Difference between revisions of "Portal: Mario"
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==Nintendo Switch== | ==Nintendo Switch== | ||
− | In 2017, ''[[Super Mario Odyssey]]'' was released for the [[Nintendo Switch]]. This game revamped the 3D ''Mario'' gameplay with an open-world setting, to critical acclaim. The Switch also saw the release of ''[[Super Mario Maker 2]]'' in 2019, which heavily expanded upon the level creation options and added a new gameplay style based on a 2-D version of ''Super Mario 3D World''. | + | In 2017, ''[[Super Mario Odyssey]]'' was released for the [[Nintendo Switch]]. This game revamped the 3D ''Mario'' gameplay with an open-world setting, to critical acclaim. The Switch also saw the release of ''[[Super Mario Maker 2]]'' in 2019, which heavily expanded upon the level creation options and added a new gameplay style based on a 2-D version of ''Super Mario 3D World''. As for ''Luigi's Mansion'', it received both a 3DS remake of the original game and a [[Luigi's Mansion 3|new installment]] in 2019. |
The Switch also became home to ports of several Wii U games, including ''[[Mario Kart 8 Deluxe]]'', ''New Super Mario Bros. U Deluxe'' and ''Captain Toad; Treasure Tracker'' (the latter of which was also made available for the 3DS). Alphadream also began remaking earlier ''Mario & Luigi'' games for the 3DS with additional modes, starting with ''[[Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga + Bowser's Minions]]'' in 2017 and set to continue with ''[[Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story + Bowser Jr.'s Journey]]'' in 2019. | The Switch also became home to ports of several Wii U games, including ''[[Mario Kart 8 Deluxe]]'', ''New Super Mario Bros. U Deluxe'' and ''Captain Toad; Treasure Tracker'' (the latter of which was also made available for the 3DS). Alphadream also began remaking earlier ''Mario & Luigi'' games for the 3DS with additional modes, starting with ''[[Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga + Bowser's Minions]]'' in 2017 and set to continue with ''[[Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story + Bowser Jr.'s Journey]]'' in 2019. | ||
− | Nintendo also expanded Mario's mobile presence in 2019 by launching ''[[Dr. Mario World]]'' and ''[[Mario Kart Tour]]''. In 2020, the ''Paper Mario'' series continued on the Switch with ''[[Paper Mario: The Origami King]]''. | + | Sports games also continued on the Switch, with the release of ''[[Mario Tennis Aces]]'' and the latest ''Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games''. Nintendo also expanded Mario's mobile presence in 2019 by launching ''[[Dr. Mario World]]'' and ''[[Mario Kart Tour]]''. In 2020, the ''Paper Mario'' series continued on the Switch with ''[[Paper Mario: The Origami King]]''. |
=Subseries= | =Subseries= | ||
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*''[[Super Mario Land]]'' (1989) | *''[[Super Mario Land]]'' (1989) | ||
*''[[Super Mario Land 2: 6 Golden Coins]]'' (1992) | *''[[Super Mario Land 2: 6 Golden Coins]]'' (1992) | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===''Donkey Kong''/''Mario vs. Donkey Kong''=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | The original ''[[Portal: Donkey Kong|Donkey Kong]]'' series was a set of arcade games in which Mario and [[Donkey Kong]] made their first appearances. In 1994, a Game Boy remake of ''Donkey Kong'' doubled as a sequel with 96 new levels that featured a new puzzle-like gameplay in which Mario must find a key in each level and bring it to the exit door to clear the level. The original ''Mario vs. Donkey Kong'' was made a decade later as a successor for that game on the Game Boy Advance. Its sequels then shifted direction to focus instead on controlling the [[MIni-Mario]] toys in a ''Lemmings''-like style of gameplay. This ultimately culminated in a Wii U game focusing entirely on Mini toys of various ''Mario'' characters. | ||
+ | |||
+ | *''[[Donkey Kong GB]]'' (1994) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario vs. Donkey Kong]]'' (2004) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario vs. Donkey Kong 2: March of the Minis]]'' (2006) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Minis March Again!]]'' (2009) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Mini-Land Mayhem!]]'' (2010) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario and Donkey Kong: Minis on the Move]]'' (2013) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Tipping Stars]]'' (2015) | ||
+ | *''[[Mini Mario & Friends: amiibo Challenge]]'' (2016) | ||
===''Super Mario'' (3D)=== | ===''Super Mario'' (3D)=== | ||
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===''Super Mario Maker''=== | ===''Super Mario Maker''=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | These games allow players to create and share their own custom ''Mario'' levels, in the style of 2-D platformers. | ||
*''[[Super Mario Maker]]'' (2015) | *''[[Super Mario Maker]]'' (2015) | ||
+ | *''[[Super Mario Maker 2]]'' (2019) | ||
===Remakes=== | ===Remakes=== | ||
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===''Yoshi''=== | ===''Yoshi''=== | ||
− | The ''Yoshi'' series officially started with ''Yoshi's Island'', although it was preceded by several standalone games of different genres featuring the character (''[[Yoshi (game)|Yoshi]]'', ''[[Yoshi's Cookie]]'' and ''[[Yoshi's Safari]]''). | + | The ''Yoshi'' series officially started with ''Yoshi's Island'', although it was preceded by several standalone games of different genres featuring the character (''[[Yoshi (game)|Yoshi]]'', ''[[Yoshi's Cookie]]'' and ''[[Yoshi's Safari]]''). The ''Yoshi'' series started with ''Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island'' for the Super NES, which established the basic gameplay of the ''Yoshi'' subseries. The ''Yoshi'' games could be divided into two types: ones in which Yoshis carry Baby Mario around (which are primarily the ''Yoshi's Island'' ones) and games that feature Yoshi adventuring without Baby Mario. The two most recent games have also featured the aesthetic of having the entire world being made out of different types of material (yarn in ''Wooly World'' and general craft items in ''Crafted World''). |
+ | |||
+ | Most of these games are set in the past and typically feature Baby Bowser and/or [[Kamek]] as antagonists. Some of the games also use time travel to have future versions of Bowser and Kamek make appearances within the past era. | ||
− | *''[[Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island]]'' | + | *''[[Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island]]'' (1995) |
− | *''[[Yoshi's Story]]'' | + | *''[[Yoshi's Story]]'' (1997) |
+ | *''[[Yoshi Topsy-Turvy]]'' (2004) | ||
+ | *''[[Yoshi Touch & Go]]'' (2005) | ||
+ | *''[[Yoshi's Island DS]]'' (2006) | ||
+ | *''[[Yoshi's New Island]]'' (2014) | ||
+ | *''[[Yoshi's Woolly World]]'' (2015) | ||
+ | *''[[Yoshi's Crafted World]]'' (2019) | ||
===''Luigi's Mansion''=== | ===''Luigi's Mansion''=== | ||
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===''Paper Mario''=== | ===''Paper Mario''=== | ||
− | *''[[Paper Mario]]'' | + | Developed by [[Intelligent Systems]], the ''Paper Mario'' games follow a general aesthetic in which the characters and the world around them appear to be made out of paper or other craft materials. These games typically feature Mario as the main playable character, along with a partner character. The first two games featured their own battle system and a number of unique partners who were recruited over the course of the game. The third game, ''Super Paper Mario'' for the Wii, removed many of the RPG elements for a more platforming-like experience and allowed the player to switch between several playable characters while the partner system was downplayed. Afterwards, Miyamoto's critique of the series caused it to change course for the following entries. ''Sticker Star'' returned to RPG gameplay, but with heavily simplified gameplay and story, and only one partner character was featured per game. |
− | *''[[Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door]]'' | + | |
− | *''[[Super Paper Mario]]'' | + | *''[[Paper Mario]]'' (2000) |
− | *''[[Paper Mario: Sticker Star]]'' | + | *''[[Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door]]'' (2004) |
− | *''[[Paper Mario: Color Splash]]'' | + | *''[[Super Paper Mario]]'' (2007) |
− | *''[[Paper Mario: The Origami King]]'' | + | *''[[Paper Mario: Sticker Star]]'' (2012) |
+ | *''[[Paper Mario: Color Splash]]'' (2016) | ||
