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Dr. Mario

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This article is about the doctor persona of Mario. For the game, see Dr. Mario (game). For other uses, see Dr. Mario (disambiguation).
Dr. Mario
Dr. Mario in Dr. Mario World
Artwork of Dr. Mario holding a capsule from Dr. Mario World
Species Human
First appearance Dr. Mario (1990)
Latest appearance WarioWare: Move It! (2023)
Latest portrayal Charles Martinet (2001 - 2022)
“Hi everybody! I'm Mario. How's it going? Over the last few years, I've been involved in some pretty wild adventures. Now, believe it or not, I work in the virus research lab at the Mushroom Kingdom Hospital. Today I'm about to begin my research as usual.”
Dr. Mario, Dr. Mario NES manual, p. 3

Dr. Mario is the persona Mario assumes in the Dr. Mario series. Under this identity, Mario dons a lab coat, a head mirror, and a stethoscope around his neck. Debuting in his eponymous game, Dr. Mario and his assistant Nurse Toadstool work at the Mushroom Kingdom Hospital, where he eliminates viruses and other diseases by using capsules, a premise that has been the standard for subsequent games starring him. Dr. Mario is a character separate from Mario in some media, such as the Super Smash Bros. series.

History[edit]

Dr. Mario series[edit]

Dr. Mario[edit]

Dr. Mario's original design for his titular game
Dr. Mario in the game

In Dr. Mario (and its remakes VS. Dr. Mario, Tetris & Dr. Mario, Dr. Mario BS Version, and Dr. Mario & Puzzle League), Dr. Mario works in a virus research lab at the Mushroom Kingdom Hospital, alongside Nurse Toadstool.[1] When an experiment goes wrong, the hospital is flooded with tri-color viruses.[2] Armed with vitamin capsules–a medicine of his own invention[3]–Dr. Mario sets out to neutralize the outbreak. In gameplay, Dr. Mario periodically throws vitamin capsules into the bottle. Afterwards, the player can move and land them on Viruses, which spawn throughout the bottle. By connecting a line of three or more halves of vitamins to a virus of the corresponding color, the Virus disappears. As such, blue vitamins eliminate Chill Viruses (blue), red vitamins eliminate Fever Viruses (red), and yellow vitamins eliminate Weird Viruses (yellow). Removing all viruses on the screen advances the player to the next level. Dr. Mario's design during gameplay also differs in comparison to his appearance in artworks and on the game's cover: his hair and mustache area a light shade of brown, his head mirror's headband is white, and he does not wear gloves.

Dr. Mario 64[edit]

Dr. Mario sprite from Dr. Mario 64.

In Dr. Mario 64, Dr. Mario receives several subtle aesthetic changes, with most of them reflecting Mario's own changes over time. In particular, some sprites feature him wearing a tie, which has since become a staple of his design. However, unlike on the cover and in artworks, his stethoscope is still directly around his neck, his tie is blue instead of red, his head mirror's headband is white instead of gray, his doctor's coat has no buttons or pockets, and he wears a tank top instead of a shirt.

Dr. Mario is one of the two playable characters in Story mode, the other being Wario. In the storyline, Dr. Mario is hard at work curing sick patients across the village with Megavitamins, getting the attention of both Wario and Mad Scienstein. When Dr. Mario leaves the house, his Megavitamins are stolen by Mad Scienstein. Dr. Mario notices Wario after finding out that his Megavitamins are gone, causing him to think that Wario is responsible. After finding out that Wario didn't steal them, both notices Mad Scienstein getting away with the medicine, and a chase ensues. The rivals Dr. Mario and Wario go after him and meet many creatures known from Wario Land 3 on their way. In Wario's storyline, Dr. Mario is his first opponent, and one of his seventh opponents in Normal difficulty or greater. In the end, it is revealed that Rudy is actually sick and Scienstein was ordered to retrieve the magical healing pills to cure him.

