Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 | American box art. | Developer(s) | Nintendo EAD | Publisher(s) | Nintendo | Platform(s) | Game Boy Advance Virtual Console (Wii U) | Release date | Game Boy Advance: July 11, 2003 October 17, 2003 October 21, 2003 October 24, 2003[1] Virtual Console (Wii U): December 29, 2015[2] January 21, 2016 March 10, 2016[3] March 11, 2016
| Genre | 2D Platformer | Rating(s) | ESRB: | - Everyone | PEGI: | - Three years and older | CERO: | - All ages | ACB: | -General |
| Mode(s) | Single player, multiplayer | Media | Digital download Cartridge | Input | Game Boy Advance: |
Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 (known as just Super Mario Advance 4 in Japanese) is the Game Boy Advance remake of Super Mario Bros. 3, and is the fourth and final entry in the Super Mario Advance series of games on the GBA. It boasts similar graphics and sound to the Super Mario All-Stars version, and made use of the e-Reader. Also, like the Super Mario Advance games that came before it, it features an identical remake of Mario Bros. A few e-cards came included with new copies of the game, while two sets (referred to as series) of cards were released and sold alongside the game. By scanning special cards into the e-Reader, players were able to upload items, videos, and most importantly, new levels into the game. One notable item was the Cape Feather from Super Mario World, which allowed Mario to transform into Caped Mario. There were also two Switch cards that the player could activate (and deactivate) the effects of by scanning them; the Orange Switch and the Blue Green Switch. Scanning these switches triggered small functions in the game. The e-Reader feature is still available in the European version, but disabled by default and inaccessible. It is fully translated, possibly because the e-Reader was planned to be released in Europe. It can be 'unlocked' by having a corrupted save file.[4] The game was re-released on the Wii U's Virtual Console service in Japan on December 29, 2015[2], and later in North America on January 21, 2016, in Europe on March 10, 2016, and in Australia on March 11, 2016. This release also includes all of the e-Reader levels in all versions, including the levels that were previously only released in Japan. This game has rumble support if played on a Game Boy Player. - 2List of changes
- 3e-Cards
- 5Gallery
- 9Reception
Story[edit]The story, from the instruction booklet: The Mushroom Kingdom has remained a peaceful place, thanks to the brave deeds of Mario and Luigi. However, the Mushroom Kingdom forms an entrance to the Mushroom World, a place where all is not well. Bowser sent his seven children to make mischief in this normally peaceful land. As their first order of business, they stole the royal magic wands from each country in the Mushroom World and used them to turn the kings into animals. Mario and Luigi must recover the royal magic wands from Bowser's seven kids to return the kings to their true forms. As Mario and Luigi set off on their journey deep into the Mushroom World, Princess Peach and Toad have but one thing to say: “Good-bye, and good luck!”
List of changes[edit]There are many changes between the original and All-Stars versions of Super Mario Bros. 3 and Super Mario Advance 4. - Like Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2, after booting up the game, a cutscene telling the story leading up to the game was added.
- If the player warps to World 8, Bowser's letter will appear on screen as if the player completed World 7.
- If the player defeats Bowser before defeating all of the Koopalings and enters a skipped world's castle, a cutscene will play that will show the respective Koopaling breaking into the castle, stealing the King's scepter, transforming the King, and leaving just as Mario arrives at the castle, similar to the intro.
- When first entering the second part of the World 8 map, Princess Peach is shown above the second pipe. She yells 'Mario!' (if the player is Mario) or simply screams (if the player is Luigi) before disappearing.
- Instead of being a mostly static slideshow, the worlds in the end credits now show a short animation, followed by the screen freezing and the level name and map sliding onto the screen.
- The ending scene of Mario/Luigi rescuing Peach is omitted after the game is cleared.
Gameplay changes[edit]- Upside-down Spiny Shells can be safely grabbed, stomped and/or kicked without taking damage; in previous versions, even an immobile, upside-down Spiny shell would hurt Mario if he landed on top of it.
- Big Blocks in normal courses can be hit with a tail swipe as Raccoon or Tanooki Mario (Mega ? Blocks in bonus rooms are still immune to tail whips.).
- Coin Blocks generally give more than ten coins if hit fast enough, and up to 20 if a Magic Wing is used.
- Spade Panels change suits if won, which gives the player the chance to earn more lives. The order is: Spade> Heart (offering up to a 7-Up)> Club (up to a 10-Up)> Diamond (guaranteed win), before looping back.
- The maximum amount of lives is now 999, rather than 100 (in the NES version) or 99 (in All-Stars).
- Due the inclusion of the Mario Bros. remake, the Battle Mode in 2 Player Game (and the option to play it from the title screen) is gone.
- The controls were slightly changed:
- On the map screen, is used to open the inventory window, rather than , which instead swaps lives in Mario & Luigi mode (as in Super Mario World).
- Due to the removal of the current world and the player's lives from the inventory window, it can hold eight more items, increasing the allowed amount from 28 to 36.
- After beating the game, can also be used to select a world (as in Super Mario Bros. and Yoshi's Island: Super Mario Advance 3), although in Mario & Luigi mode, both brothers must be in different places for it to work.
- can be used as an additional run/attack button during levels, while on the map screen, it brings up the e-Reader menu.