+ | *''[[Paper Mario: The Origami King]]'' (2020) | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===''Mario & Luigi''=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | The second ''Mario'' RPG series was one for handheld systems that was developed by [[AlphaDream]]. These games featured a cartoony style, and the gameplay was based around the idea of Mario and Luigi acting as a team, and with a heavy expansions upon the concept of timed hits from other ''Mario'' RPG games. Later games of the series also featured additional playable characters, such as Baby Mario and Baby Luigi or Bowser. The last original game of the series was ''Paper Jam'', which acted as a crossover with the ''Paper Mario'' games. Afterwards, the last two games were remakes of previous games that each added a new campaign mode wherein the player controlled Bowser's minions on their own misadventures parallel to the original games' stories. With AlphaDream's closure in 2019, the future of the series remains unclear. | ||
+ | |||
+ | *''[[Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga]]'' (2003) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time]]'' (2005) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story]]'' (2009) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario & Luigi: Dream Team]]'' (2013) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam]]'' (2015) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga + Bowser's Minions]]'' (2017) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story + Bowser Jr.'s Journey]]'' (2019) | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Spin-off Games== | ||
+ | |||
+ | These games feature various characters from the ''Mario'' series engaging in activities outside of the normal gameplay style, which mostly consist of different sports, kart racing or other recreational activities. These games are usually geared towards multiplayer experiences and have little to no stories to them, with few exceptions. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===''Mario Kart''=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | The most prevalent of Mario's spin-off series, ''Mario Kart'' is a series of kart racing games featuring ''Mario'' characters. There has been one ''Mario Kart'' series for each of Nintendo's major systems. | ||
+ | |||
+ | *''[[Super Mario Kart]]'' (1992) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Kart 64]]'' (1996) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Kart: Double Dash!!]]'' (2001) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Kart: Super Circuit]]'' (2003) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Kart DS]]'' (2005) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Kart Wii]]'' (2008) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Kart 7]]'' (2011) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Kart 8]]'' (2014) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Kart 8 Deluxe]]'' (2017) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Kart Tour]]'' (2019) | ||
+ | |||
+ | Additionally, there is a subseries of ''Mario Kart'' games made for arcades, known as ''Mario Kart Arcade GP''. Developed in conjunction with Bandai Namco, these games feature guest appearances by characters from the ''Pac-Man'' and ''Tamagotchi'' series. | ||
+ | |||
+ | *''[[Mario Kart Arcade GP]]'' (2005) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Kart Arcade GP 2]]'' (2007) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Kart Arcade GP DX]]'' (2013) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Kart Arcade GP VR]]'' (2017) | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Golf=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | Originally, the NES had several golf games in which the main character was referred to as Mario. ''[[NES Open Tournament Golf]]'' was a distant predecessor to the later ''Mario Golf'' games in 1991, as it was the first one to feature a cast of playable ''Mario'' characters (though only four of them, along with [[Donkey Kong]] appeared as an NPC). The ''Mario Golf'' had its true start in 1999, when ''Mario Golf'' was released for the Nintendo 64. All ''Mario Golf'' games have been developed by [[Camelot]]. The first two handheld games could connect to their console counterparts and also acted as their own subseries, as they featured story modes with original characters, RPG elements and continuity between the two games. The production of ''Mario Golf'' games has slowed down compared to ''Tennis'', with only one game having come out since the Gamecube/Game Boy Advance pair (and with a ten year gap in between those released), although it was among the sports featured in 2017's ''Mario Sports Superstars''. | ||
+ | |||
+ | *''[[Mario Golf]]'' (1999) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Golf (GBC)]] (1999) | ||
+ | *''[[Mobile Golf]]'' (2001) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Golf: Toadstool Tour]]'' (2003) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Golf: Advance Tour]]'' (2004) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Golf: World Tour]]'' (2014) | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Tennis=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | Nintendo originally tried making a tennis game known as ''Mario's Tennis'' for the ill-fated [[Virtual Boy]] in 1995. As with ''Mario Golf'', the series did not truly start until Camelot developed ''Mario Tennis'' for the Nintendo 64. Another element shared with the ''Mario Golf'' games is that the connectivity between the first two handheld games and their console counterparts, and the handheld games also bearing RPG elements and stories featuring original characters. In contrast to the ''Mario Golf'' series, the ''Mario Tennis'' series has received regular releases on most of Nintendo's consoles over the years, and tennis was also one of the sports featured in 2017's ''Mario Sports Superstars''. | ||
+ | |||
+ | *''[[Mario's Tennis]]'' (1995) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Tennis]]'' (2000) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Tennis (GBC)]] (2000) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Power Tennis]]'' (2004) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Tennis: Power Tour]]'' (2005) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Tennis Open]]'' (2012) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Tennis: Ultra Smash]]'' (2015) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Tennis Aces]]'' (2018) | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===''Mario Party''=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | The ''Mario Party'' subseries is a popular series of party games featuring Mario and his company. The game involves a board game-like set-up in which players navigate a board and compete in minigames while trying to collect the most coins and/or stars. Hudson Soft originally developed the series until their closure, after which NDCUbe took over the series. For their first two games (''Mario Party 9'' and ''10''), they incorporated a new gameplay style in which characters navigated the board together on a vehicle, before ''Super Mario Party'' returned the series to the classic style of gameplay. | ||
+ | |||
+ | *''[[Mario Party]]'' (1998) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Party 2]]'' (1999) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Party 3]]'' (2000) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Party 4]]'' (2002) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Party 5]]'' (2003) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Party 6]]'' (2004) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Party 7]]'' (2005) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Party 8]]'' (2007) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Party 9]]'' (2012) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Party 10]]'' (2015) | ||
+ | *''[[Super Mario Party]]'' (2018) | ||
+ | |||
+ | There are also several games released outside of the series' original numbering, primarily for handheld systems. | ||
+ | |||
+ | *''[[Mario Party-e]]'' (2003) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Party Advance]]'' (2005) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Party DS]]'' (2007) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Party: Island Tour]]'' (2013) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Party: Star Rush]]'' (2016) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Party: The Top 100]]'' (2017) | ||
+ | |||
+ | Finally, several ''Mario Party'' arcade games were made in Japan. Developed by Capcom, these machines typically use versions of existing minigames and/or boards from the main ''Mario Party'' games. | ||
+ | |||
+ | *''[[Super Mario Fushigi no Korokoro Party]]'' (2004) | ||
+ | *''[[Super Mario Fushigi no Korokoro Party 2]]'' (2005) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher]]'' (2009) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Party Kurukuru Carnival]]'' (2012) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher 2]]'' (2013) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Party Challenge World]]'' (2016) | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Baseball=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | There were two ''Mario'' baseball games developed by Namco-Bandai in association with Nintendo, one on the Gamecube and the other on Wii. Baseball was also one of the sports featured in ''Mario Sports Superstars'' in 2017. | ||
