I think about 2-3 weeks ago, I got Super Mario Galaxy 2 at Wal-Mart. When I got home, I started playing it and the GAME IS AMAZING!!!!!!! There's a lot of creativity in more of the levels, there are more stars to collect, and its a very hard game. Usually I get pissed off whenever I fall off the stage, or die from taking damage from a certain thing on the stage (Enemies, Wall Blocks, Bosses, etc.). I found no stage in the entire game stupid or over wacky. They were all creative. The main plot is that Princess Peach invites Mario to share some cake at the Star Festival, a time when Star Bits rain down from the skies over theMushroom Kingdom. On his way, Mario finds a Luma, who immediately befriends him and grants him the ability to spin. Shortly thereafter, Mario's archnemesis Bowser, who has grown to an immense size, invades and attacks the Mushroom Kingdom. Kidnapping the princess, Bowser escapes into outer space to create his empire at the center of the universe again. After launching into outer space, Mario is given control of Starship Mario, a mobile planetoid in the shape of his head, made by a crafty Luma mechanic called Lubba, powered by Power Stars, and piloted by other Lumas; his mission is to fly across the universe in pursuit of Bowser and the Princess and to help Lubba find the lost Lumas that were part of Bowser's plot. Along the way Mario meets new Lumas and joins up with his companion Yoshi.[7] Upon collecting enough Power Stars, Starship Mario reaches Bowser's main fortification, draining energy from what appears to be a comet. Mario infiltrates the castle and defeats Bowser, but is forced to retreat when Bowser reappears; Mario then ultimately defeats Bowser by hitting him with asteroids. Mario and Peach then get the Grand Star, before the Comet Observatory from the first Super Mario Galaxy shows up, and Rosalina is heard thanking Mario for watching over the Luma that he had found. The Luma returns to the Comet Observatory, taking Mario's cap with him, before the Comet Observatory transforms into a comet and leaves. Eventually, Mario and his companions return to the Mushroom Kingdom, where a large cake stands in front of Peach's Castle and Starship Mario sits in the sky above. There were many new stuff in Mario Galaxy 2 such as Yoshi being in the game (Which BTW he controls great), new power up suits, and new enemies/bosses. The new suits that were in the game was the cloud suit, in which a suit you can make 3 cloud platforms, the rock suit, in which you can transform into a boulder and destroy stuff in your path, and also all the suits (Except the Ice Flower) return from the original Galaxy like the Bee Suit, the fire flower, the Boo Suit, and the rainbow suit. There are 7 total worlds in the game. World 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6. The 7th world is called World S (S=Special). There are a total of 242 (122 Gold Stars, 120 Green Jewel Special Stars) in the entire game. The Green Jewel special stars are only unlocked once you have every single gold star in the game and beat Bowser again for the last time in Bowser's Galaxy Generator (Located In World 6, The Final World: Bowser In Your Sights). They are stars that will appear at every single galaxy, so that means its like you have to start the game all over again, but collecting another humongous batch of stars. These stars are hidden anywhere in a galaxy. You have to keep your eyes and your ears peeled for them. Super Mario Galaxy 2 overall is a very great game. You must have this game in your Wii Library!(From Yahoo!)
MEXICALI, Mexico – Aftershocks rattled the southwest Mexico-U.S. border on Monday morning in the aftermath of a major earthquake that killed two people, blacked out cities and forced the evacuation of hospitals and nursing homes.
Sunday's 7.2-magnitude quake, centered just south of the U.S. border near Mexicali, was one of the strongest earthquakes to hit region in decades, shaking at least 20 million people.
It had a shallow depth of 6 miles (10 kilometers). But the human toll was minimal in large part because the energy from the quake moved northwest of Mexicali toward a less populated area, said Jessica Sigala, a geophysicist from the U.S. Geological Survey.
"We were just kind of lucky that the energy went the other way," Sigala said. "With every earthquake, the earth starts moving a certain direction. It started south of Mexicali and the rupture moved northwest."
Building construction has also improved in northern Mexico, a region with a history of quakes, said Carlos Valdes, chief of the Mexican National Seismological Service.
"Construction codes prevented more serious damage," Valdes said. "People see that it always shakes and have improved their construction capacity. Then when the construction codes are implemented, there is stricter control, especially in larger structures."
Still, some homes were destroyed in farming communities on the edge of Mexicali, a bustling commercial center along Mexico's border withCalifornia where the quake hit hardest, said Javier Ruiz, an inspector with the city's civl protection agency.
One man was killed when his home collapsed, and another died when he into the street in panic and was struck by a car.
Across the border in Calexico, police patrolled streets littered with shattered glass Monday, and a downtown area was closed because of damage.
Scientists measured about 100 aftershocks early Monday morning, said seismologist Kate Hutton at theCalifornia Institute of Technology in Pasadena.
At least 100 people were injured in Mexicali, most of them struck by falling objects, and power was out across the city on Monday, said Baja California Civil Protection Chief Alfredo Escobedo said.
Power lines fell, lamp posts were bent and bricks fell from buildings in Mexicali's aging downtown section. Wells crumbled and the waters of the All-American canal spilled into some streets.
All 300 patients were evacuated from the Mexicali General Hospital because of the structural damage to the building, which also was without electricity and water. Some patients were taken to private clinics but others were in tents.
It was unclear how long the emergency generators powering the private clinics could last. Civil Protection Inspector Alan Sandoval said the most critical patients would be transported to hospitals in Tijuana and the coastal town of Ensenada.
Sandoval said the Easter holiday delayed damage assessments for Mexicali, as did landslides that slowed traffic on the toll road into the city.
The parking garage at Mexicali's city hall collapsed but no one was injured.
Scientists said the main earthquake probably occurred on a fault that has not produced a major temblor in over a century. Preliminary data suggest the quake occurred on the Laguna Salada fault, which last unleashed a similar-sized quake in 1892. Since then, it has sparked some magnitude-5 temblors.
In Calexico, California, a city of 27,000 right across the border from Mexicali, the city council declared a state of emergency.
Calexico police Lt. Gonzalo Gerardo said most of the damage occurred downtown, where buildings constructed in the 1930s and '40s were not retrofitted for an earthquake of this magnitude.
"You've got a lot of cracks. You've got a lot of broken glass," he said. "It's unsafe for people to go there."
Rosendo Garcia, 44, was driving his daughter home from work when the quake struck.
"It felt like I was in a canoe in the middle of the ocean," he said, adding that homes in his trailer park were seriously damaged, including one knocked off its foundation.
A home for seniors in Calexico built in the early 1900s was evacuated and its residents moved to a Red Cross shelter. The Fire Department also brought some sick and elderly people to hospitals because of power outages and gas problems.
Strong shaking was reported across much of Southern California. The earthquake rattled buildings on the west side of Los Angeles and in the San Fernando Valley, interrupting Easter dinners. In San Diego, there were reports of shattered windows, broken pipes and water main breaks in private buildings.
If the preliminary magnitude holds it would be the area's largest temblor since the 7.3-magnitude Landers quake hit in 1992, Jones said. There were at least two other 7.2-magnitude quakes in the last 20 years.
___
Associated Press Writers Christopher Weber, Andrew Dalton, John Antczak and Alicia Chang in Los Angeles; John S. Marshall in San Francisco; Matt Reed and Katie Oyan in Phoenix; Sue Major Holmes inAlbuquerque, N.M.; and Mariana Martinez in Tijuana, Mexico, contributed to this report.