- On the map screen, opens a new replay menu, which can be used to watch or save a replay of the most recent level playthrough (provided the player did not pause).
- Mario can climb beanstalks faster by holding or . He can also aim his fireballs/hammers by moving left or right while on one.
- Several changes are inspired by Super Mario World:
- Invincible Mario's point chain is the same as that of kicking a shell through many enemies or stomping many foes without landing on the ground.
- The time bonus countdown is shown after clearing any stage, and like in Super Mario Advance 2, the time bonus is x100, x200, and x500 for beating Boom Boom, the Koopalings, and Bowser, respectively.
- Getting a Fire Flower or Super Leaf as Small Mario will change him to the respectiveform instead of only changing him to Super Mario.
- The player can carry items (like shells and Ice Blocks) through pipes to new areas.
- Shelled enemies (like Koopa Troopas and Buzzy Beetles) can now be stomped underwater.
- Holding an item underwater lets Mario swim faster and float to the surface.
- Like Caped Mario, Raccoon or Tanooki Mario can now tail swipe mushrooms away from him.
- Tail swiping a Muncher won't turn it into an Empty Block.
- All Lakitus are one block lower than they were in previous versions.
- Kicked shells and ice blocks can collect coins. Coins collected this way are worth double.
- Jelectros bob up and down in-place, rather than being completely still.
- The Hammer Brothers' hammer-throwing frequency is lowered; the only exception is while they are jumping.
- A new game over screen appears before the Continue/Quit menu, and it is impossible to save after a game over.
- The Power Meter doesn't run out if Mario keeps running, and in Raccoon or Tanooki form, it can be replenished by landing and taking off again.
- After Mario/Luigi defeats Bowser, he automatically turns into Super Mario/Luigi regardless of whatever power-up he is using, to fit with the ending cutscene.
Level design changes[edit]- Main article: Super Mario Bros. 3#Worlds
Mario on Larry Koopa's Airship. - Entire structures in some levels are altered to fit on a smaller screen, such as shortened rooms, lower ceilings, higher lava pits, and slightly different stairs.
- The map pipe tunnels were also edited to fit on the screen.
- Before facing Boom Boom, the entrance is closed. As such, the fortress boss arenas are slightly shorter.
- The game is generally easier than previous versions:
- In World 6, the path to the second Toad House was changed so that clearing World 6-5 is not required to access it.
- Several platforms were made longer.
- Several blocks containing coins, power-ups, and 1-Up Mushrooms were added.
- Several enemies, obstacles, and pits were changed to be less threatening or removed.[5]
- The end of World 2- is now at the other side of the pyramid, and a Blue Coin-revealing Switch Block has been added behind the pipe.
- In World 5, the Brick Blocks directly attached to Warp Pipes and Turtle Cannons now contain coins.
- As this is Super Mario Advance 4, one of the two '3's' made of blue coins in World 5-1 was changed to a '4'.
- After beating the game, in levels that unlock White Mushroom Houses, there is a coin-shaped block at the start that, when hit, shows how many coins Mario needs to unlock the house.
Graphical changes[edit]- A few sprites were slightly changed:
- As in the other games in Super Mario All-Stars, Mario and Luigi now wear their white gloves instead of being bare-handed (the coloring in the NES version was due to color limitations; the All-Stars version did not fix this for unknown reasons). Mario's lighter tail stripes are also thinner.
- Unless he is holding an item, Luigi now scuttles when he jumps, regardless of whether the Yellow Switch e-Card is active or not.
- Luigi's Statue form is as tall as he normally is, instead of matching Mario's.
- Frog Mario/Luigi is upright when holding the magic wand, rather than in his normal jumping pose.
- When Raccoon/Tanooki Mario/Luigi jumps while crouched and glides, his tail is now animated.
- Princess Peach received new sprites for this version, matching her official artwork.
- Pile Driver Micro-Goombas are colored differently and do not shine like actual Brick Blocks (as in the NES version).
- In World 4, the Sledge Brother map icon now looks like an actual Sledge Brother. Before, their map icon was merely a green Hammer Brother.
- The floating Turtle Cannon in World 8-1 is flipped and now looks attached to the block it's on.
- As in the official artwork, Boom Boom's head is rounded.
- Sprites have a slightly brighter color, but it's not as noticeable as in the other Super Mario Advance games.
- The invincibility palettes are even brighter, making Mario/Luigi colored like they were in Super Mario Advance. This can be reverted by using a Warp Pipe, taking damage, powering-up, or exiting/clearing the course.
- If the game is played on a Game Boy Player, however, the palettes revert to that of the All-Stars version.
- Some effects were added:
- Coins sparkle when collected.
- Shooting a fireball at Bowser or Boom Boom causes him to flash for an instant.
- Using a Magic Whistle causes the screen to blur out, like it does when warping in the remakes of Super Mario Bros. 2.
- After a Switch Block is activated, it disappears in a puff of smoke after one game second.
- When an extra life is earned, the '1UP' icon grows bigger before it disappears.
- The world maps have been edited, mostly due to the lack of borders on the map screen. Most maps scroll vertically, due to the GBA's resolution.
- The end section of World 3's map is even more like Japan, as Sado Island is added.
