Dino Rhino

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Not to be confused with "Rhino Dino", another name for Reznor.
Dino Rhino
Artwork of a Dino-Rhino, from Super Mario World.
Artwork from Super Mario World
First appearance Super Mario World (1990)
Latest appearance Paper Mario: The Origami King (2020)
Variants
Relatives
Comparable

Dino Rhinos, also spelled Dino-Rhinos, are enemies introduced in Super Mario World. They are Ceratopsian dinosaurs with dark turquoise bodies and rhinoceros-like ears.

History[edit]

Super Mario series[edit]

Super Mario World[edit]

Artwork scene of Mario in Chocolate Island, from Super Mario World.
Scene artwork of Mario with a Dino Rhino (foreground) and a Dino-Torch (background)

Dino-Rhinos appear in Super Mario World. They are encountered in Chocolate Island. Dino Rhinos follow Mario and jump over short obstacles to get him. A Dino-Rhino becomes a Dino-Torch if stomped, in which case it can breathe fire, something that Dino Rhinos would have originally been capable of doing.[1] Dino-Rhinos can be defeated if attacked by a Spin Jump or being stomped by Yoshi. Dino-Rhinos are unaffected by fireballs or being eaten by Yoshi. Sprites depict them with pale white bellies and toenails, though this trait is notably absent in artwork.

Super Mario All-Stars / Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3[edit]

The king of Sea Side has been transformed into a purple Dino Rhino in both the Super Mario All-Stars and Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 reissues of Super Mario Bros. 3.

Super Mario World television series[edit]

A Dino-Rhino pinning Mario to the ground in the Super Mario World episode "Send in the Clown."
A Dino-Rhino in the Super Mario World television series episode "Send in the Clown".

Dino-Rhinos, though never named as such, appear only in the episode "Send in the Clown" of the Super Mario World television series. It is held in a cage within King Koopa's "Koopaling Bros. Circus," and is defeated from fireballs thrown by Fire Mario, who had avoided being eaten by it. Their smaller counterparts Dino-Torches appear more frequently.

Nintendo Adventure Books[edit]

Dino Rhinos are enemies in Flown the Koopa. They are encountered by Mario, Luigi, Toad, and the Mushroom King on their travels through a forest. They manage to avoid it, unless the reader solves the puzzle incorrectly, in which case they lose some Coins and International Dino-Flying Derby tickets.

A Dino Rhino is ridden by Bowser in Unjust Desserts after ditching his Toad disguise. Some are eaten by Yoshi and others shrunk by Magikoopa. Dino Rhinos can be encountered by Mario, both inside and outside the dinosaur's body.

Some Dino Rhinos can be encountered in Brain Drain. They can have their earned by Luigi, who had been transformed into a Koopa Troopa earlier, if he supposedly "scares" away Mario.

Mario is Missing![edit]

Dino-Rhino is a character in Mario is Missing! CD-ROM Deluxe. It has voice acting, unlike other appearances. It is one of the Curators, replacing the humans from the MS-DOS releases. Besides taking questions, Dino-Rhino gives Luigi two questions if he decides to return an artifact as proof of its authenticity, followed by a money reward.

Paper Mario series[edit]

Paper Mario[edit]

AlbinoDino PM.png

While Dino Rhinos themselves do not make an appearance, look-alikes, the Albino Dinos, appear as guards in the Crystal Palace in Paper Mario.

Paper Mario: Color Splash[edit]

Dino Rhinos are enemies in Paper Mario: Color Splash. They are encountered in Mossrock Theater. Their attacks include ramming and breathing fire, similarly to Dino-Torches. Stronger variants named Wild Dino Rhinos are introduced as well.

Paper Mario: The Origami King[edit]

Café
A Dino Rhino in the Shroom City café

A Dino Rhino is a non-playable character in Paper Mario: The Origami King. It sings in the Shroom City café alongside a Ptooie and a Sombrero Guy.

The in-game concept art shows that origami Dino Rhinos were originally going to be enemies.

Profiles and statistics[edit]

Super Mario series[edit]

Super Mario World[edit]

  • Instruction booklet description:
    • English:
      These are dragons from Chocolate Island. Jump on Dino-Rhino and it becomes Mini-Rhino. Watch out, they breathe fire.[2]
  • Mario Mania: Big but nearsighted. Dino Rhino looks more dangerous than he is. Mario can easily evade the big lug, but he also can stomp him down to size.[3]
  • Nintendo Power Issue #28: Dino-Rhinos: When they're hit, these lugs shrink.[4]

Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2[edit]

  • Denizens of Dinosaur Land poster: Chocolate Island is home to these dinosaurs. Dino Rhinos change into Mini-Rhinos when stomped on, but the little ones breathe fire, so be careful.[5]

Nintendo Kōshiki Guidebook – Yoshi's Egg[edit]

★ライタとチビライタ
火を吹く点から、インド系ヨッシーと関係が 深いと考えられているが、どう深いのかは不 明。彼とヨッシーのイキサツについては秘密。[6]

Dino Rhino & Dino Torch
Due to their fire-blowing points, they're thought to be closely related to the Indian Yoshi, but how deep is unknown. The history between them and Yoshi is a secret.