+ | |||
+ | *''[[Mario Superstar Baseball]]'' (2005) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Super Sluggers]]'' (2008) | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Soccer=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | The soccer games, known as ''Mario Strikers'', were developed by Next Level Games. These games were known for having their own distinctive art style. As with the baseball games, there were only two games (specifically for the Gamecube and Wii), and the sport was later featured in ''Mario Sports Superstars'' in 2017. However, the soccer part of that game was not based on ''Strikers'', lacking its art style and adhering more to the actual rules of soccer. | ||
+ | |||
+ | *''[[Super Mario Strikers]]'' (2005) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Strikers Charged]]'' (2007) | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Other/Compilation Sports=== | ||
− | + | Square worked with Nintendo to make ''Mario Hoops 3-on-3'' for the Nintendo DS win 2006. This was Mario's sole basketball game and featured a crossover with Square's ''Final Fantasy'' franchise. This was followed by the first sports compliation, ''Mario Sports Mix'' for the Nintendo Wii in 2010. Also made by Rare and featuring a similar ''Final Fantasy'' crossover, that game featured basketball as well as hockey, dodgeball and volleyball. The next sports compilation game would be ''Mario Sports Superstars'' for the 3DS in 2017, which comprised of the four most recurring ''Mario'' sports (golf, tennis, baseball and soccer) as well as adding horse riding. | |
− | + | *''[[Mario Hoops 3-on-3]]'' (2006) | |
+ | *''[[Mario Sports Mix]]'' (2010) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario Sports Superstars]]'' (2017) | ||
− | = | + | ===''Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games''=== |
+ | |||
+ | As the name indicates, this game acts as a crossover containing characters from the ''Super Mario'' and ''Sonic the Hedgehog'' series, competing in different events of the Olympics. There has been an installment tying into each occurrence of the Olympic Games, with the only exception being the Pyeongchang 2020 Olympics. Most installments have also consisted of both a console and handheld version of the game. | ||
+ | |||
+ | *''[[Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games]]'' (2007) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games]]'' (2009) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario & Sonic at the London 2012 Olympic Games]]'' (2011) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario & Sonic at the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games]]'' (2013) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario & Sonic at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games]]'' (2016) | ||
+ | *''[[Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020]]'' (2019) | ||
+ | |||
+ | =In Other Series= | ||
There were several licensed games that were created in the 1990s, including ''[[Nintendo Games on Philips CD-i|Hotel Mario]]'' for the Philips CD-i. | There were several licensed games that were created in the 1990s, including ''[[Nintendo Games on Philips CD-i|Hotel Mario]]'' for the Philips CD-i. | ||
− | The ''Mario'' series has also been represented in Nintendo's popular crossover fighting game series, ''[[Portal: Super Smash Bros.|Super Smash Bros.]]''. Mario, Luigi, Yoshi and Donkey Kong have been playable since the first game, with later games adding Princess Peach, Bowser, Dr. Mario, Wario, Diddy Kong, Rosalina and Bowser Jr/the Koopalings as playable characters. The series also features items, stages, enemies and music from throughout the various ''Mario'' games, as well as trophies | + | The ''Mario'' series has also been represented in Nintendo's popular crossover fighting game series, ''[[Portal: Super Smash Bros.|Super Smash Bros.]]''. Mario, Luigi, Yoshi and Donkey Kong have been playable since the first game, with later games adding Princess Peach, Bowser, Dr. Mario, Wario, Diddy Kong, Rosalina and Bowser Jr/the Koopalings as playable characters. The series also features items, stages, enemies and music from throughout the various ''Mario'' games, as well as trophies, assist trophies, stickers and [[Spirit]]s depicting characters and other elements of the series. |
In 2017, ''[[Mario + Rabbids: Kingdom Battle]]'' was released for the Switch. This was a roleplaying game which crossed over the ''Mario'' characters with Ubisoft's ''Raving Rabbids'' series. | In 2017, ''[[Mario + Rabbids: Kingdom Battle]]'' was released for the Switch. This was a roleplaying game which crossed over the ''Mario'' characters with Ubisoft's ''Raving Rabbids'' series. | ||
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==Feature film== | ==Feature film== | ||
− | The ''Super Mario Bros.'' | + | The first movie based on the series was a live action one called ''Super Mario Bros.'' that was released in 1993. It starred Bob Hoskins as Mario, John Leguizamo as Luigi, Dennis Hooper as Bowser (once more called Koopa) and Samantha Mathis as Daisy, who was used as the Mushroom Kingdom's princess instead of Peach. The movie depicted the Mushroom Kingdom in more of a gritty sci-fi manner, as it was shown to exit in a lost world full of humans who had evolved from dinosaurs instead of primates. Set in a city called Dinohatten, Koopa ruled the world and used technology to de-evolve others as punishment, turning the former king into sentient fungus while traitors were turned into bulky, dim-witted dinosaur men referred to as Goombas. Yoshi also appeared as an small dinosaur that was being kept as a pet. Daisy (who was born from an egg) was sent to Brooklyn as a baby to protect her. In the movie, Mario and Luigi stumbled into a portal to the world by accident after Daiy's kidnapping, and they learned more about the strange world while embarking on a quest to defeat Koopa. The movie was critically planned and divided Mario fans due to the movie's distance from the source material. |
+ | |||
+ | It was decades later until another ''Mario''-based movie was made in 2023. It was a CGI-animated movie by the studio Illumination which was known as ''The Super Mario Bros. Movie''. The voice cast included Chris Pratt as Mario, Charlie Day as Luigi, Ana Taylor Joy as Princess Peach, Jack Black as Bowser, Keegan Michael Key as [[Toad]], Seth Rogan as [[Donkey Kong]], Fred Armisen as [[Cranky Kong]], Kevin Michael Richardson as [[Kamek]] and Sebastian Maniscalco as [[Foreman Spike]], along with Charles Martinet making voice cameos as Mario's father and a man named Giueseppe (who speaks with an Italian accent similar to his portrayal of Mario). This movie was an origin story for the Mario Bros. using a similar background as the previous film and cartoons in which they started off as plumbers in Brooklyn before stumbling into the Mushroom Kingdom. Mario and Luigi were separated in the journey across worlds, with Mario ending up in the Mushroom Kingdom while Luigi fell into Bowser's clutches. Mario worked together with Princess Peach and Toad to put together an effort to thwart Bowser's upcoming invasion of the Mushroom Kingdom, and to do so they sought out the aid of the Kongs, who were shown to be led by Cranky Kong with Donkey Kong as his son and champion. The Kongs crafted karts for all of them to ride in reference to the ''Mario Kart'' games. The movie was filled with references throughout the ''Mario'' series and to other Nintendo franchises, with some characters making small appearances such as Foreman Spike, [[Pauline]], several Kong characters and a [[Luma]]. A herd of Yoshis also appeared at one point, with the post-credits sequence teasing [[Yoshi]] hatching in Brooklyn. This movie received a mix of reviews, with some fans finding it to be a faithful adaptation of the ''Mario'' games while critics did not like the writing, and some fans also took task with some of the movie's casting. Regardless, the movie quickly became the highest-grossing video game adaptation of all time and broke several box office records. | ||
=See Also= | =See Also= |
Latest revision as of 07:40, 19 April 2023
Mario | |
---|---|
Developer | Nintendo |
Games | List of all games |
Debut | Donkey Kong (1981) |
Gallery | GH Gallery |
The Mario series (alternately referred to as Mario Brothers/Bros. or Super Mario) is an expansive video game franchise consisting of multiple subseries. These feature the heroic plumber Mario, who usually saves princesses and/or kingdoms from forces that are most commonly led by Bowser. Luigi is his brother who initially was created as someone for a second player to control, but later games have expanded his personality and given him more of a distinctive role, although his experiences have become infrequent.