- In World 5, the map of the ground seen from the sky is fixed, now matching the actual ground part of the world's map. Also, moving clouds replace the stationary ones.
- After World 8-Fortress is cleared, the spotlight briefly expands when the lock is removed.
- On the last part of World 8, Bowser's Castle was redesigned again, as it was during the NES-to-All-Stars transition. Also, the path-connecting coin icons sparkle, and a 'Help!' word balloon comes from the castle before beating the game.
- The border from the All-Stars version returns on the new World Select screen.
- After beating the game, the castles' word balloons change to '!' if all the stages in the world haven't been cleared, 'OK' if they have, and 'CLEAR!' if the game is fully completed.
- Spade Panels and N-Mark Spade Panels got a major design change, now having a zoomed-out view of the original area, a more detailed background, and a door which Mario enters to play the minigame.
- Many levels are given more fitting backgrounds, like the All-Stars version. However, most level backgrounds (except for underground levels, airships, and fortresses) lack horizontal parallax scrolling, although this did appear in a pre-release trailer shown at E3 (vertical parallax scrolling can still be seen as Mario flies upward).
- Thus, in World 3-7's background, the clouds are all in front of the hills.
- In World 3, all block backgrounds are replaced by waterfall backgrounds.
- As in the All-Stars version of Super Mario Bros., underwater level backgrounds now have a distorted wavy effect.
- The steel background of World 5-1's secret area and the block background of World 5-7's secret area were changed to a sky background.
- The sky in World 6's athletic background is white, rather than purple.
- Brick Blocks that contain something do not turn into a 'fake' coin after a Switch Block is activated.
- Brick Blocks and Coins remain animated while a Switch Block is active.
- The status bar is only one 'block' tall (only showing the current world, and the player's lives, coins, score, and cards) and is in front of the map on the map screen, but it is replaced by a normal HUD in courses (the Power Meter and cards stay on the bottom; the cards are shown briefly at the start of each stage, and reappear near the goal).
- In both cases, the word 'World' is taller (to match the number font), and the 'M' & 'L' symbols are shorter.
- The item inventory shows all four rows at once, rather than one row at a time.
- Small blue & icons are added to the top corners of the map screen.
- Within levels, the cards are now squares instead of rectangles.
- Letters look slightly different:
- Peach's letters are smaller and have a cyan background.
- Bowser's letter is written on different paper with a gray background, instead of looking the same as Peach's letters.
- During the ending, the 'World #' font was changed to look like it did on the original status bar, but bigger.
Textual changes[edit]- Upon clearing a level, 'COURSE CLEAR! YOU GOT A CARD' was changed to 'LEVEL CLEARED! YOU GOT A PANEL.' 'LEVEL CLEARED!' also appears after boss fights.
- In World 1-3's secret Toad House, 'faraway' is spelled correctly as one word.
- In the Spade Panel instructions, 'Miss twice and your out' from early NES versions was corrected to 'Miss twice, and you're out!'
- The dialogue in the Kings' castles are changed:
- In Toad's initial pleas, 'King' is in lowercase.
- If the player visits the castle after failing in an airship stage, 'Little Koopa.' in Toad's message is replaced by 'the Koopalings!'
- Kings start their thanks with 'Oh, splendid! Splendid!' instead of 'Oh, thank heavens!', 'I'm' was changed to 'I am', and 'Princess' is now lowercase.
- In the Kings' message to Tanooki Mario, a comma was added after 'Please'.
- The '?!' in the Kings' message to Hammer Mario was reversed.
- The post-world letters are slightly changed:
- Peach's second and third letters are swapped, though the attachments remained the same. Also, as in the revised NES version, 'Kuribo' is changed to 'Goomba'.
- In her fourth letter, 'Sand Dunes' is now fully lowercase.
- The space between the first and second sentences of her fifth letter is removed.
- Her last letter has 'goal of the first' added in-between 'Third' and 'world', and 'Third' is in lowercase.
- In Bowser's letter, 'Ha ha ha' is changed to 'Gwa ha ha ha', and 'Koopa' to 'Koopas'.
- Peach's speech in the ending has been reverted to the one found in the Japanese versions, instead of the joke featured in the previous localized versions.
- If the player finishes all the levels, staff credits are shown at the end along with the cutscenes and world names, along with the alternate ending music mentioned below.
- World 8's name was changed from 'Castle of Kuppa' (or 'Castle of Koopa') to 'Bowser's Castle'.
- If the player managed to defeat a Koopaling after beating Bowser, the King's speech will omit any reference to Peach's letters.
- World 9's welcome message is now 'World 9 Warp Zone!' rather than 'Welcome to Warp Zone.'
Audio changes[edit]- Mario and Luigi have voice acting performed by Charles Martinet. Likewise, Peach also has a brief instance of voice acting in Bowser's Castle.
- Other added voice clips include Peach's cries for help, cackling Boos, and Toad's yelp in the intro and castle cutscenes.
- Luigi's jumps are joined with a new sound effect for his scuttling, similar to Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2.
- As in the All-Stars version of Super Mario Bros., Bonus Areas feature new upbeat music, rather than the underground theme.
- As in Super Mario Advance 2, a sliding sound effect was added.
