- Not to be confused with Trigger Pad.
Switches are an Object in Where's My Water?. They first appeared in Meet Swampy, alongside Platforms, which are first introduced in Divert.
Summary[]
- Switches activate devices when they themselves are activated with any type of Fluid. The switch consumes one drop of fluid that activated it.
- Once it is activated, the switch and the device connected to it stays in its new state.
- Multiple switches can appear in a level, but no more than four will appear.
- These are split into different colors with different symbols. The red/orange switch has a gear symbol, the blue has a diamond symbol, the green has a reticle-like gear symbol and the purple has a slightly irregular hexagonal symbol.
- In 10 Days of Frankenweenie in Where's My Water? Free, the switch's symbol appears to be the same gear as for the red switch, except that the switch is colored green (while not affecting the gear symbol itself).
Gallery[]
Sounds[]
Description | Sound |
---|---|
Activated Switch |
Trivia[]
- Depending on the number of switches in a level, the colors will appear in either the order Red-Blue-Green-Purple or Red-Green-Blue-Purple. However, some levels break the rule:
- Crack the Code (1-6 in the free version) has red, blue and purple.
- Across the Bridge (5-18), has red, green and purple.
- Track and Field (A2-16) has red and purple.
- In both Round the Bend (A2-13) and U-Bend (A3-2), blue appears alone.
- Mid-Air Mix (8-18) has red, blue and purple.
- The red switch is introduced in Divert, the green in Order of Operations, the blue in Flip the Switches, and the purple in Back and Forth. The first level with all four switches is Back and Forth.
- The Switch made a special appearance in the limited-time-only chapter, 10 Days of Frankenweenie in Where's My Water? Free. The Switch is given a black and white texture except for the symbol which is made identical to the red gear but with a green background.
- The Switch as it appears in the said game and other games cannot be deactivated whatsoever. The only exception applies to Where's My Mickey?.