The character of Mario takes his roots back in the original Donkey Kong game that first appeared in the arcades in 1981. Since then, Mario has grown to star in his own series of self-titled games. The main games are platforming adventures in 2-D and later 3-D styles, but there are also several spinoff series ranging from sports, RPGs, party games, and independent games for other characters such as Yoshi, Wario and Peach.
History[edit]
Origins and Early Games[edit]
The franchise itself is the brainchild of Shigeru Miyamoto, and though most of the games in the franchise are made without him, he has remained the guiding hand for all of the games in the primary series of platforming adventure games. The character of Mario was originally created for the arcade game Donkey Kong in 1981, then known as Jumpman until Nintendo of America chose to name him Mario. After a brief foray as a villain in Donkey Kong Jr., Mario was spun off to his own games.
The first game to feature both brothers was the 1983 arcade game Mario Bros.. This game introduced Luigi as the character who could be controlled by a second player. It was a simple competitive one-screen action game, but it still introduced several other recurring elements of the Mario Bros. series, including the turtle enemies (later Koopas), the presence of warp pipes, and the brothers being known as plumbers.
NES[edit]
The definitive first game of the series was Super Mario Bros., which was released for the NES in 1985. This game established a foundation upon which most other Mario Bros. games were based, featuring Mario and Luigi on a quest in the Mushroom Kingdom to save Princess Peach from Bowser. Along with the setting and the new characters that would become essential parts of the series, this game also introduced a variety of enemies that would appear throughout the series such as Goombas and Lakitus. It also established the series as a side-scrolling platformer and introduced power-ups, including the Super Mushroom and Fire Flower.
Super Mario Bros. spawned two different direct sequels. The original Super Mario Bros. 2 was basically an expanded and more difficult version of the original game. Nintendo of America considered it too hard for American players, so instead the game Doki Doki Panic was reworked to feature Mario characters and was released in America as Super Mario Bros. 2 in 1988. Its follow-up was the more original Super Mario Bros. 3, which featured various new worlds, enemies and abilities, and it introduced a group of minibosses known as the seven children. It became one of the most popular of the series and has been reported as one of the best-selling games of all time.
The Mario series also began branching into more subseries.In 1989, Super Mario Land had been released for the Game Boy. This spawned a smaller platformer series that wound up introducing Mario's rival Wario as the antagonist of 1992's Super Mario Land 2: 6 Golden Coins, at which point the series transitioned into Wario's own series. Additionally, Dr. Mario was released for the NES in 1990 and led to several other Mario puzzle games over the years.
Super NES[edit]
In 1990, Super Mario World, was released as the Super Nintendo's launch game. This installment expanded on the Mario formula using the Super NES's superior capabilities. The Koopalings returned, and Mario's loyal steed Yoshi was introduced, leading to the game becoming another popular installment. It was followed by Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island in 1996, a prequel game set while Mario, Luigi and Bowser were babies. This acted as a springboard for Yoshi's own spin-off games and also introduced the baby characters that would later be used a lot in spin-off games.
Super Mario Kart was released in 1992, proving to be a popular spin-off game that started the trend of kart racing games while paving the way for future Mario sports spin-offs. There was also a less successful attempt at a Mario shooter in 1993 in the form of Yoshi's Safari. In 1996, Square worked with Nintendo to make Mario's first RPG game, Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars, which expanded on the Mario world while influencing various Mario RPG games that would follow over the years, with writing that was largely humorous in nature while also featuring emotional elements and a unique gameplay style.
Nintendo 64[edit]
The platformer games than made a transition from 2D side-scrolling to 3D games with the coming of the Nintendo 64 in 1996. Super Mario 64, the system's launch game, defined the formula for the 3D Mario games in the same way that Super Mario Bros. had for the 2D ones. The basic premise of rescuing the princess from Bowser remained the same, but now Mario operated from a hub overworld from which various different worlds could be reached. Instead of having individual linear levels, the free-roaming worlds had specific goals that had to be accomplished to earn special items, in this case Power Stars. These collectible items could then be used to unlock more worlds and more areas of the hub overworld, as well as boss battles. Additionally, Mario was given a wider variety of acrobatic moves as well as a life meter, as opposed to the 2D Mario who could only jump without power-ups. Like the other Mario launch games, Super Mario 64 proved to be wildly popular and inspired most other 3D platformers of that era.
The Nintendo 64 era was also known for the spinoffs released in that time. It saw the release of Yoshi's Story, which cemented Yoshi's spin-off games, as well as the beginnings of the Mario Party series and the regularly released Mario sports games such as Mario Tennis and Mario Golf. Although no more platformers were made on the Nintendo 64 after Super Mario 64]], a new RPG called Paper Mario was released that combined RPG and platformer features in a new way that spawned another subseries. At the same time, most handheld releases for the Game Boy Color and Game Boy Advance consisted of remakes of classic Mario games as well as various sports and spin-off games.
Gamecube[edit]
In 2001, the Gamecube era launched with a non-platformer game starring Mario's brother Luigi, which was called Luigi's Mansoon. It was notable as the first to star Luigi without his brother (not counting the licensed game Mario is Missing!) and his first major appearance after he had been left out of Super Mario 64. This was a game that was more about exploration and armed Luigi with a flashlight and vacuum weapon, which provoked a mixed reception. However, A 3D Mario platformer was still in development and was released in 2002 as Super Mario Sunshine This game used an island setting and equipped Mario with a water-spraying backpack known as FLUDD, which had a variety of functions depending on the equipped nozzle. This game also received mixed reviews, due to the usage of FLUDD and the emphasis on cleaning up pollution found throughout the game, although this game also introducing popular recurring characters such as Bowser Jr. and Petey Piranha. The Gamecube also contained more sports titles, the traditional Mario Kart follow-up (in the form of Mario Kart: Double Dash!!, which also took non-traditional choices to mixed reception) and the more popular Paper Mario sequel, Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door.