- Certain sounds were changed/removed. For example, in levels, the 'poof' sound Super Leaves make when grabbed is replaced with the typical 'power-up' sound, and the 'block hit' sound is absent when hitting Brick Blocks or blocks with coins in them.
- In the Spade Panel minigame, a drumroll starts when two-thirds of a picture are lined up, and new victory music plays if a picture is lined up.
- The Power Meter beeps in a lower pitch if the player isn't in Raccoon or Tanooki form.
- The short tune heard after defeating Bowser was changed from the same one heard after saving a Mushroom King to the tune heard after defeating him in Super Mario Bros..
- An alternate ending song, which features the Super Mario Bros. ending theme remixed, is played when the player finishes all the game's levels. The original ending song is only heard if the player beats Bowser without finishing all the levels.
e-Cards[edit]For a complete listing of the cards themselves, see here. The list of features added to Super Mario Advance 4 by the cards is as follows: Exclusive features[edit]- See-saw platforms
- Gray Brick Blocks (can only be destroyed by Hammer Mario or Statue Mario)
- Checkered blocks that rotate 90°
- Sideways Venus Fire Traps
- Vanishing Blocks (only visible when Mario is Statue Mario)
- ? Block with Goomba's Shoe
- Grey spike Donut Lifts
- Blue boomerangs
Features and enemies from past titles[edit]- Super Mario Bros.
- Super Mario Bros.-styled Lifts
- Super Mario Bros.-styled Hard Blocks
- Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels
- Super Mario Bros. 2
- Grass and Turnips
- Sand, which can be dug through
- Super Mario World
- Cape Feather/Caped Mario
- Cross-shot Bullet Bills
- ? Blocks with Control Coins
- Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island
- Super Mario Advance
- Giant Vegetables
- Items trapped in bubbles
Staff[edit]- Main article: List of Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 staff
Super Mario Advance 4 was developed by Nintendo EAD, with Hiroyuki Kimura as its director and Takashi Tezuka as the producer. The new graphics were designed by Emi Tomita, and the new music tracks were composed by Taiju Suzuki. Very few of the original game's staff were involved in the production of this remake; even Mario creator Shigeru Miyamoto goes uncredited here, when he had previously produced Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2 with Tezuka as his supervisor. Gallery[edit]Logos[edit]Box art[edit]American box art Jan 06, 2019 PES 5 - Edit - Sve sto je vezano za editovanje PES5, patchevi, alati, programi. Ponesto i za pocetnika i za edit mastera. Udjite da zajedno diskutujemo o editovanju. Now you can feel the intense of 2005/2006 Season with Pro Evolution Soccer 5 FLS Patch. Pro Evolution Soccer 5 might be old, but it keeps getting better like a red wine! If you never tried this game, i recommend you to try it. Especially with this amazing patch from FLS Patch! DOWNLOAD HERE. PASSWORD: www.pesnewupdate.com. Download Pro Evolution Soccer – PES Patch with Full Setup. PES Patch is finally out and available for download with game ISO on this page. Pro Evolution Soccer is one of the most played and loved games in the world. This game is a treat for not only gamers but also for Soccer fans. Pes 5 patch download. PES 5 Pro Evolution Soccer Free Download. PES 5 Pro Evolution Soccer Free Download PC Game setup in single direct link for Windows. It is an awesome Sports and Football game. PES 5: Pro Evolution Soccer PC Game Overview. Pro Evolution Soccer 5 pushes the franchise one level up towards realism by expanding and improving character moves and control.
Pack-In e-Reader Cards[edit]Miscellaneous[edit]Prima Games official guide Larry Koopa's bio in the Prima Games official guide Morton Koopa Jr.'s bio in the Prima Games official guide Wendy O. Koopa's bio in the Prima Games official guide Roy Koopa's bio in the Prima Games official guide Lemmy Koopa's bio in the Prima Games official guide Ludwig von Koopa's bio in the Prima Games official guide
Media[edit]It has been suggested that audio and/or video file(s) related to this section be uploaded. Please upload all related music, sound effects, voice clips, or any videos for this section. See the help page for information on how to get started. |
Pre-release and unused content[edit]- Main article: List of Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 pre-release and unused content
The game's logo looked different than it did in the E3 trailer. Grey Switches were also found in the game's data and also includes pressed versions of these switches. Compressed Super Mario World graphics were found in game data, these include an animation frame for the Koopa Clown Car, three frames of a Koopa Troopa walking, and two frames of a Goomba from Super Mario World walking. Glitches[edit]- Main article: List of Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 glitches
- It is possible to get Mario or Luigi to run backwards in the game. To get this to happen the player needs to hold and at the same time.
- If the player is on the map and uses a Starman and goes to a pipe, after the Starman is done, the underground music will play very fast.