Perfect Ban Mario Character Daijiten[edit]

ライタ (JP) / Dino Rhino (EN)
A Dino Rhino from Super Mario World.
Original text (Japanese) Translation
種族しゅぞく 恐竜族 Tribe Dinosaur clan
性格せいかく しつこい Disposition Persistent
登場とうじょうゲーム ワールド Game appearances World
大きり体で追りかけてくるぞ

チョコレー島のみに出現する恐竜だ。段差などものともせず、ひたすらマリオに突進。ジャンプして通りすぎても、振り向いてしつこく追い回す。一回踏んでも、チビライタに変身して火を吹くのだ。
元々チビのライタも⋯
チビライタにはライタを踏んでチビになるものと、元々チビライタのものの2種類がいる。さばやい動きで、火を大きくはく強敵だ。[7]

He's going to come after you with a big body

These dinosaurs appear only on Chocolate Island. It rushes at Mario without regard for any bumps on the road. Even when he jumps past, it turns around and persistently chases him. Even if he steps on it once, it transforms into a Dino-Torch and starts to breathe fire.
Originally, the Dino-Torch was also...
There are two types of Dino-Torches: those that become small by stepping on a Dino Rhino and those that are already Dino-Torches. They are fast-moving and strong opponents that can make big fires.

Paper Mario: Color Splash[edit]

Paper Mario: Color Splash enemy
Dino Rhino
Dino Rhino sprite from Paper Mario: Color Splash HP 56 Type Normal Role Common Card
Strong None Weak None Card drop rate 3
A Dino Rhino card from Paper Mario: Color Splash
Moves Body Attack (16), Fire Attack (32), Group Attack (12), Blowback Attack (24)
Location(s) Mossrock Theater
Quotes N/A
Enemy class
ENEMY_FIRE
Dropped items
Hammer Scraps 10 Red paint 0 Yellow paint 0 Blue paint 0 Orange paint 74 Green paint 0 Purple paint 0

Gallery[edit]

Sprites[edit]

Screenshots[edit]

Scans[edit]

Miscellaneous[edit]

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese ライタ[8]
Raita
Pun on "lighter" and possibly "rhino"; officially romanized as "Raita"
Chinese (simplified) 打火龙[9]
Dǎhuǒ Lóng
Lighter Dragon
Chinese (traditional) 打火龍[?]
Dǎhuǒ Lóng
Lighter Dragon
Dutch Dino Rhino[?] -
French Dino-Rhino[10][11] -
German Dino-Rhino[?] -
Dino Rhino[12]
Italian Dino Rino[?] "Rino" comes from rinoceronte ("rhinoceros")
Korean 라이터[?]
Raiteo
Transliteration of the Japanese name
Portuguese (NOA) Dino Rhino[13] - Super Mario World instruction booklet
Portuguese (NOE) Rinossauro[?] Portmanteau of rinoceronte ("rhino") and dinossauro ("dinosaur") Paper Mario: Color Splash
Russian Носозавр[?]
Nosozavr
From носорог (nosorog, "rhino") and -завр (-zavr, suffix for dinosaurs)
Spanish Dino-Rino[?] "Rino" comes from rhinocerotidae ("rhinoceros")
Llamasaurio Rex[?] Flamesaurus Rex, a play on llama ("flame") and "Tyrannosaurus rex" Super Mario World instruction booklet

References[edit]

  1. ^ TCRF. Super Mario World/Unused Graphics & Objects | Fire-Spitting Dino Rhino. The Cutting Room Floor (English).
  2. ^ 1991. Super Mario World instruction booklet. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 25.
  3. ^ August 1991. Nintendo Mario Mania Player's Guide. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 51.
  4. ^ Tilden, Gail, et al. (September 1991). Nintendo Power Issue #28. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 11.
  5. ^ Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2 promotional flyerMedia:SMW SMA2-Protional Flyer.png
  6. ^ February 1, 1992. 「任天堂公式ガイドブック ヨッシーのたまご」 (Nintendo Kōshiki Guidebook – Yoshi's Egg). Shogakukan (Japanese). ISBN 4-09-104196-5. Page 61Media:Yoshi no Tamago Shogakukan 61.jpg.
  7. ^ November 20, 1994. 「パーフェクト版 マリオキャラクター大事典」 (Perfect Ban Mario Character Daijiten). Shogakukan (Japanese). ISBN 4-09-259067-9. Page 226.
  8. ^ Kagawa, Ryo (APE/Shigesato Itoi), Koichi Toda (100 Percent), Masaki Kuramochi (100 Percent), Shigeo Tanabe, Naomaru Asao, and Ryuji Osawa, editors (1991). "UNIT 2 CHARACTER" in『任天堂公式ガイドブック スーパーマリオワールド』. Tokyo: Shogakukan (Japanese). ISBN 4-09-104117-5. Page 28.
  9. ^ 无敌阿尔宙斯 (August 28, 2013). 神游 超级马力欧世界 敌人官译. Baidu Tieba (Simplified Chinese). Archived February 27, 2017, 15:38:47 UTC from the original via Wayback Machine. Retrieved February 2, 2017.
  10. ^ French Super Mario World instruction manual. Page 25.
  11. ^ Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2 French end credits
  12. ^ Menold, Marcus, Claude M. Moyse, and Andreas G. Kämmerer, editors (1993). Der offizielle Nintendo Spieleberater "Super Mario World". Großostheim: Nintendo of Europe GmbH (German). Page 19.
  13. ^ Super Mario World Brazilian instruction booklet (PDF). Page 25. Archived July 19, 2021, 09:17:30 UTC from the original via Wayback Machine.