A new RPG series also started on the GBA with Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga in 2003, which starred both brothers, with a gameplay system that featured more platformer elements than the other RPG games. It was followed up by two more sequels on the DS that expanded upon the concept, Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time and Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story. The GBA also revisited another classic premise in the form of Mario vs. Donkey Kong, which acted as a modernized revival of the Donkey Kong concept using various influences from the 1994 Game Boy remake and ended up forming its own subseries. When the Nintendo DS eventually launched in 2004, it came with a Mario game that was an expanded remake of Super Mario 64 known as Super Mario 64 DS to show off the DS's capabilities. The DS has also featured further Yoshi games, as well as one game featuring the princess known as Super Princess Peach, in addition to the usual set of sports games, a party game and a kart racing game.
Nintendo later released its first fully original 2D Mario platformer in over a decade for the DS, known as New Super Mario Bros.. This game used the classic side-scrolling gameplay style mixed with some of the acrobatic moves and enemies from the 3D games, as well as power-ups both old and new, and the game became wildly popular.
Wii[edit]
With the release of the Wii, there was a bit of a gap before it received original Mario titles. 2007's Super Paper Mario was reworked from a Gamecube game and reversed the normal Paper Mario formula by being primarily a platformer with RPG characteristics, as well as featuring Peach, Bowser and Luigi as playable characters. The Wii later saw the latest 3D platformer in the form of Super Mario Galaxy, which featured Mario in an intergalactic setting traveling across various planets and introduced a new character, Rosalina. The Wii also featured more sports games, along with another party installment and another kart game. A series of sports game pitting Mario and company against Sega's mascot Sonic the Hedgehog and friends (Nintendo's former rival during the 1990s) also started with 2008's Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games.
A follow-up to the popular New Super Mario Bros. idea was released for the Nintendo Wii with the simple title of New Super Mario Bros. Wii. This game naturally expanded upon the DS predecessor with the Wii's capabilities, including a multiplayer cooperative option for progressing through the game, although the playable characters were restricted to the Mario brothers and a pair of oddly-colored Toads. This game also saw the return of the Koopalings, whom had been absent for much of a decade since Yoshi's Safari, with the exception of a surprise appearance in the first Mario & Luigi. New Super Mario Bros. Wii has also gone on to become one of the Wii's most popular titles. Super Mario Galaxy 2 was also released for the Wii in 2010 and expanded upon the gameplay of the original with the addition of Yoshi and some more new power-ups, as well as Luigi being integrated as a playable character earlier on. These games were followed by new Mario games for the 3DS in 2011 and 2012. The first was Super Mario 3D Land, which combined a 3-D environment with the linear stage design and other gameplay aspects that were primarily associated with the 2-D sidescrollers. This acted as a combination of the two Mario styles and was designed for quick and convenient play. Paper Mario: Sticker Star was also released for the 3DS, being the subseries' first handheld installment and featuring a simplified gameplay style that did not reflect the gameplay of Super Paper Mario. Miyamoto had been displeased with the previous games and their storylines, so this one was made with less of a story focus.
Wii U[edit]
In 2012, the Wii U was released with New Super Mario Bros. U as a launch title, the latest of the New Super Mario Bros. style of the main games. 2013 later saw a focus on games featuring Luigi as a promotional event known as the Year of Luigi, celebrating the 20th anniversary of the character's existence. The releases associated with this included New Super Luigi U (which was DLC for New Super Mario Bros. U), Dr. Luigi (an alternate version of Dr. Mario released as WiiWare), Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon and Mario & Luigi: Dream Team, the latter two being 3DS games.
The Wii U later featured an expanded follow-up to Super Mario 3D Land known as Super Mario 3D World, which was released in 2013. This game featured a cooperative multiplayer option and also featured multiple playable characters including Peach. In 2014, Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker was made as a spin-off of Super Mario Galaxy. Afterwards, Super Mario Maker was released in 2015. This game allowed players to create their own unique sidescrolling Mario levels which could then be played and shared online.
The sports, kart racing and RPG subseries also continued to receive new installments on the Wii U, including Mario Kart 8 and Mario Tennis: Ultra Smash. The Mario & Luigi titles released for the 3DS were Dream Team in 2013 and Paper Jam in 2015, the latter of which featured a Paper Mario crossover. The Paper Mario series also received a new installment on the Wii U in the form of Paper Mario: Color Splash in 2016. Mario also made his mobile debut in the form Super Mario Run, which was based on New Super Mario Bros. and released in December 2016.
Nintendo Switch[edit]
In 2017, Super Mario Odyssey was released for the Nintendo Switch. This game revamped the 3D Mario gameplay with an open-world setting, to critical acclaim. The Switch also saw the release of Super Mario Maker 2 in 2019, which heavily expanded upon the level creation options and added a new gameplay style based on a 2-D version of Super Mario 3D World. As for Luigi's Mansion, it received both a 3DS remake of the original game and a new installment in 2019.
The Switch also became home to ports of several Wii U games, including Mario Kart 8 Deluxe, New Super Mario Bros. U Deluxe and Captain Toad; Treasure Tracker (the latter of which was also made available for the 3DS). Alphadream also began remaking earlier Mario & Luigi games for the 3DS with additional modes, starting with Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga + Bowser's Minions in 2017 and set to continue with Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story + Bowser Jr.'s Journey in 2019.
Sports games also continued on the Switch, with the release of Mario Tennis Aces and the latest Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games. Nintendo also expanded Mario's mobile presence in 2019 by launching Dr. Mario World and Mario Kart Tour. In 2020, the Paper Mario series continued on the Switch with Paper Mario: The Origami King.
Subseries[edit]
This section groups the Mario games by subseries, based on a mix of their titles and genres. Note that these classifications are not official.
Adventure Series[edit]
These are the mainstream games, which are based on Mario (often accompanied by Luigi or some of his other allies) going on platforming adventures. They usually feature some type of storyline as well.
Super Mario Bros.[edit]
These are the 'classic' Super Mario Bros. games that were originally released on the NES. This classification also includes Super Mario World for the Super NES, as it carried on the style of the Super Mario Bros. games. These games are side-scrolling platformers that star Mario, with Luigi as an optional playable character who is usually reserved for the second player. The games' plots mostly involve defeating Bowser in order to save Princess Peach, which would become the basic plot for most Mario games. The one exception is the American version of Super Mario Bros. 2, which contains additional playable characters and a different story due to being developed based on a different game.
- Super Mario Bros. (1985)
- Super Mario Bros. 2 (Japan) (1986)
- Super Mario Bros. 2 (1988)
- Super Mario Bros. 3 (1988)
- Super Mario World (1990)
Super Mario Land[edit]
This series was the handheld counterpart to the Super Mario Bros. series that was released on the Game Boy. It was of a more experimental nature and featured elements that differed from other Mario games in terms of designs for enemies and levels, as well as some gameplay features such as giving Mario vehicles to ride. They also featured characters other than Princess Peach and Bowser, and two prominent recurring Mario characters were created for these games: Princess Daisy and Wario. This series only had two proper tiles before the third game acted as a transition into the Wario Land series.
- Super Mario Land (1989)
- Super Mario Land 2: 6 Golden Coins (1992)
Donkey Kong/Mario vs. Donkey Kong[edit]
The original Donkey Kong series was a set of arcade games in which Mario and Donkey Kong made their first appearances. In 1994, a Game Boy remake of Donkey Kong doubled as a sequel with 96 new levels that featured a new puzzle-like gameplay in which Mario must find a key in each level and bring it to the exit door to clear the level. The original Mario vs. Donkey Kong was made a decade later as a successor for that game on the Game Boy Advance. Its sequels then shifted direction to focus instead on controlling the MIni-Mario toys in a Lemmings-like style of gameplay. This ultimately culminated in a Wii U game focusing entirely on Mini toys of various Mario characters.