In Dr. Mario's storyline, when he reaches Rudy's castle, he confronts Rudy, who got a hold of the Megavitamins. After beating Rudy, he notices the cold that he is having, so Dr. Mario promptly uses his Megavitamins to cure his cold, causing him to feel better before returning back to his home. In Normal difficulty or higher, if Dr. Mario wins every match without redoing any, Wario steals the Megavitamins and ingest them to become Vampire Wario; When Wario is defeated, Dr. Mario returns to Rudy to cure his cold before returning back to his home. In Wario's storyline, after beating Hammer-bot in Easy, Dr. Mario is seen chasing after Mad Scienstein, but is never seen again after that. In Normal or higher difficulty, after Wario has beaten everyone else, Dr. Mario is left behind after defeat, and only returns to confront Wario if Wario wins every match without redoing any. This causes an accident that changes Dr. Mario into Metal Mario, and if beaten, Dr. Mario will return back to normal while being unconscious.

In Vs. modes, his AI difficulty is the second highest, which is the same as both Wario and Mad Scienstein.

Dr. Mario Online Rx[edit]

Gameplay of Dr. Mario Online Rx with Dr. Mario as the character.
Dr. Mario, as seen in Dr. Mario Online Rx.

In Dr. Mario Online Rx, players can control Dr. Mario or any Mii stored in their Wii. Dr. Mario serves a similar role as his debut game; he takes capsules from his bag and throws them into the bottle, using them to defeat viruses. His design is consistent, with blue eyes, a buttoned coat, a shirt, a red tie, a gray head mirror headband, fair skin and the stethoscope has an altered position, now being along his shoulders.

Dr. Mario Express[edit]

Dr. Mario Express gives Dr. Mario the same role as in Dr. Mario Online Rx, though with a cel-shaded model to match the game's cartoonish art style.

Dr. Mario: Miracle Cure[edit]

Dr. Mario appears in the compilation in Dr. Mario: Miracle Cure, which includes his younger twin brother Luigi reprising his role as Dr. Luigi. Miracle Cure features "Dr. Mario", the standard gameplay where Dr. Mario assists players with destroying viruses, as well as two additional modes: "Operation L" from Dr. Luigi and "Virus Buster". One new clearing method Dr. Mario can use is the titular Miracle Cure, which is a gauge that, once filled, can be used to destroy all viruses and capsules of the corresponding color, drop a bomb to remove adjacent viruses and capsules, or clear an entire column.

Dr. Mario World[edit]

Dr. Mario and Dr. Toad in Dr. Mario World
Dr. Mario and Dr. Toad in Dr. Mario World

Dr. Mario appears in Dr. Mario World. Unlike the previous installments, he and Luigi are no longer the sole playable doctors; instead, they are joined by a plethora of their allies, such as Princess Peach and Yoshi, and even some enemies like Bowser, Bowser Jr., and the Koopalings.

Dr. Mario's skill allows him to eliminate the lowest line of objects, and is represented by a big blue and red capsule with Mario's emblem on it. If the lowest line of objects contain only unclearable objects such as cages and Empty Blocks, it will be ignored in favor of the next lowest line with clearable objects. In versus mode, his skill also allows him to clear the bottom-most line with objects, but starting from level 2 it will clear up to two lines, which are the bottom-most line with objects and the line above that. At higher levels, this skill fills up faster.

In a version update, both Dr. Mario and Dr. Peach received Fire Flower-empowered variants, which gives them a lab coat and stethoscope over their normal Fire form outfits. Dr. Fire Mario improves upon Dr. Mario's skill by removing pieces that require multiple matches to clear otherwise. In a subsequent update, Luigi and Rosalina continued this theme. To celebrate the 30th anniversary of Dr. Mario, an 8-bit version of Dr. Mario was given to all players as a gift. His "Newly Added Doctors & Assistants" video had most of the text and many of the visual elements done in pixel art.[4]

8-bit Dr. Mario's skill in stage mode is to eliminate three special viruses, which is represented by an 8-bit magnifying glass hovering over the play area that was temporarily changed to be the same as the screen seen in Dr. Mario (NES). Special viruses are basically any virus that is different from a normal virus, including floatie viruses and viruses encased or covered inside other objects such as barrels or clouds. If there are no more special viruses remaining, his skill will eliminate one random virus or a clearable object with the exception of capsules and coins if no viruses remain. In versus mode, his skill is to temporarily prevent the opponent from controlling half capsules, although half capsules can be pushed down by a full-sized capsule. The versus skill lasts longer and/or have a faster skill meter fill at higher levels. 8-bit Dr. Mario is the only doctor to have decreased speed in filling the attack meter and the skill meter since his introduction, though the changes happen during separate updates.

