Cherry Blossom Park | |
---|---|
Basic Info | |
Japanese Name(s) |
月風鳥花 |
Effects | None |
Events | None |
Notable NPCs | None |
Other | |
Connecting Areas | Golden Mechanical Tower Four Seasons Forest Fox Temple |
BGM | 🔊 spelude-32 (No. 669) |
Map ID | 1694 |
Version Added | 0.117g patch 3 |
Last Updated | 0.121f |
Author | aediorugap |
Cherry Blossom Park is an area accessible from the clock in the Golden Mechanical Tower.
Features
Cherry Blossom Park is a large, looping area with concrete paths over a white ground dotted with puddles and rocks, along with cherry blossom trees.
There are one-eyed cherry blossom creatures that lurk the area, where they become gray-colored when the Maiko or Dice effects are equipped, and using either of them will make them jump in response.
North of the entrance is a bench and a pool of water reflecting the moon, with a white bird just beside the pool. Equipping the Maiko or Dice effects will transform it into a floating clock, which also jumps when these effects are used.
Southeast from the Golden Mechanical Tower connection is a floating object with a pie chart design on it. Interacting with it will lead the player to Four Seasons Forest. To the left of the Golden Mechanical Tower connection is a row of torii gates. Going through the gates has a 1/10 chance to take you to the Day version of Fox Temple.
Directions
- The Nexus → Toy World → Wooden Block World → Chicken World → Nazca Valley → Soy Sauce World → Tomato World → Golden Mechanical Tower → Cherry Blossom Park
If the current in-game season is not spring:
- The Nexus → Toy World → Wooden Block World → Chicken World → Nazca Valley → Oriental Dojo → Four Seasons Forest → Cherry Blossom Park
After unlocking the connection between Red Lily Lake and Constellation World:
- The Nexus → Graveyard World → Red Lily Lake → Constellation World → Fox Temple → Cherry Blossom Park
Trivia
- This area's Japanese name (月風鳥花) is literally the backwards version of a word from Japanese (花鳥風月), both literally meaning "Nature's Beauty". The latter refers to the traditional themes of natural beauty in Japanese aesthetics.
- The area's name in the aforementioned entry, written properly, can also translate to "Flowers, Birds, Wind, Moon". This mirrors the lyrics of the song "A Sardine Grows From The Soil", a song by "k", an anonymous Japanese musician, though it's likely this is a coincidence.
- This could also be referencing the "spelude26" book from the Fantasy Library, which contained an image of a flower, a bird, a gust of wind, and a moon. The book also shared its music with this area's BGM file.
Gallery
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