- Donkey Kong GB (1994)
- Mario vs. Donkey Kong (2004)
- Mario vs. Donkey Kong 2: March of the Minis (2006)
- Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Minis March Again! (2009)
- Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Mini-Land Mayhem! (2010)
- Mario and Donkey Kong: Minis on the Move (2013)
- Mario vs. Donkey Kong: Tipping Stars (2015)
- Mini Mario & Friends: amiibo Challenge (2016)
Super Mario (3D)[edit]
This classification contains the standard 3-D Mario platforming adventures. Although they are not directly tied together for the most part, they share the same basic gameplay elements. They feature Mario (usually as the sole playable character, with the exception of Luigi in the Galaxy games) exploring 3-D environments, which often contains an overworld and different sandbox-like environments. In each world, rather then traveling to the end of a level, there is usually a specific task that has to be completed to earn Mario a type of collectible item (such as a Power Star) which can be accumulated for the sake of accessing new worlds. The Super Mario games are presented as standalone titles for the most part and treated as big event games for each system. There is usually only one for system, but the prime exception for two of those rules is Super Mario Galaxy, which had a sequel on the same system, making it the only subseries within this.
- Super Mario 64 (1996)
- Super Mario Sunshine (2002)
- Super Mario Galaxy (2007)
- Super Mario Galaxy 2 (2010)
- Super Mario Odyssey (2017)
New Super Mario Bros.[edit]
This subseries is intended to act as a revival of the classic 2-D Mario platforming style, hence the title. Some elements from modern games are also mixed into the game, such as some of Mario's acrobatic moves. The console equivalents of the games are also known for featuring a cooperative multiplayer experience, and New Super Mario Bros. U is also known for properly reintroducing the Koopalings (after they reappeared in Mario & Luigi) after a long absence. The mobile game Super Mario Run also uses the same style as the New Super Mario Bros. games.
- New Super Mario Bros. (2006)
- New Super Mario Bros. Wii (2009)
- New Super Mario Bros. 2 (2012)
- New Super Mario Bros. U (2012)
- Super Mario Run (2015)
Super Mario 3D[edit]
Created by the team behind Super Mario Galaxy, these games act as a blend of the two basic Mario styles. The games feature 3-D environments and gameplay, but they feature linear A-to-B levels as in the 2-D platformers instead of an overworld and/or sandbox-like environments. The first game was released on the 3DS, while its sequel was on the Wii U (and was the only 3-D Mario game released for the system). As with the New Super Mario Bros. series, the console successor added a cooperative multiplayer elements, this time including Princess Peach and Toad as playable characters.
- Super Mario 3D Land (2011)
- Super Mario 3D World (2013)
Super Mario Maker[edit]
These games allow players to create and share their own custom Mario levels, in the style of 2-D platformers.
- Super Mario Maker (2015)
- Super Mario Maker 2 (2019)
Remakes[edit]
These are all of the prominent remakes of Super Mario games over the years, which featured graphical enhancements and/or significant changes to the original game. This started with Super Mario All-Stars for the Super NES, which featured remakes of all four classic Super Mario Bros. games from the Super NES. Then there was Super Mario Bros. Deluxe for the Game Boy (which also included a version of the Japanese Super Mario Bros. 2), followed by the Super Mario Advance subseries for the Game Boy Advance, which featured more remakes of the classic games and added elements such as voice clips and new challenges. Super Mario 64 DS stands as the only substantial remake of a 3-D Mario platformer, which adds more playable characters (Luigi, Wario and Yoshi) as well as additional challenges.
- Super Mario All-Stars (1993)
- Super Mario Bros. Deluxe (1999)
- Super Mario Advance: Super Mario Bros. 2 (2001)
- Super Mario Advance 2: Super Mario World (2001)
- Super Mario Advance 3: Yoshi's Island (2002)
- Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 (2003)
- Super Mario 64 DS (2004)
Adventure Games (Other Characters)[edit]
This classification contains spin-off series and games featuring characters other than Mario. Some individual spin-offs without series include Super Princess Peach and Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker, although the latter received a remake for both the 3DS and Switch.
For Wario's games, see Portal: Wario.
Yoshi[edit]
The Yoshi series officially started with Yoshi's Island, although it was preceded by several standalone games of different genres featuring the character (Yoshi, Yoshi's Cookie and Yoshi's Safari). The Yoshi series started with Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island for the Super NES, which established the basic gameplay of the Yoshi subseries. The Yoshi games could be divided into two types: ones in which Yoshis carry Baby Mario around (which are primarily the Yoshi's Island ones) and games that feature Yoshi adventuring without Baby Mario. The two most recent games have also featured the aesthetic of having the entire world being made out of different types of material (yarn in Wooly World and general craft items in Crafted World).
Most of these games are set in the past and typically feature Baby Bowser and/or Kamek as antagonists. Some of the games also use time travel to have future versions of Bowser and Kamek make appearances within the past era.
- Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island (1995)
- Yoshi's Story (1997)
- Yoshi Topsy-Turvy (2004)
- Yoshi Touch & Go (2005)
- Yoshi's Island DS (2006)
- Yoshi's New Island (2014)
- Yoshi's Woolly World (2015)
- Yoshi's Crafted World (2019)
Luigi's Mansion[edit]
This is a spin-off series featuring Luigi and his adventures in capturing ghosts. These games typically feature Professor E. Gadd (and later [[Polterpup) as a supporting character and King Boo as a villain, and the plot usually involves saving Mario. These games feature a different gameplay style that involves almost no jumping and is instead based around exploring and using different devices, most prominently the Poltergust. The first Luigi's Mansion was released in 2001 as a launch title for the Gamecube, and it did not receive any follow-up until 2013, when Next Level Games began making new entries for the series.
- Luigi's Mansion (2001)
- Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon (2013)
- Luigi's Mansion Arcade (2015)
- Luigi's Mansion 3 (2019)
RPG Series[edit]
The Mario RPG games originated with Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars, which was released on the Super NES in 1996. It was developed by Square and acted as a standalone game, but it influenced the two Mario RPG series that followed it. These links between the RPG games include the timed hits system, Mario's basic moves (jumping and using a hammer as a special attack) and the usage of humor throughout the game. Some terms (such as FP or Flower Points, used as an equivalent of magic points) also were used in some later Mario RPGs.
Paper Mario[edit]
Developed by Intelligent Systems, the Paper Mario games follow a general aesthetic in which the characters and the world around them appear to be made out of paper or other craft materials. These games typically feature Mario as the main playable character, along with a partner character. The first two games featured their own battle system and a number of unique partners who were recruited over the course of the game. The third game, Super Paper Mario for the Wii, removed many of the RPG elements for a more platforming-like experience and allowed the player to switch between several playable characters while the partner system was downplayed. Afterwards, Miyamoto's critique of the series caused it to change course for the following entries. Sticker Star returned to RPG gameplay, but with heavily simplified gameplay and story, and only one partner character was featured per game.