Nintendo Comics System[edit]

Dr. Mario appears in Nintendo Comics System's adaptation of Dr. Mario, entitled "The Doctor Is In... Over His Head". Mario and Princess Toadstool, expecting a plumbing emergency, enter the Mushroom Kingdom General Hospital, although they find no emergency. Dr. Waldo Bloom insists so and makes Mario his research assistant, calling him Dr. Mario. After touring through the hospital, Dr. Waldo takes them to his laboratory where he shows them the Viruses, and he explains that the Viruses have been multiplying. The original Viruses, inside the jar, soon break free and introduce themselves as Chill, Fever, and Weird. Eventually, after discovering that matching the colors of stacked vitamins can destroy Viruses, Mario manages to defeat them.

Princess Toadstool then advises Dr. Bloom play golf and return only when he is done with the game, but Mario notes that Dr. Bloom is a bad golfer, which means Dr. Bloom will be off duty for a long time. Princess Peach then suggests Mario to be both a plumber and a doctor, which Mario agrees to do.

Super Mario World television series[edit]

In the animated Super Mario World TV show episode "King Scoopa Koopa", Mario finishes off his healthy-eating request to a group of cave people with the line "Dr. Mario's orders!".

In a "we will return" bumper for Captain N and the New Super Mario World, Mario says the line "Dr. Mario says, Captain N and Super Mario Bros. World will return!"

Super Mario Adventures[edit]

Dr. Mario and Nurse Luigi in Super Mario Adventures.
Dr. Mario and Luigi as a nurse in Super Mario Adventures

A possible variant of Dr. Mario appears in the tenth "episode" of Super Mario Adventures. However, he was not a physical doctor, but rather a psychologist. It was also only a ploy to gain the trust of Big Boo and get out of the Ghost House they were trapped in.

Club Nintendo[edit]

Dr. Mario also appears in the German Club Nintendo comic "Süße Weihnachten" where he helps Bowser who suffers from a stomachache on Christmas Day. Bowser has Viruses in his stomach, and Dr. Mario advises him to take bitter pills instead of marzipan.

Super Mario (Kodansha manga)[edit]

Cover of Yoshi's Island manga by Comic BomBom
Artwork featuring Dr. Mario from Super Mario: Yoshi Island 3.

While in Dr. Mario, Mario dons his doctor attires to save the Mushroom Kingdom and then his brother from Bowser's homemade Viruses, in the rest of the manga series, Dr. Mario becomes his own character, separate from Mario, taking the role of the Mushroom Kingdom's doctor. He is also the stepfather of a cat-girl Toad named Kinoppe. In Super Mario: Yoshi Island 3, it is revealed that he was already of adult age and practicing during the Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island events, during which he met and rescued Kinoppe's mother.

Super Mario-kun[edit]

Mario often dons his doctor robe in multiple occasions in Super Mario-kun, starting from the very first chapter. While he mostly uses it to cure his partners, he also uses it to throw the capsules, having a different effect every chapter: sometimes they heal, sometimes they are jetpacks that he attaches to a Red Shell to strike down a Snifit army, and sometimes they have collateral effects like rapidly growing a Garlic Pot to fill the one who eats it with roots.

In Volume 2, while recapping his previous adventures, Mario recalls the events of Dr. Mario, in which, about to treat a patient, he ran off scared of the surgery saw he pulled out.

In Volume 8, Mario ends up turning into Dr. Mario not by choice, but because a Tweeter was sucking his blood.

Dr. Mario appears in a special chapter of Super Mario Manga Mania, entitled "Super Mari-Old". While Mario is dealing with a mid-life crisis, Dr. Mario walks in and forces a giant pill down Mario. It cures Mario from his depression, and only then Mario and his friends to realize that Mario and Dr. Mario are occupying the same room. Dr. Mario explains that he is Mario from 25 years in the future, celebrating the series' 50th anniversary. After his work is done, he hops on Doraemon's time machine, to go back to his time.

