Gate of Heavenly Peace

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Gate of Heavenly Peace
The Gate of Heavenly Peace in Mario is Missing! (DOS)
DOS
The Gate of Heavenly Peace in Mario is Missing! (SNES)
SNES
The Gate of Heavenly Peace in Mario is Missing! (NES)
NES
First appearanceMario is Missing! (1993)

TheGate of Heavenly Peace is an item in thePC,SNES, andNES versions ofMario is Missing!. It is the entryway to theImperial City and theForbidden City ofBeijing, separating it fromTiananmen Square. A group ofKoopa Troopas steal it in its entirety while they are stormingBeijing, andLuigi takes it back after grabbing it from the single Koopa Troopa that was carrying it around. He then shows it to Beijing's inhabitants and asks them questions about it, with all of them telling him what it is while providing additional facts, such as how it was "built in the 4th century" (which is completely false[1]). Eventually, Luigi learns enough to return the gate to its proper place through the Forbidden City's information booth, receiving a cash reward of $1750, as well as a bonus of $2800 if the gate is returned before the other stolen items.

Information

PersonQuote
PC version
Boy"It's the great gate to the Emperor's house in Forbidden City, built by Yung Le."
Tourist"The Emperor had a bad temper and only he could pass through that gate."
Reporter"The Emperor's guards stood under that to keep everyone else out!"
Scientist"This heavenly gate was built in the 4th century by Emperor Yung Le."
Police officer"That's the Gate of Heavenly Peace. Put it back on Tian An Men square."
SNES version
Boy"It's the great gate to the Emperor's house in Forbidden City, built by Yung Le."
Tourist"The Emperor had a bad temper and only he could pass through that gate."
Reporter"The Emperor's guards stood under that to keep everyone else out!"
Scientist"This heavenly gate was built in the 4th century by Emperor Yung Le."
Police officer"That's the Gate of Heavenly Peace. Put it back on Tian An Men square."
NES version
Boy"It's the great gate to the Emperor's house in Forbidden City, built by Yung Lee."
Tourist"The Emperor had a bad temper and only he could pass through that gate."
Reporter"The Emperor's guards stood under that to keep everyone else out!"
Scientist"This heavenly gate was built in the 4th century by Emperor Yung Lee."
Police officer"That's the Gate of Heavenly Peace. Put it back on Tian An Men square."

Names in other languages

LanguageNameMeaningNotes
Frenchla Porte de la Paix Céleste[2]-
Germandas Tor des himmlischen Friedens[3]The Gate of heavenly Peace

References

  1. ^"The Tiananmen Gate was first built in 1417 in the Ming Dynasty." – 26 Nov. 2010.The History of Tiananmen Gate.People's Daily Online (English). Archived December 20, 2016, 02:39:24 UTC from theoriginal via Wayback Machine. Retrieved November 25, 2024 from eBeijing.
  2. ^Mario a disparu.Software Toolworks (French). Retrieved April 22, 2025.
  3. ^Mario wir vermisst.Software Toolworks (German). Retrieved September 23, 2024.
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Appears in the DOS/Mac release
Appears in the SNES release
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