Reception[edit]Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 has received very positive reviews, and has been considered one of the best Game Boy Advance games ever made. It is the third highest-rated GBA game on Metacritic, with an aggregate score of 94 based on 25 reviews,[6] and also that site's third highest-rated game in the Mario series, behind only Super Mario Galaxy and its sequel.[7] Both Pocket Gamer and Play Magazine gave the game perfect scores. The former called the game 'Mario hop-'n'-bop action at its finest', while the latter lauded the challenge in the gameplay, the quick save feature, and the e-Reader functionality. Meanwhile, Electronic Gaming Monthly praised SMA4 for its controls, stages, and visuals, stating that it looked good for an 'old, trippy 2D game', and Yahoo! Games stated that the game surpassed both the original NES/Famicom version and the Super Mario All-Stars release.[6] Reviews |
---|
Release | Reviewer, Publication | Score | Comment | Game Boy Advance | Benjamin Turner, Gamespy | 4.5/5 | 'Given the short list of negatives above, I'd have to say that this is technically the least desirable version of Super Mario Bros. 3. However, the least accomplished version of an awesome game can still be pretty damn great, and such is the case here. Players who missed the first two editions probably won't even notice the shortcomings, and this is the only version of SMB3 that can easily be played on the go. SMB3 is almost as fun today as it was 13 years ago, and is among the top platformers on the GBA. That makes Super Mario Advance 4 an excellent choice for series veterans who want a portable Mario game, and an even better one for fresh-faced newbies who won't notice the port's technical shortcomings.' | Game Boy Advance | Joao Diniz Sanches, Pocket Gamer | 4/5 | 'Playing Super Mario Bros. 3 is a dizzying experience. As one of the finest exponents of the genre, the ride it takes you on is as memorable as it is extraordinary, making it a vital acquisition for lovers of platform games.' | Aggregators |
---|
Compiler | Platform / Score | Metacritic | 94 | GameRankings | 92.25% |
Sales[edit]The game was commercially successful in North America, with sales in excess of 2.88 million copies.[8] By the end of 2006, it had sold more copies in that region than any other Game Boy Advance game.[9] Awards[edit]Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 won IGN's 2003 award for best Game Boy Advance platform game,[10] and GameSpot nominated it for best platform game of the year.[11] Trivia[edit]- This is the first Mario franchise release in North America to carry Nintendo's current-era universal seal, which covers all products and merchandise licensed by the company. Previously, Nintendo had two seals—the Official Nintendo Seal of Quality, which covered hardware, games, and accessories; and a secondary seal saying 'Official Nintendo Licensed Product', which only covered licensed merchandise.
- Many of this game's mechanics (like obtaining an extra life if a Goal Pole's top is reached) became the standard in the series since New Super Mario Bros.
- Despite gaining new sprites in this game, part of Luigi's power-up animation is a palette swap of Mario's.
External links[edit]References[edit]- ^Date info for GBA from TMK, retrieved 6-30-2008
- ^ abhttps://www.nintendo.co.jp/titles/20010000008346
- ^Nintendo Download: 10th March (Europe). Nintendo Life. Retrieved March 7, 2016.
- ^Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 - The Cutting Room Floor
- ^https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m9H7ulK4Cbw
- ^ abSuper Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 reviews at Metacritic.com, dated 10-20-2003
- ^'Best and Worst Mario Games' at Metacritic.com, dated 5-20-2010
- ^'US Platinum Chart Games' at The Magic Box, dated 12-27-2007
- ^News - 'Sailing the World: Eye of the Hurricane' at Gamasutra
- ^[1]
- ^[2]
Super Mario Bros. 3 / Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 |
---|
Protagonists | Mario • Luigi • Princess Toadstool • Toads • Kings |
---|
Bosses | Boom Boom • Big Boo* • Fake Bowser* • Koopalings (Larry Koopa • Morton Koopa Jr. • Wendy O. Koopa • Iggy Koopa • Roy Koopa • Lemmy Koopa • Ludwig von Koopa) • Bowser |
---|
Items | 1-Up Mushroom • Anchor • Blue Coin • Boomerang* • Cape Feather* • Card • Coin • Fire Flower • Frog Suit • Goomba's Shoe • Hammer • Hammer Suit • Lakitu's Cloud • Magic Ball • Magic Whistle • Magic Wing • Music Box • Poison Mushroom* • Starman • Super Leaf • Super Mushroom • Tanooki Suit • Vegetable* |
---|