Super Mario 4koma Manga Theater[edit]

Dr. Mario also makes a short appearance in one strip of Super Mario 4koma Manga Theater. Here, he receives a patient, which turns out to be a Dry Bones, much to his annoyance.

Super Smash Bros. series[edit]

The Super Mario franchise emblem, from Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS / Wii U.
Super Smash Bros. fighter
Dr. Mario
Dr. Mario from Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Game appearances
Super Smash Bros. Melee (unlockable)
Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS (unlockable)
Super Smash Bros. for Wii U (unlockable)
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate (unlockable)
Special moves
Neutral:  Megavitamins
Side:  Super Sheet
Up:  Super Jump Punch
Down:  Dr. Tornado
Final Smash:  Doctor Finale
Battle entrance
A wall of vitamin capsules appear, and Dr. Mario is shown contemplatively holding his forehead before appearing surprised as they disappear.

Super Smash Bros.[edit]

While Dr. Mario does not appear in Super Smash Bros., he is mentioned in Mario's profile as one of his professions.

Super Smash Bros. Melee[edit]

SmashWiki article: Dr. Mario (SSBM)

Dr. Mario is an unlockable fighter in Super Smash Bros. Melee. He can be unlocked by clearing Classic Mode or Adventure Mode with Mario without using any continues or by playing 100 Melee matches, and then defeating him in the immediate subsequent match on Peach's Castle. Unlike in his home series, Dr. Mario has a somewhat different design, having a blue stethoscope, a brown head mirror headband and a pair of dark gray pants. Like his normal self, Dr. Mario's weight is 100 units. The default theme from his game, "Fever", is available in the soundtrack. Due to being a moveset clone, the overwhelming majority of Dr. Mario's moves are nearly identical to his normal self's.[5] The concept of a slower, yet stronger Mario was originally considered to be used for Wario, a concept that went to Dr. Mario instead due to time constraints.[6] Some of Dr. Mario's animations are less energetic and thus make him appear more serious and contemplative.[5] Besides an increased strength, Dr. Mario throws Megavitamins instead of Fireballs, his forward smash uses electricity instead of fire, he uses the white-colored Super Sheet instead of the Cape, and his Super Jump Punch is stronger despite consisting of fewer hits. Dr. Mario cannot wall jump like Mario. His air speed is slightly faster than his normal self's.

Super Smash Bros. Brawl[edit]

Although Dr. Mario is absent from Super Smash Bros. Brawl as a playable character, data for Dr. Mario can be found, suggesting that he was intended to be in the game in some form. Meanwhile, his Super Smash Bros. Melee theme can be used as one of the songs that plays in the PictoChat and custom stages, as well as an arrangement of the "Chill" theme, which plays on Flat Zone 2. There is also a Sticker of Dr. Mario that depicts his artwork from the original Dr. Mario game.

Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS / Wii U[edit]

Dr. Mario artwork.
Official artwork of Dr. Mario from Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS / Wii U.
SmashWiki article: Dr. Mario (SSB4)

Dr. Mario appears in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and Super Smash Bros. for Wii U as an unlockable fighter. Dr. Mario can be unlocked in the Nintendo 3DS version by first either completing Classic Mode with Mario on at least 4.0 intensity or playing 60 Smash matches, then defeating Dr. Mario himself on Mushroomy Kingdom. Dr. Mario can be unlocked in the Wii U version by first either completing a Master Orders ticket with a difficulty level of Hard or higher or by playing 50 Smash matches, and then defeating Dr. Mario on Delfino Plaza. In addition to retaining his moveset, albeit with some mechanic modifications, the custom versions of Dr. Mario's neutral, side, and up special moves are shared with Mario, though the custom versions of Dr. Tornado are instead shared with Luigi, owing to Mario having F.L.U.D.D. as his down special move since Super Smash Bros. Brawl. Dr. Mario's Final Smash, Doctor Finale, is a variation of Mario's Mario Finale that uses giant vitamin capsules instead of giant, streaming Fireballs. Dr. Mario has also gained two new taunts, a new idle animation, a new entrance animation, and a new victory animation that replaces the victory pose he shared with Mario in Super Smash Bros. Melee. Like Mario, Dr. Mario is a middlewight close-range fighter. Unlike in Super Smash Bros. Melee, Dr. Mario functions like a stronger, yet slower Mario due to multipliers being applied to his damage output and some of his attributes. Dr. Mario has the ability to Wall Jump, unlike his previous appearance. Conversely, his mobility is lowered from Mario's attributes. These multipliers result in Dr. Mario being distinctly affected by passive equipment physics, in which he specifically possesses a +15 Attack value and a -50 Speed value; this allows Dr. Mario to KO opponents more easily than Mario, courtesy of a larger variety of finishing moves.