- Paper Mario (2000)
- Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door (2004)
- Super Paper Mario (2007)
- Paper Mario: Sticker Star (2012)
- Paper Mario: Color Splash (2016)
- Paper Mario: The Origami King (2020)
Mario & Luigi[edit]
The second Mario RPG series was one for handheld systems that was developed by AlphaDream. These games featured a cartoony style, and the gameplay was based around the idea of Mario and Luigi acting as a team, and with a heavy expansions upon the concept of timed hits from other Mario RPG games. Later games of the series also featured additional playable characters, such as Baby Mario and Baby Luigi or Bowser. The last original game of the series was Paper Jam, which acted as a crossover with the Paper Mario games. Afterwards, the last two games were remakes of previous games that each added a new campaign mode wherein the player controlled Bowser's minions on their own misadventures parallel to the original games' stories. With AlphaDream's closure in 2019, the future of the series remains unclear.
- Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga (2003)
- Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time (2005)
- Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story (2009)
- Mario & Luigi: Dream Team (2013)
- Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam (2015)
- Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga + Bowser's Minions (2017)
- Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story + Bowser Jr.'s Journey (2019)
Spin-off Games[edit]
These games feature various characters from the Mario series engaging in activities outside of the normal gameplay style, which mostly consist of different sports, kart racing or other recreational activities. These games are usually geared towards multiplayer experiences and have little to no stories to them, with few exceptions.
Mario Kart[edit]
The most prevalent of Mario's spin-off series, Mario Kart is a series of kart racing games featuring Mario characters. There has been one Mario Kart series for each of Nintendo's major systems.
- Super Mario Kart (1992)
- Mario Kart 64 (1996)
- Mario Kart: Double Dash!! (2001)
- Mario Kart: Super Circuit (2003)
- Mario Kart DS (2005)
- Mario Kart Wii (2008)
- Mario Kart 7 (2011)
- Mario Kart 8 (2014)
- Mario Kart 8 Deluxe (2017)
- Mario Kart Tour (2019)
Additionally, there is a subseries of Mario Kart games made for arcades, known as Mario Kart Arcade GP. Developed in conjunction with Bandai Namco, these games feature guest appearances by characters from the Pac-Man and Tamagotchi series.
- Mario Kart Arcade GP (2005)
- Mario Kart Arcade GP 2 (2007)
- Mario Kart Arcade GP DX (2013)
- Mario Kart Arcade GP VR (2017)
Golf[edit]
Originally, the NES had several golf games in which the main character was referred to as Mario. NES Open Tournament Golf was a distant predecessor to the later Mario Golf games in 1991, as it was the first one to feature a cast of playable Mario characters (though only four of them, along with Donkey Kong appeared as an NPC). The Mario Golf had its true start in 1999, when Mario Golf was released for the Nintendo 64. All Mario Golf games have been developed by Camelot. The first two handheld games could connect to their console counterparts and also acted as their own subseries, as they featured story modes with original characters, RPG elements and continuity between the two games. The production of Mario Golf games has slowed down compared to Tennis, with only one game having come out since the Gamecube/Game Boy Advance pair (and with a ten year gap in between those released), although it was among the sports featured in 2017's Mario Sports Superstars.
- Mario Golf (1999)
- Mario Golf (GBC) (1999)
- Mobile Golf (2001)
- Mario Golf: Toadstool Tour (2003)
- Mario Golf: Advance Tour (2004)
- Mario Golf: World Tour (2014)
Tennis[edit]
Nintendo originally tried making a tennis game known as Mario's Tennis for the ill-fated Virtual Boy in 1995. As with Mario Golf, the series did not truly start until Camelot developed Mario Tennis for the Nintendo 64. Another element shared with the Mario Golf games is that the connectivity between the first two handheld games and their console counterparts, and the handheld games also bearing RPG elements and stories featuring original characters. In contrast to the Mario Golf series, the Mario Tennis series has received regular releases on most of Nintendo's consoles over the years, and tennis was also one of the sports featured in 2017's Mario Sports Superstars.
- Mario's Tennis (1995)
- Mario Tennis (2000)
- Mario Tennis (GBC) (2000)
- Mario Power Tennis (2004)
- Mario Tennis: Power Tour (2005)
- Mario Tennis Open (2012)
- Mario Tennis: Ultra Smash (2015)
- Mario Tennis Aces (2018)
Mario Party[edit]
The Mario Party subseries is a popular series of party games featuring Mario and his company. The game involves a board game-like set-up in which players navigate a board and compete in minigames while trying to collect the most coins and/or stars. Hudson Soft originally developed the series until their closure, after which NDCUbe took over the series. For their first two games (Mario Party 9 and 10), they incorporated a new gameplay style in which characters navigated the board together on a vehicle, before Super Mario Party returned the series to the classic style of gameplay.
- Mario Party (1998)
- Mario Party 2 (1999)
- Mario Party 3 (2000)
- Mario Party 4 (2002)
- Mario Party 5 (2003)
- Mario Party 6 (2004)
- Mario Party 7 (2005)
- Mario Party 8 (2007)
- Mario Party 9 (2012)
- Mario Party 10 (2015)
- Super Mario Party (2018)
There are also several games released outside of the series' original numbering, primarily for handheld systems.
- Mario Party-e (2003)
- Mario Party Advance (2005)
- Mario Party DS (2007)
- Mario Party: Island Tour (2013)
- Mario Party: Star Rush (2016)
- Mario Party: The Top 100 (2017)
Finally, several Mario Party arcade games were made in Japan. Developed by Capcom, these machines typically use versions of existing minigames and/or boards from the main Mario Party games.
- Super Mario Fushigi no Korokoro Party (2004)
- Super Mario Fushigi no Korokoro Party 2 (2005)
- Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher (2009)
- Mario Party Kurukuru Carnival (2012)
- Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher 2 (2013)
- Mario Party Challenge World (2016)
Baseball[edit]
There were two Mario baseball games developed by Namco-Bandai in association with Nintendo, one on the Gamecube and the other on Wii. Baseball was also one of the sports featured in Mario Sports Superstars in 2017.
- Mario Superstar Baseball (2005)
- Mario Super Sluggers (2008)
Soccer[edit]
The soccer games, known as Mario Strikers, were developed by Next Level Games. These games were known for having their own distinctive art style. As with the baseball games, there were only two games (specifically for the Gamecube and Wii), and the sport was later featured in Mario Sports Superstars in 2017. However, the soccer part of that game was not based on Strikers, lacking its art style and adhering more to the actual rules of soccer.
- Super Mario Strikers (2005)
- Mario Strikers Charged (2007)
Other/Compilation Sports[edit]
Square worked with Nintendo to make Mario Hoops 3-on-3 for the Nintendo DS win 2006. This was Mario's sole basketball game and featured a crossover with Square's Final Fantasy franchise. This was followed by the first sports compliation, Mario Sports Mix for the Nintendo Wii in 2010. Also made by Rare and featuring a similar Final Fantasy crossover, that game featured basketball as well as hockey, dodgeball and volleyball. The next sports compilation game would be Mario Sports Superstars for the 3DS in 2017, which comprised of the four most recurring Mario sports (golf, tennis, baseball and soccer) as well as adding horse riding.