Objects | Main game | ? Block • Arrow Lift • Beanstalk • Big Block • Bolt Lift • Brick Block • Buzzy Beetle Shell • Cloud Block • Coin Block • Coral • Directional Lift • Donut Lift • Empty Block • Giant Green Shell • Giant Red Shell • Goal • Green Shell • Hidden Block • Ice Block • Jump Block • Lift • Magic Door • Magic Note Block • Mega ? Block • P Warp Door • Quicksand • Red Shell • Semisolid Platform • Spiny Shell • Switch Block • Track • Treasure Chest • Warp Door • Warp Pipe • Wood Block |
---|
World-e* | ! Switch • Arrow wheel • Axe • Boost Block • Bubble • Coin Counting Block • Control Coin • Dotted-Line Block • Flagpole • Flipper • Giant Gate • Grass • Gray Brick Block • Key • Key Door • Lift • Rotating Block • Roulette Block • Snake Block • Springboard • Stretch Block • Triangular Block • Vanishing Block |
---|
Forms | Small Mario • Super Mario • Fire Mario • Raccoon Mario • Frog Mario • Tanooki Mario (Statue Mario) • Hammer Mario • Invincible Mario • Caped Mario* |
---|
Switch Cards* | Yellow Switch • Green Switch • Red Switch • Blue Switch • Blue Green Switch • Cyan Switch • Orange Switch |
---|
Worlds | Grass Land • Desert Land • Water Land • Giant Land • Sky Land • Ice Land • Pipe Land • Dark Land • Warp Zone • World-e* |
---|
Locations | N-Mark Spade Panel • Spade Panel • Toad House • Treasure Ship • World-e Castle* |
---|
Enemies | Main game | Angry Sun • Baby Cheep • Big Bertha • Bloober • Bloober baby • Bob-omb • 'Boo' Diddly • Boomerang Brother • Boss Bass • Bullet Bill • Buster Beetle • Buzzy Beetle • Chain Chomp • Cheep-Cheep • Colossal Koopa Paratroopa • Dry Bones • Fiery Walking Piranha • Fire Brother • Fire Chomp • Firesnake • Giant Koopa • Goomba • Grand Goomba • Hammer Brother • Hot Foot • Jelectro • Koopa Paratroopa • Koopa Troopa • Kuribo's Goomba • Lakitu • Lava Lotus • Micro-Goomba • Missile Bill • Muncher • Para-Beetle • Para-Goomba • Pile Driver Micro-Goomba • Piranha Plant • Piranhacus Giganticus • Podoboo • Ptooie • Rocky Wrench • Scattering Bloober • Sledge Brother • Spike • Spiny Cheep-Cheep • Spiny • Spiny Egg • Stretch • Thwomp • Venus Fire Trap • Walking Piranha |
---|
World-e* | Amazing Flyin' Hammer Brother • Big Boo • Bony Beetle • Bumpty • Chargin' Chuck • Flurry • Gold Bowser Statue • Goomba (Super Mario World) • Hoopster • Hothead • Jumping Piranha Plant • Lil' Sparky • Magikoopa • Monty Mole • Para-Goomba (Super Mario World) • Porcupo • Rip Van Fish • Spike Top • Thwimp • Wiggler |
---|
Obstacles | Bowser Statue • Candy ring • Cannon • Cannonball • Falling Spike* • Fire-Bar* • Giant Cannonball • Lava • Rocket Engine • Roto-disc • Spike Trap • Tornado • Turtle Cannon |
---|
World-e Minigames* | Ball Throwing Minigame • Balloon Fight Minigame • Digging Minigame |
---|
Other | Glitches • Media • Pre-release and unused content • Staff |
---|
*Only in Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 |
[Edit] Mario games |
---|
Platformers | Super Mario series | Super Mario Bros. (1985, NES) • Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels (1986, FCD) • Super Mario Bros. 2 (1988, NES) • Super Mario Bros. 3 (1988, NES) • Super Mario Land (1989, GB) • Super Mario World (1990, SNES) • Super Mario Land 2: 6 Golden Coins (1992, GB) • Super Mario 64 (1996, N64) • Super Mario Sunshine (2002, GCN) • New Super Mario Bros. (2006, NDS) • Super Mario Galaxy (2007, Wii) • New Super Mario Bros. Wii (2009, Wii) • Super Mario Galaxy 2 (2010, Wii) • Super Mario 3D Land (2011, 3DS) • New Super Mario Bros. 2 (2012, 3DS) • New Super Mario Bros. U (2012, Wii U) • Super Mario 3D World (2013, Wii U) • Super Mario Maker (2015, Wii U) • Super Mario Run (2016, iOS/Android) • Super Mario Odyssey (2017, NS) • Super Mario Maker 2 (2019, NS) |
---|
Mario vs. Donkey Kong series | Mario vs. Donkey Kong (2004, GBA) • Mario vs. Donkey Kong 2: March of the Minis (2006, DS) • Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Minis March Again! (2009, DSiWare) • Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Mini-Land Mayhem! (2010, DS) • Mario and Donkey Kong: Minis on the Move (2013, 3DS) • Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Tipping Stars (2015, 3DS/Wii U) • Mini Mario & Friends: amiibo Challenge (2016, 3DS/Wii U) |
---|
Other | Donkey Kong (1981, Arcade) • Mario Bros. (1983, Arcade) • Mario's Cement Factory (1983, G&W) • Mario Bros. Special (1984, PC88) • Punch Ball Mario Bros. (1984, PC88) • VS. Wrecking Crew (1984, Arcade) • Wrecking Crew (1985, NES) • Super Mario Bros. Special (1986, PC88) • Mario & Wario (1993, SNES) • Hotel Mario (1994, Philips CD-i) • Donkey Kong (1994, Game Boy) • Mario Clash (1995, VB) • Wrecking Crew '98 (1998, SFC) • Super Princess Peach (2005, DS) |
---|
