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|developer=[[The Software Toolworks]]
|developer=[[The Software Toolworks]]
|publisher=The Software Toolworks
|publisher=The Software Toolworks
|release={{flag list|USA|December 1993|Europe|March 1994<ref>{{cite|date=February 1994|title=''Total!'' issue 26|publisher=Future Publishing|language=en-GB|url=https://archive.org/details/total-26/page/44|page=44-45}}</ref>}}
|release=December 1993
|languages={{languages|en_us=y|de=y}}
|languages={{languages|en_us=y|de=y}}
|genre=[[Genre#Edutainment|Educational]]
|genre=[[Genre#Edutainment|Educational]]
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|format={{format|snes=1}}
|format={{format|snes=1}}
|input={{input|snes=1}}
|input={{input|snes=1}}
|serials={{flag list|USA|SNS-8M-USA|UK|SNSP-8M-UKV|Germany|SNSP-8M-NOE/SFRG}}
|serials=SNS-8M (U.S.)
}}
}}
'''''Mario's Time Machine''''' is an [[Genre#Educational|educational]] game developed by [[The Software Toolworks]] that was released for the [[Super Nintendo Entertainment System|SNES]] in 1993. It is the successor to ''[[Mario is Missing! (Super Nintendo Entertainment System)|Mario is Missing!]]'' It is intended to teach younger players basic world history and was the last game in the [[Mario Discovery (series)|''Mario Discovery'']] series. This game is mostly based on ''[[Super Mario World]]'', which was a common theme of the ''[[Mario Discovery (series)|Mario Discovery]]'' series and ''Super Mario'' educational games.
'''''Mario's Time Machine''''' is an [[Genre#Educational|educational]] game developed by [[The Software Toolworks]] that was released for the [[Super Nintendo Entertainment System|SNES]] in 1993. It is the successor to ''[[Mario is Missing! (Super Nintendo Entertainment System)|Mario is Missing!]]'' It is intended to teach younger players basic world history and was the last game in the [[Mario Discovery (series)|''Mario Discovery'']] series. This game is mostly based on ''[[Super Mario World]]'', which was a common theme of the ''[[Mario Discovery (series)|Mario Discovery]]'' series and ''Super Mario'' educational games.


==Story==
==Story==
[[File:Timulator in MiM SNES opening.png|thumb|left]]
In the year 1993, [[Bowser]] uses a time machine called a "[[Timulator]]", traveling backwards to different points in [[Earth|human history]] and stealing significant artifacts to place in his personal [[Bowser's Museum|museum]] inside his [[Bowser's Castle|castle]]. With his collection nearly completed, Bowser gloats that not even Mario can stop him now. Mario realizes that history will change forever if he does nothing, so it is up to Mario to use Bowser's own device against him by returning the artifacts to their proper places in time.
In the year 1993, [[Bowser]] uses a time machine called a "[[Timulator]]," traveling backwards to different points in [[Earth|human history]] and stealing significant artifacts to place in his personal [[Bowser's Museum|museum]] inside his [[Bowser's Castle|castle]]. With his collection nearly completed, Bowser gloats that not even Mario can stop him now. Mario realizes that history will change forever if he does nothing, so it is up to Mario to use Bowser's own device against him by returning the artifacts to their proper places in time.


Bowser plans to destroy his time machine, deliberately planning to irreversibly damage history and send the world back to the Dark Ages.<ref>''Mario's Time Machine'' SNES instruction booklet, page 1.</ref>
Bowser plans to destroy his time machine, deliberately planning to irreversibly damage history and send the world back to the Dark Ages.<ref>''Mario's Time Machine'' SNES instruction booklet, page 1.</ref>


==Gameplay==
==Gameplay==
[[File:Mario in Mario's Time Machine.png|frame|left]]
Being a port of the PC release, this version has a few changes to the original game. There is less content overall, so Mario travels to fewer time periods, and there are some graphical changes such as the design of the time machine. During the sequence on time's waves, Mario can move in all directions rather than just forward due to the use of Mode 7 on the water, and he must go in a [[whirlpool]] after collecting ten mushrooms. The true ending is similar to the DOS version, only Bowser's puddle remains on the ground throughout the entire credits, and in addition, Bowser only gapes upon noticing the T-Rex foot coming down on him.
