Difference between revisions of "Fluttering"

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(Extended Flutter)
(Perfect Flutter)
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*After obtaining the key in 6-6.
 
*After obtaining the key in 6-6.
  
''Regarding the video:''
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The video demonstrates 3 normal flutters and then one perfect flutter.
The first 3 flutters are done normally and the last one is a perfect flutter.
 
  
 
==Extended Flutter==
 
==Extended Flutter==

Revision as of 11:00, 29 August 2018


How To Flutter

In this video uploaded by Trix, he discusses how to do perfect flutters, consecutive flutters and the visual cue that he uses.

Perfect Flutter

Normally, a flutter is done by simply pushing the jump button and holding it until a flutter begins, however, this method does not give you maximum height. What you want to do instead is, release B at the peak of your jump and then, as quickly as possible, repress it to do a perfect flutter. Doing this will allow you to gain a few extra pixels of height. It is a 3 frame window to do a perfect flutter.

They can be used to access several areas that are otherwise too high to reach, such as:

  • The area above the !switch in 2-4.
  • The last room of the bottom-right room in 4-4 (after you shoot the cloud containing the key).
  • Traveling over the stone column in 6-4.
  • After obtaining the key in 6-6.

The video demonstrates 3 normal flutters and then one perfect flutter.

Extended Flutter

An extended flutter is performed by bouncing on an enemy and then holding B. There are a couple ways to get the most height out of an extended flutter:

  • Hold B just before bouncing on the enemy to get a big bounce. Not holding B results in a much smaller bounce.
  • Release B and manually initiate the flutter around the peak of the bounce, rather than just waiting for an automatically flutter. This is sort of the same idea as the perfect flutter.
  • You can also follow the extended flutter up with a manual flutter to gain a bit more height.

Extended flutters are used in many levels to reach otherwise unreachable areas like in 1-1 to skip the beanstalk or in 6-4 to travel over the stone column, skipping the need for a key.

The video demonstrates an extended flutter, followed by a perfect flutter as part of the Warpless route in 6-4.

Sustained Flutter

5-4 Full Skip VS. platform Any%: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3CnmRBnr1gI
5-4 Half VS. Full Skip 100%: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lDNDGFJjWo0

Flutters can be chained indefinitely so that Yoshi does not lose height throughout consecutive flutters, in fact, several pixels of height can actually be gained between flutters by doing perfect flutters. This is used to travel across areas where fluttering is faster, such as the long water section in 3-4, the 5-4 Platform Skip or the 6-4 Lava Skip.

Lava Skip

The Lava Skip is a flutter-based skip that "only" saves ~3s but gets you all the swag points! Doing multiple consecutive flutters over such a long period of time takes a lot of practice... but you know the saying: Practice makes perfect! Flutter.gif

5-4 Skip

The notorious 5-4 Skip is by far the hardest Trick in the whole game, way harder than the already hard Lava Skip. It can take a very long time to land it even once, but the time it saves is very huge, making it totally worth learning. There are 4 different ways to do the skip. All of them are hard (Half Skip is a lot easier though).

A timing comparison for the skip in Any%:
- No Skip (Use platform): 2:27
- Half Skip (w/ Shy Guy): 1:31 (-56s)
- Half Skip (No Shy Guy): 1:24 (-63s)
- Full Skip (w/ Shy Guy): 1:10 (-77s)
- Full Skip (No Shy Guy): 1:03 (-84s)

Full Skip saves ~60s in 100%, whereas Half Skip would save ~40s.