Here’s how many of the Red Coin, Smiley Flower & Star locations there are in each level:
* 20 Red Coins per level. Red Coins are hidden inside some of Yoshi’s Gold Coins. – As a bonus you’ll get a 1UP extra life for every 100 Yoshi Coins you collect.
* 5 Smiley Flowers tokens in each course. – If you get them all in one go on your very first try, you’ll get a red flower stamp at the end of the level.
* 20 Stars per level. – The more Stars you get, the more time you have to get Baby Mario back, if he gets separated from Yoshi after an enemy attack.
The Timeline for all these in-game Red Coins, Flowers & Stars locations is listed below.
Table of Contents
- Work-In-Progress
Index of Yoshi’s New Island Guides:
- This Page: Yoshi’s New Island Red Coins, Flowers & Stars Locations Guide
- Next Page: Yoshi’s New Island Walkthrough
- Next Page: Yoshi’s New Island Cheats
- Next Page: Yoshi’s New Island Collectibles
Do you unlock a bonus for getting 100% on each level in the game?: No, no extra World gets unlocked, there’s not even an alternate title screen or save file icon as a reward. It’s purely a collect-a-thon to test your own abilities.
Please note that I hope I’m wrong, because Nintendo does hint at something happening. To quote them: “A range of awesome items: Stars, Egg Blocks, Coins, Smiley Flowers & Winged Clouds. Uncover these and many more items as you journey around Egg Island. Get lots of these and something good might happen!”
Tip: Take your time! Have a good look around Egg Island – there are tons of secrets to discover and collectables to nab.
Note: To see how many of each collectible you’ve found so far, read the totals on the bottom screen of your 3DS or 2DS system.
Does the game save each Red Coins, Flowers & Stars you collect?: Yes, the game will automatically save the Red Coins, Flowers & Stars you just collected at the end of each level.
Where to find all Red Coins, Flowers & Stars in Yoshi’s New Island? The in-game collectibles locations for the Red Coins, Flowers & Stars are described in this detailed video guide.
The Red Coins, Flowers & Stars are listed per level in the order that they appear chronologically.
World 1 Collectibles
Timeline in minutes for the Red Coins, Flowers & Stars Locations Guide:
• 1-1: Little Eggs, Big Eggs — 0:04
• 1-2: Chomp Rock ‘n’ Roll — 2:53
• 1-3: Cave of the Nipper Plants — 6:20
• 1-4: Fort Bucket Booby Trap — 11:08
• 1-5: Heads Up, Hop Up — 17:10
• 1-6: Bouncy Beanstalk Walk — 20:40
• 1-7: Ground-Pound Rebound — 25:02
• 1-8: Big Beanie’s Castle — 29:39
World 2 Collectibles
Timeline in minutes for the Red Coins, Flowers & Stars Locations Guide:
• 2-1: Koopa Canyon — 0:04
• 2-2: Inside the Outside — 3:24
• 2-3: Seesaw Scramble — 12:14
• 2-4: Beware the Boo Brigade — 18:18
• 2-5: Lantern Ghost Grotto — 25:18
• 2-6: Gusty Glory — 31:07
• 2-7: Hidey-Hole Hooligans — 35:28
• 2-8: Count Fang’s Castle — 42:51
World 3 Collectibles
[Work-In-Progress]
There you go! All Red Coins, Flowers & Stars in Yoshi’s New Island will soon be yours! 🙂
Yoshi's Island Online
Huge thanks to Andre for the guide videos and tips.
Please comment if you have any additional Yoshi’s New Island Red Coins, Smiley Flowers & Stars location tips of your own, we’ll give you credit for it. – Thanks for visiting!
Tags:Yoshi's New Island
Categories:3DS Guides, Guides, News, Videos
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Trivia/YoshisIsland
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Yoshi's Island Flower Garden Piano
- Name's the Same: The theme for the cave levels is called 'Crystal Caves'. There's also a level in Donkey Kong 64 called 'Crystal Caves'.
- Real Life Writes the Plot: Notice how in this game and successive Yoshi-themed games that if you complete them with top marks, you get a red flower drawn on your results? This is actually a tradition/cliche in Japan dating back to primary schools where if the teacher is especially pleased with your work, you get a flower circle drawn on the paper. Essentially, the Japanese version of getting a gold star in America.
- Recycled Set: The Advance version recycles sounds originally used in Yoshi's Story.
- Market-Based Title: Most likely to play on the success of Super Mario World, the original game was named Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island in North America and Europe, despite the fact that it is a prequel. In Japan, it was simply called Super Mario: Yossy Island. In all countries, the Super Mario World 2 part is dropped completely from the GBA port, in favor of Super Mario Advance 3.
- Moved to the Next Console: Touch & Go started life as a Gamecube title before being moved to the DS to utilize the handheld's features.
- Sequel Gap: Twice. DS was released 11 years after the original. Yoshi's New Island was released eight years after DS.
- Speedrun: Comes in three flavors—glitched, any% glitchless, and 100%.
- Trope Namer: For Ground Pound.
- What Could Have Been:
- There may have been points in the game where you control Baby Mario himself without the star, as there are Dummied Out sprites featuring him crawling and even a Yoshi-less victory pose.
- There are also unused transformations for Yoshi in the game, including a mushroom, a plane, and a walking tree.
- There's an oft-told story that Shigeru Miyamoto's bosses at Nintendo were so impressed with the original Donkey Kong Countrynote that they wanted this game to go in a similar direction, which Shigeru Miyamoto disagreed with, creating the well received crayon-style graphics as an act of rebellion.
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