Ports and remakes | Crazy Kong (1981, Arcade) • Donkey Kong (1982, G&W) • Mario Bros. (1983, G&W) • VS. Super Mario Bros. (1986, Arcade) • All Night Nippon Super Mario Bros. (1986, FCD) • Super Mario Bros. (1987, G&W) • Kaettekita Mario Bros. (1988, FCD) • Super Mario All-Stars (1993, SNES) • Super Mario All-Stars + Super Mario World (1994, SNES) • BS Super Mario USA (1996, SNES) • BS Super Mario Collection (1997, SNES) • Super Mario Bros. Deluxe (1999, GBC) • Super Mario Advance (2001, GBA) • Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2 (2002, GBA) • Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 (2003, GBA) • Famicom Mini Series (2004, GBA) • Classic NES Series (2004-2005, GBA) • Super Mario 64 DS (2004, NDS) • Virtual Console (2006-current, Wii/3DS/Wii U) • Super Mario All-Stars Limited Edition (2010, Wii) • New Super Luigi U (2013, Wii U) • Luigi Bros. (2013, Wii U) • Super Mario Maker for Nintendo 3DS (2016, 3DS) • New Super Mario Bros. U Deluxe (2019, NS) |
---|
Role-playing games | Paper Mario series | Paper Mario (2000, N64) • Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door (2004, GCN) • Super Paper Mario (2007, Wii) • Paper Mario: Sticker Star (2012, 3DS) • Paper Mario: Color Splash (2016, Wii U) |
---|
Mario & Luigi series | Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga (2003, GBA) • Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time (2005, NDS) • Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story (2009, NDS) • Mario & Luigi: Dream Team (2013, 3DS) • Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam (2015, 3DS) |
---|
Other | Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars (1996, SNES) |
---|
Remakes | Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga + Bowser's Minions (2017, 3DS) • Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story + Bowser Jr.'s Journey (2018, 3DS) |
---|
Dr. Mario series | Main | Dr. Mario (1990, NES) • Dr. Mario 64 (2001, N64) • Dr. Mario Online Rx (2008, WiiWare) • Dr. Mario Express (2008, DSiWare) • Dr. Luigi (2013, Wii U) • Dr. Mario: Miracle Cure (2015, 3DS) • Dr. Mario World (2019, iOS/Android) |
---|
Other | VS. Dr. Mario (1990, Arcade) |
---|
Remakes | Tetris & Dr. Mario (1994, SNES) • Nintendo Puzzle Collection (2003, GCN) • Dr. Mario & Puzzle League (2005, GBA) |
---|
Mario Kart series | Main | Super Mario Kart (1992, SNES) • Mario Kart 64 (1996, N64) • Mario Kart 64 (slot machine) (1997, Arcade) • Mario Kart: Super Circuit (2001, GBA) • Mario Kart: Double Dash!! (2003, GCN) • Mario Kart Arcade GP (2005, Arcade) • Mario Kart DS (2005, NDS) • Mario Kart Arcade GP 2 (2007, Arcade) • Mario Kart Wii (2008, Wii) • Mario Kart 7 (2011, 3DS) • Mario Kart Arcade GP DX (2013, Arcade) • Mario Kart 8 (2014, Wii U) • Mario Kart Arcade GP VR (2017, Arcade) • Mario Kart Tour (2019, iOS/Android) |
---|
Remakes | Mario Kart 8 Deluxe (2017, NS) |
---|
Mario Party series | Mario Party (1998, N64) • Mario Party 2 (1999, N64) • Mario Party 3 (2000, N64) • Mario Party 4 (2002, GCN) • Mario Party-e (2003, GBA) • Mario Party 5 (2003, GCN) • Super Mario Fushigi no Korokoro Party (2004, Arcade) • Mario Party 6 (2004, GCN) • Mario Party Advance (2005, GBA) • Super Mario Fushigi no Korokoro Party 2 (2005, Arcade) • Mario Party 7 (2006, GCN) • Mario Party 8 (2007, Wii) • Mario Party DS (2007, NDS) • Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher (2009, Arcade) • Mario Party Kurukuru Carnival (2012, Arcade) • Mario Party 9 (2012, Wii) • Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher 2 (2013, Arcade) • Mario Party: Island Tour (2013, 3DS) • Mario Party 10 (2015, Wii U) • Mario Party Challenge World (2016, Arcade) • Mario Party: Star Rush (2016, 3DS) • Mario Party: The Top 100 (2017, 3DS) • Super Mario Party (2018, NS) |
---|
Luigi's Mansion series | Main | Luigi's Mansion (2001, GCN) • Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon (2013, 3DS) • Luigi's Mansion Arcade (2015, Arcade) • Luigi's Mansion 3 (2019, NS) |
---|
Remakes | Luigi's Mansion (2018, 3DS) |
---|
Sports games | Mario Baseball series | Mario Superstar Baseball (2005, GCN) • Mario Super Sluggers (2008, Wii) |
---|
Mario Golf series | Golf (1984, NES) • Family Computer Golf: Japan Course (1987, FCD) • Family Computer Golf: U.S. Course (1987, FCD) • NES Open Tournament Golf (1991, NES) • Mario Golf (1999, N64) • Mario Golf (1999, GBC) • Mobile Golf (2001, GBC) • Mario Golf: Toadstool Tour (2003, GCN) • Mario Golf: Advance Tour (2004, GBA) • Mario Golf: World Tour (2014, 3DS) |
---|
Mario Strikers series | Super Mario Strikers (2005, GCN) • Mario Strikers Charged (2007, Wii) |
---|