Dr. Mario's design is now a composition of his appearance as of Dr. Mario 64 and his dark gray pants from Super Smash Bros. Melee, although with a few original changes from this game: his stethoscope has a slightly different color scheme, his pants are rolled up to his ankles, and his neck is longer due to the graphics, allowing him to wear a dress shirt and necktie under the labcoat rather than just a white shirt, and his tie is looser compared to his home series. To reflect this change, Dr. Mario can wear tie equipment to boost his defense stat instead of the overalls equipment his normal self uses. However, he also uses the gloves and shoes equipment for attack and speed like Mario does.

Super Smash Bros. Ultimate[edit]

SmashWiki article: Dr. Mario (SSBU)

Dr. Mario appears as an unlockable fighter in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. Although he still functions as a stronger, yet slower clone of Mario, Dr. Mario has nevertheless been slightly de-cloned from his normal self in a few ways. His new back throw consists of him lifting the opponent on his shoulders and then powerfully throwing them away with a single arm, his idle pose and Super Sheet have updated animations, and his traction is slightly higher than Mario's. Like several other fighters, a number of Dr. Mario's standard attacks received nicknames: up smash is Ear, Nose, and Throat, neutral aerial is Dr. Kick, forward aerial is Dr. Punch, down aerial is CLEAR! (Bone Drill prior to version 2.0.0), and down throw is Hospital Bed.

Aside from these changes, Dr. Mario has received a number of noticeable improvements. His damage multiplier has increased from 1.12× to 1.175×, further bolstering his already high overall damage output. Dr. Mario has a new down aerial where he stomps his opponent with both feet, which is capable of meteor smashing when connecting with his feet, which is a trait only Mario has since Super Smash Bros. Melee, and has a hitbox on his chest that launches the opponents away. His aforementioned back throw has higher knockback that, when coupled with his higher overall damage output, makes it one of the strongest back throws in the game.

For the Megavitamins move, the capsules are not only larger, but also gained a higher launching angle, increased hitlag, decreased ending lag, better hitbox placements and increased knockback. Altogether, these changes make them much more effective for camping and setting up combos at the comparatively minor cost of their ability to lock a downed opponent. Dr. Tornado gained a drastic increase to its damage output and knockback, which make it a viable finisher unlike in previous installments. In addition, it boasts improved utility, courtesy of its improved vertical recovery and its ability to grant damage-based armor during frames 2-9 when Dr. Mario uses it on the ground.

However, Dr. Mario's grounded and aerial mobility use a negative multiplier with an unspecified value: although his walking and running speeds are slightly faster and his jump is higher, his short hop and double jump are slightly lower and his already sluggish air speed is slightly slower. Aside from these issues, Dr. Mario's up tilt gained the same horizontal range reduction that Mario's acquired, and his grabbing ability is hampered by Ultimate's near-universal lag increase for grabs.

As with several other returning characters, Dr. Mario's victory theme, which is the orchestral arrangement of the level clear theme from Super Mario Bros. (and is shared with Mario, Luigi, Peach, and Daisy), has been slightly shortened and sped up compared to the previous installments.

Dr. Mario's Classic Mode route involves him fighting red-, yellow-, and blue-colored variants of different characters, as a reference to the Viruses from the Dr. Mario series.

  1. Three Mr. Game & Watches on Flat Zone X
  2. Three Kirbys on Green Greens
  3. Three Yoshi on Yoshi's Island
  4. Three Wii Fit Trainers on Wii Fit Studio
  5. Three R.O.B.s on Battlefield
  6. Three Wario (overalls) on Luigi's Mansion
  7. Final boss against Master Hand, as well as Crazy Hand on intensity 7.0 or higher, on Final Destination

Paper Mario[edit]

Dr. Mario was given a reference in Paper Mario when the thankful Whale told Mario that he should be addressed by the title of "Dr. Mario" after Mario and his partners expelled the Fuzzipede from the Whale's body, thus ending his stomachache.