- Mario Hoops 3-on-3 (2006)
- Mario Sports Mix (2010)
- Mario Sports Superstars (2017)
Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games[edit]
As the name indicates, this game acts as a crossover containing characters from the Super Mario and Sonic the Hedgehog series, competing in different events of the Olympics. There has been an installment tying into each occurrence of the Olympic Games, with the only exception being the Pyeongchang 2020 Olympics. Most installments have also consisted of both a console and handheld version of the game.
- Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games (2007)
- Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games (2009)
- Mario & Sonic at the London 2012 Olympic Games (2011)
- Mario & Sonic at the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games (2013)
- Mario & Sonic at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games (2016)
- Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 (2019)
In Other Series[edit]
There were several licensed games that were created in the 1990s, including Hotel Mario for the Philips CD-i.
The Mario series has also been represented in Nintendo's popular crossover fighting game series, Super Smash Bros.. Mario, Luigi, Yoshi and Donkey Kong have been playable since the first game, with later games adding Princess Peach, Bowser, Dr. Mario, Wario, Diddy Kong, Rosalina and Bowser Jr/the Koopalings as playable characters. The series also features items, stages, enemies and music from throughout the various Mario games, as well as trophies, assist trophies, stickers and Spirits depicting characters and other elements of the series.
In 2017, Mario + Rabbids: Kingdom Battle was released for the Switch. This was a roleplaying game which crossed over the Mario characters with Ubisoft's Raving Rabbids series.
Other Media[edit]
Animated Series[edit]
The first adaptation of a Mario game was the Donkey Kong segment of the 80's cartoon Saturday Supercade. It was made in the style of a classic Hanna-Barbara cartoon, with Donkey Kong as the lovable animal protagonist while Mario was more of an antagonist who constantly pursued Donkey Kong; Pauline was depicted as Mario's niece who accompanied him but often became a damsel in distress. There was also a mostly unrelated Donkey Kong Jr. segment in which Donkey Kong Junior (who could talk and was a Scrappy Doo-esque character) traveled with a streetwise teenager named Bones in search of the missing Donkey Kong.
Several anime adaptations were released throughout the 80's that were closer to the source material. In 1986, an anime movie called Super Mario Bros.: Peach-Hime Kyushutsu Dai Sakusen (translated to The Great Mission to Rescue Princess Peach) was released that was based directly on the Super Mario Bros. video game. It featured Mario and Luigi being pulled into the video game world, where they went on an adventure to save Peach from Bowser. Then in 1989, a trio of OVAs were released that featured Mario characters in the roles of classic folk tales: Momotaro, Issun-boshi and Snow White. These notably featured an appearance by the Koopalings, as well as some influence from the later Super Mario Bros. games. None have been released in America.
The Super Mario Bros. Super Show was made in America in 1989 and blended concepts from the first two Western Super Mario Bros. games. This show featured Mario, Luigi, Toad and Peach (or Princess Toadstool as she was known in America at the time) as the main characters. Bowser was known as King Koopa (and had a more crocodile-like design) and often appeared in different costumes, pulling off a different scheme in each episode that usually involved taking over the Mushroom Kingdom or capturing the princess. The first series also featured live action segments set in Brooklyn where Mario and Luigi often got involved in sitcom-like situations and met a variety of guest stars. The original series also featured Captain Lou Albano as Mario, although he did not reprise the role for the follow-up series.
Two follow-up shows to the Super Show were made; in 1990, The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3 incorporated various elements from Super Mario Bros. 3, such as the inclusion of the Koopalings as regularly-appearing characters (but known by different names). The show also featured stronger continuity and episodes set in the real world (but still depicted in animation) as well as within the Mushroom Kingdom. The last short-lived series, Super Mario World, was aired in 1991 and based on the game of the same name. Toad was omitted from this series in place of an original character named Oogtar the caveboy, and Yoshi was added to this series' cast.
Comics and Manga[edit]
From 1990 to 1991, Valient Comics' Nintendo Comics System published several Mario comics that were based on a combination of the American cartoons and the first three games.
In Japan, a manga known as Super Mario-Kun entered publication in 1991 and has been published to the current day. The manga loosely adapts Mario games as they come out, starting with Super Mario World, and infuses them with a comedic slapstick feel.
A comic series called Super Mario Adventures was published in Nintendo Power in 1992. One of the more faithful adaptations, it was drawn in manga-style and featured the Mario Bros. on a quest to rescue Peach before Bowser marries her, with several twists thrown in. This also included characters from the later games such as Yoshi and the Koopalings. Afterwards, two more follow-up comics featuring Wario and based on Super Mario Land 2: 6 Golden Coins were made.
Feature film[edit]
The first movie based on the series was a live action one called Super Mario Bros. that was released in 1993. It starred Bob Hoskins as Mario, John Leguizamo as Luigi, Dennis Hooper as Bowser (once more called Koopa) and Samantha Mathis as Daisy, who was used as the Mushroom Kingdom's princess instead of Peach. The movie depicted the Mushroom Kingdom in more of a gritty sci-fi manner, as it was shown to exit in a lost world full of humans who had evolved from dinosaurs instead of primates. Set in a city called Dinohatten, Koopa ruled the world and used technology to de-evolve others as punishment, turning the former king into sentient fungus while traitors were turned into bulky, dim-witted dinosaur men referred to as Goombas. Yoshi also appeared as an small dinosaur that was being kept as a pet. Daisy (who was born from an egg) was sent to Brooklyn as a baby to protect her. In the movie, Mario and Luigi stumbled into a portal to the world by accident after Daiy's kidnapping, and they learned more about the strange world while embarking on a quest to defeat Koopa. The movie was critically planned and divided Mario fans due to the movie's distance from the source material.
It was decades later until another Mario-based movie was made in 2023. It was a CGI-animated movie by the studio Illumination which was known as The Super Mario Bros. Movie. The voice cast included Chris Pratt as Mario, Charlie Day as Luigi, Ana Taylor Joy as Princess Peach, Jack Black as Bowser, Keegan Michael Key as Toad, Seth Rogan as Donkey Kong, Fred Armisen as Cranky Kong, Kevin Michael Richardson as Kamek and Sebastian Maniscalco as Foreman Spike, along with Charles Martinet making voice cameos as Mario's father and a man named Giueseppe (who speaks with an Italian accent similar to his portrayal of Mario). This movie was an origin story for the Mario Bros. using a similar background as the previous film and cartoons in which they started off as plumbers in Brooklyn before stumbling into the Mushroom Kingdom. Mario and Luigi were separated in the journey across worlds, with Mario ending up in the Mushroom Kingdom while Luigi fell into Bowser's clutches. Mario worked together with Princess Peach and Toad to put together an effort to thwart Bowser's upcoming invasion of the Mushroom Kingdom, and to do so they sought out the aid of the Kongs, who were shown to be led by Cranky Kong with Donkey Kong as his son and champion. The Kongs crafted karts for all of them to ride in reference to the Mario Kart games. The movie was filled with references throughout the Mario series and to other Nintendo franchises, with some characters making small appearances such as Foreman Spike, Pauline, several Kong characters and a Luma. A herd of Yoshis also appeared at one point, with the post-credits sequence teasing Yoshi hatching in Brooklyn. This movie received a mix of reviews, with some fans finding it to be a faithful adaptation of the Mario games while critics did not like the writing, and some fans also took task with some of the movie's casting. Regardless, the movie quickly became the highest-grossing video game adaptation of all time and broke several box office records.