Being a port of the PC release, this version has a few changes to the original game. There is less content overall, so Mario travels to fewer time periods, and there are some graphical changes such as the design of the time machine. During the sequence on time's waves, Mario can move in all directions rather than just forward due to the use of Mode 7 on the water, and he must go in a [[whirlpool]] after collecting ten mushrooms. The true ending is similar to the DOS version, only Bowser's puddle remains on the ground throughout the entire credits, and in addition, Bowser only gapes upon noticing the T-Rex foot coming down on him.
{{br|left}}


==Time periods==
==Time periods==
[[File:MTM SNES Orleans.png|thumb|Mario in Orleans]]
Here is a chart of the location and artifact in chronological order.
Here is a chart of the location and artifact in chronological order.
*369 BC — [[Athens]] ([[Plato]]'s ''[[Republic]]'')
*369 BC — [[Athens]] ([[Plato]]'s ''[[Republic]]'')
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;[[Alexandria]] (47 BC)
;[[Alexandria]] (47 BC)
*This section centers on returning [[Cleopatra]]'s staff to her so that she can reign over Egypt; however, she first reigned in 51 BC (despite one of Cleopatra's guards saying that she was "crowned" in 52 BC) at the bequest of her father and alongside her brother, Ptolemy XIII. She then took sole control after a civil war between her and her brother in 47 BC.<ref>{{cite|author=Anderson, Jaynie|title=''Tiepolo's Cleopatra''|publisher=Macmillan|date=December 1, 2003|isbn=978-1876832445|language=English|page=38–39}}</ref>
*This section centers on returning [[Cleopatra]]'s staff to her so that she can reign over Egypt; however, she first reigned in 51 BC (despite one of Cleopatra's guards saying that she was "crowned" in 52 BC) at the bequest of her father and alongside her brother, Ptolemy XIII. She then took sole control after a civil war between her and her brother in 47 BC.<ref>{{cite|author=Anderson, Jaynie|title=''Tiepolo's Cleopatra''|publisher=Macmillan|date=December 1, 2003|isbn=978-1876832445|language=English|page=38–39}}</ref>
**Cleopatra also says that her staff was passed down from her ancestors, although no such item exists in real life.
*Cleopatra also says that her staff was passed down from her ancestors, although no such item exists in real life.
*Julius Caesar claims that he is allergic to [[cat (Mario's Time Machine)|cat]]s; though his family line, in general, was afflicted with asthma,<ref>{{cite|author=Cantani, Arnaldo|title=''Pediatric Allergy, Asthma and Immunology''|publisher=Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg|date=December 17, 2007|page=724|isbn=978-3540207689}}</ref> Caesar is not known to have been allergic to or even afraid of cats.<ref>{{cite|author=Hankins, Justine|title="That Sinking Feline"|publisher=The Guardian|url=www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2004/nov/06/weekend.justinehankins|date=November 6, 2004|accessdate=December 20, 2017}}</ref>
*Julius Caesar claims that he is allergic to [[cat (Mario's Time Machine)|cat]]s; though his family line, in general, was afflicted with asthma,<ref>{{cite|author=Cantani, Arnaldo|title=''Pediatric Allergy, Asthma and Immunology''|publisher=Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg|date=December 17, 2007|page=724|isbn=978-3540207689}}</ref> Caesar is not known to have been allergic to or even afraid of cats.<ref>{{cite|author=Hankins, Justine|title="That Sinking Feline"|publisher=The Guardian|url=www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2004/nov/06/weekend.justinehankins|date=November 6, 2004|accessdate=December 20, 2017}}</ref>
**Caesar also boasts about having conquered {{wp|Pompeii}}, despite the town having been acquired by Roman general {{wp|Sulla}} during the {{wp|Social War (91–88 BC)|Social War}} in 89 BC,<ref>{{cite|author=Santangelo, Federico|title="Warfare and Politics: Sulla in Italy" - ''Sulla, the Elites and the Empire: A Study of Roman Policies in Italy and the Greek East''|publisher=Brill Academic Pub|date=December 17, 2007|page=68–69|isbn=978-9004163867}}</ref> before Caesar held any power.