WarioWare series[edit]

Dr. Mario appears sometimes in the WarioWare series. In WarioWare, Inc.: Mega Microgame$!, he appears in a microgame named after him based on the Family Computer game, and there is a parody minigame titled Dr. Wario, but the only difference is Wario takes the role of being the doctor. Dr. Mario again stars in another one of his own microgames in WarioWare Gold.

Nintendo Monopoly[edit]

In Nintendo Monopoly, Dr. Mario is seen on the "Receive for medical services $25" ? Block Card.

Super Mario series[edit]

Super Mario Maker[edit]

Dr. Mario in is also one of the several characters that compose Costume Mario in Super Mario Maker; players can unlock the Dr. Mario costume by using the appropriate amiibo or completing one of the several challenges, which randomly unlocks a costume character. When players use Dr. Mario, sound effects from the NES version of Dr. Mario play, and when +Control Pad up is pressed, Dr. Mario takes out a capsule.

Super Mario Odyssey[edit]

Dr. Mario in Super Mario Odyssey
Mario dressed as Dr. Mario, as seen in Super Mario Odyssey

In Super Mario Odyssey, Dr. Mario appears as one of Mario's outfits: the Doctor Headwear and Doctor Outfit.

Yoshi's Woolly World[edit]

One of Yoshi's designs in Yoshi's Woolly World is based on Dr. Mario. Players can scan a Dr. Mario amiibo to unlock the color scheme.

Mario Kart series[edit]

Mario Kart Live: Home Circuit[edit]

Mario and Luigi's Doctor outfits from Mario Kart Live: Home Circuit
Mario and Luigi's Doctor outfits from Mario Kart Live: Home Circuit
Mario and Luigi's Doctor outfits from Mario Kart Live: Home Circuit

In Mario Kart Live: Home Circuit, Dr. Mario and Dr. Luigi appear as outfits for Mario and Luigi.

Mario Kart Tour[edit]

Dr. Mario is playable in Mario Kart Tour, being added alongside Dr. Luigi as a separate driver from Mario in his own tour, the 2022 Doctor Tour. Both have the Capsule as their special skill. One of Dr. Mario's trick animations mimics his victory animation at the end of a multiplayer match in Dr. Mario, complete with the same limited number of frames.[7] Dr. Bowser and Dr. Peach later debuted in the May 2022 Peach vs. Bowser Tour.

List of appearances[edit]

Title Description Release date System/format
Dr. Mario Playable character 1990 NES
Game Boy
Nintendo Vs. System
Nintendo PlayChoice-10
The Doctor Is In... Over His Head Major character 1990 Nintendo Comics System
Süße Weihnachten Minor appearance 1991 Club Nintendo
Super Mario-Kun Minor appearance 1991 Manga
Super Mario Bros. & Friends: When I Grow Up Minor appearance 1991 MS-DOS
Dr. Mario Playable character 1992 Gamewatch Boy
Tetris & Dr. Mario Playable character 1994 SNES
Dr. Mario BS Version Playable character 1997 Satellaview
Dr. Mario 64 Playable character 2001 Nintendo 64
Super Smash Bros. Melee Unlockable playable character 2001 Nintendo GameCube
WarioWare, Inc.: Mega Microgame$! Cameo in microgame 2003 Game Boy Advance
WarioWare, Inc.: Mega Party Game$! Cameo in microgame 2003 Nintendo GameCube
Classic NES Series: Dr. Mario Port of original game 2004 Game Boy Advance
Dr. Mario & Puzzle League Playable character 2005 Game Boy Advance
Super Smash Bros. Brawl Minor appearance; sticker 2008 Wii
Dr. Mario Online Rx Playable character 2008 Wii (WiiWare)
Dr. Mario Express Playable character 2008 Nintendo DSi (DSiWare)
Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS Unlockable playable character 2014 Nintendo 3DS
Super Smash Bros. for Wii U Unlockable playable character 2014 Wii U
Dr. Mario: Miracle Cure Playable character 2015 Nintendo 3DS
Yoshi's Woolly World Cameo as amiibo Yoshi design 2015 Wii U
Super Mario Maker Playable cameo as Costume Mario 2015 Wii U
Minecraft: Wii U Edition Playable skin in the Super Mario Mash-up 2016 Wii U
Poochy & Yoshi's Woolly World Cameo as amiibo Yoshi design 2017 Nintendo 3DS
Minecraft: Nintendo Switch Edition Playable skin in the Super Mario Mash-up 2017 Nintendo Switch
Super Mario Odyssey Playable character (costume) 2017 Nintendo Switch
Minecraft: New Nintendo 3DS Edition Playable skin in the Super Mario Mash-up 2018 New Nintendo 3DS
Minecraft: Bedrock Edition Playable skin in the Super Mario Mash-up 2018 Nintendo Switch
WarioWare Gold Cameo in microgame 2018 Nintendo 3DS
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate Unlockable playable character 2018 Nintendo Switch
Super Mario Maker 2 Cameo as a Mii Maker Profile outfit 2019 Nintendo Switch
Dr. Mario World Playable character as Dr. Mario and 8-Bit Dr. Mario 2019 iOS/Android
Mario Kart Live: Home Circuit Playable character (costume) 2020 Nintendo Switch
Mario Kart Tour Unlockable playable character 2022 (Doctor Tour) iOS/Android
WarioWare: Move It! Cameo in microgame 2023 Nintendo Switch