Mario Tennis series | Mario's Tennis (1995, VB) • Mario Tennis (2000, N64) • Mario Tennis (2000, GBC) • Mario Power Tennis (2004, GCN) • Mario Tennis: Power Tour (2005, GBA) • Mario Tennis Open (2012, 3DS) • Mario Tennis: Ultra Smash (2015, Wii U) • Mario Tennis Aces (2018, NS) |
---|
Ports | New Play Control! Mario Power Tennis (2009, Wii) |
---|
Other | NBA Street V3 (2005, GCN) • SSX on Tour (2005, GCN) • Mario Hoops 3-on-3 (2006, NDS) • Mario Sports Mix (2010, Wii) • Mario Sports Superstars (2017, 3DS) |
---|
Crossovers | Mario & Sonic series | Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games (2007, Wii) • Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games (2008, NDS) • Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games (2009, Wii) • Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games (2009, NDS) • Mario & Sonic at the London 2012 Olympic Games (2011, Wii) • Mario & Sonic at the London 2012 Olympic Games (2012, 3DS) • Mario & Sonic at the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games (2013, Wii U) • Mario & Sonic at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games (2016, Wii U) • Mario & Sonic at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games (2016, 3DS) • Mario & Sonic at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games Arcade Edition (2016, Arcade) • Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 (2019, NS/Arcade) |
---|
Super Smash Bros. series | Super Smash Bros. (1999, N64) • Super Smash Bros. Melee (2001, GCN) • Super Smash Bros. Brawl (2008, Wii) • Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS (2014, 3DS) • Super Smash Bros. for Wii U (2014, Wii U) • Super Smash Bros. Ultimate (2018, NS) |
---|
Other | Itadaki Street DS (2007, NDS) • Fortune Street (2011, Wii) • Nintendo Land (2012, Wii U) • Puzzle & Dragons: Super Mario Bros. Edition (2015, 3DS) • Mario + Rabbids Kingdom Battle (2017, NS) |
---|
Edutainment games | Mario Discovery series | Mario is Missing! (1993, MS-DOS/SNES/NES) • Mario's Time Machine (1993, MS-DOS/SNES/NES) • Mario's Early Years! Fun with Letters (1993, MS-DOS/SNES) • Mario's Early Years! Fun with Numbers (1994, MS-DOS/SNES) • Mario's Early Years! Preschool Fun (1994, MS-DOS/SNES) |
---|
Other | Mario Teaches Typing (1991, MS-DOS) • Super Mario Bros. & Friends: When I Grow Up (1991, MS-DOS) • Mario Teaches Typing 2 (1996, MS-DOS) |
---|
Ports | Mario's Early Years! CD-ROM Collection (1995, PC) |
---|
Art utilities | Super Mario Bros. Print World (1991, MS-DOS) • Mario Paint (1992, SNES) • Super Mario Collection Screen Saver (1997, PC) • Mario no Photopi (1998, N64) • Mario Artist: Paint Studio (1999, N64DD) • Mario Artist: Talent Studio (2000, N64DD) • Mario Artist: Communication Kit (2000, N64DD) • Mario Artist: Polygon Studio (2000, N64DD) |
---|
Miscellaneous | Main | Mario's Bombs Away (1983, G&W) • Yoshi's Safari (1993, SNES) • Undake30 Same Game (1995, SFC) • Mario's Game Gallery (1995, MS-DOS) • Mario's Picross (1995, GB) • Mario's Super Picross (1995, SFC) • Donkey Kong (slot machine) (1996, Arcade) • Picross 2 (1996, GB) • Excitebike: Bun Bun Mario Battle Stadium (1997, Satellaview) • Mario's FUNdamentals (1998, Windows) • Picross NP (1999-2000, SFC) • Super Mario Fushigi no Janjan Land (2003, Arcade) • Mario Pinball Land (2004, GBA) • Yakuman DS (2005, NDS) • Dance Dance Revolution: Mario Mix (2005, GCN) • Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker (2014, Wii U) |
---|
Ports | Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker (2018, NS/3DS) |
---|
Mario franchise | Dr. Mario & Puzzle League • Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga • Mario Golf: Advance Tour • Mario Kart: Super Circuit • Mario Party Advance • Mario Pinball Land • Mario Tennis: Power Tour • Mario vs. Donkey Kong • Super Mario Advance • Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 • Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2 |
---|
Yoshi franchise | Yoshi's Island: Super Mario Advance 3 • Yoshi Topsy-Turvy |
---|
Wario franchise | Wario Land 4 • WarioWare, Inc.: Mega Microgame$! • WarioWare: Twisted! |
---|
Donkey Kong franchise | DK: King of Swing • Donkey Kong Country • Donkey Kong Country 2 • Donkey Kong Country 3 |
---|
Classic NES series | Classic NES Series: Donkey Kong • Classic NES Series: Dr. Mario • Classic NES Series: Super Mario Bros. |
---|
Famicom Mini series | Famicom Mini: Mario Bros. • Famicom Mini: Super Mario Bros. 2 • Famicom Mini: Wrecking Crew |
---|
e-Reader | Donkey Kong-e • Donkey Kong Jr.-e • Donkey Kong 3-e • Golf-e • Mario Bros.-e • Mario Party-e • Pinball-e |
---|
Other | Densetsu no Starfy 3 • Diddy Kong Pilot (2001/2003) (canceled) • Donkey Kong Coconut Crackers (canceled) • Game & Watch Gallery 4 |
---|
|