Profiles and statistics[edit]

Main article: List of Dr. Mario profiles and statistics

Super Smash Bros. Ultimate[edit]

Spirit
#8 Dr. Mario
Dr Mario - Dr Mario Miracle Cure.png Series/game Dr. Mario Series
Type Fighter
How to obtain Clear Classic Mode as Dr. Mario

Gallery[edit]

For this subject's image gallery, see Gallery:Dr. Mario.

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese ドクターマリオ[?]
Dokutā Mario
Doctor Mario
Chinese (simplified) 马力欧医生[?]
Mǎlì'ōu Yīshēng
Doctor Mario
Chinese (traditional) 瑪利歐醫生[?]
Mǎlì'ōu Yīshēng
Doctor Mario
Dutch Dokter Mario[?] Doctor Mario
French Docteur Mario[?] Doctor Mario
German Doktor Mario[?] Doctor Mario
Italian Dottor Mario[?] Doctor Mario
Korean 닥터 마리오[?]
Dakteo Mario
Doctor Mario
Portuguese Doutor Mario[?] Doctor Mario
Russian Доктор Марио[?]
Doktor Mario
Doctor Mario
Spanish Doctor Mario[?] -

Trivia[edit]

  • In an interview about the Super Mario series for the then-upcoming 30th anniversary, Shigeru Miyamoto implied that "Dr. Mario" was not a licensed doctor.[8] Despite this, in the background of the title screen of Dr. Mario: Miracle Cure, a degree can be seen on the wall.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "I'm Mario. How's it going? Over the last few years, I've been involved in some pretty wild adventures. Now, believe it or not, I work in the virus research lab at the Mushroom Kingdom Hospital." – 1991. Dr. Mario (NES) instruction manual. Nintendo (American English). Page 3.
  2. ^ "One of the experiments has gone out of control. The viruses are spreading quickly!" – 1991. Dr. Mario (NES) instruction manual. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 3.
  3. ^ "I have just developed a new vitamin that should be able to take care of it. I sure hope this stuff works!" – 1991. Dr. Mario (NES) instruction manual. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 3.
  4. ^ Nintendo Mobile (July 27, 2020). Newly Added Doctor (Jul. 27, 2020). YouTube. Retrieved Nov 2, 2024.
  5. ^ a b News Flash! Super Smash Bros.: Dr. Mario. Source Gaming. Retrieved June 5, 2024.
  6. ^ The Definitive Unused Fighters List in Smash – Source Translations. Source Gaming. Retrieved June 5, 2024.
  7. ^ @mariokarttourEN (April 28, 2022). X post. X. Retrieved June 5, 2024.
  8. ^ Ryckert, Dan (September 10, 2015). Mario's Creators Answer Burning Questions About The Series. GameInformer. Retrieved June 5, 2024.