*Caesar also boasts about having conquered {{wp|Pompeii}}, despite the town having been acquired by Roman general {{wp|Sulla}} during the {{wp|Social War (91–88 BC)|Social War}} in 89 BC,<ref>{{cite|author=Santangelo, Federico|title="Warfare and Politics: Sulla in Italy" - ''Sulla, the Elites and the Empire: A Study of Roman Policies in Italy and the Greek East''|publisher=Brill Academic Pub|date=December 17, 2007|page=68–69|isbn=978-9004163867}}</ref> before Caesar held any power.
*One of Cleopatra's guards asks Mario to give one of Cleopatra's handmaidens a [[Wooden Snake]] to demonstrate his love for her, and after receiving the gift, she makes a comment about being bitten by the "love scarab." Neither animal is associated with romance or love: snakes are the aggressive guardians of royalty,<ref>{{cite|author=Arnold, Dorothea|title="49. Cobra on Pharaoh's Forehead" - ''An Egyptian Bestiary''|publisher=Metropolitan Museum of Art|date=1995|page=43}}</ref> and can also symbolize chaos, <ref>{{cite|author=Pinch, Geraldine|title="Magic Figurines and Statues" - ''Magic in Ancient Egypt''|publisher=University of Texas Press|date=1994|page=103|isbn=978-0292765597}}</ref> while scarabs symbolize the arrival of the Sun and the reincarnation of humans.<ref>{{cite|author=Pinch, Geraldine|title="Amulets" - ''Magic in Ancient Egypt''|publisher=University of Texas Press|date=1994|page=109|isbn=978-0292765597}}</ref>
*One of Cleopatra's guards asks Mario to give one of Cleopatra's handmaidens a [[Wooden Snake]] to demonstrate his love for her, and after receiving the gift, she makes a comment about being bitten by the "love scarab". Neither animal is associated with romance or love: snakes are the aggressive guardians of royalty,<ref>{{cite|author=Arnold, Dorothea|title="49. Cobra on Pharaoh's Forehead" - ''An Egyptian Bestiary''|publisher=Metropolitan Museum of Art|date=1995|page=43}}</ref> and can also symbolize chaos, <ref>{{cite|author=Pinch, Geraldine|title="Magic Figurines and Statues" - ''Magic in Ancient Egypt''|publisher=University of Texas Press|date=1994|page=103|isbn=978-0292765597}}</ref> while scarabs symbolize the arrival of the Sun and the reincarnation of humans.<ref>{{cite|author=Pinch, Geraldine|title="Amulets" - ''Magic in Ancient Egypt''|publisher=University of Texas Press|date=1994|page=109|isbn=978-0292765597}}</ref>
*Throughout several lines of dialogue, it is stated that "Ptolemy XI" is Cleopatra's father and "Ptolemy XII" is the brother that campaigns against Cleopatra. However, the numbers in their names are off by one: {{wp|Ptolemy XII Auletes|Ptolemy XII}} was the father and {{wp|Ptolemy XIII Theos Philopator|Ptolemy XIII}} was the brother.
*Throughout several lines of dialogue, it is stated that "Ptolemy XI" is Cleopatra's father and "Ptolemy XII" is the brother that campaigns against Cleopatra. However, the numbers in their names are off by one: {{wp|Ptolemy XII Auletes|Ptolemy XII}} was the father and {{wp|Ptolemy XIII Theos Philopator|Ptolemy XIII}} was the brother.
*Several characters also use dates with {{wp|Anno Domini|before Christ}}; for example, when the handmaiden says that Caesar arrived in Egypt "in 48 B.C.". Though these dates are not incorrect, they would have not been used by people who lived close to fifty years before the birth of {{wp|Jesus}}, and furthermore, this dating system was not created until 525.
*Several characters also use dates with {{wp|Anno Domini|before Christ}}; for example, when the handmaiden says that Caesar arrived in Egypt "in 48 B.C.". Though these dates are not incorrect, they would have not been used by people who lived close to fifty years before the birth of {{wp|Jesus}}, and furthermore, this dating system was not created until 525.
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*The same councilman also claims that the Academy will last for over nine hundred years. In reality, the Academy was destroyed in 86 BC.<ref>{{cite|author=Reale, Giovanni; Catan, John R.|title=''A History of Ancient Philosophy: The schools of the Imperial Age''|page=207-208|publisher=SUNY Press|isbn=978-0791401293|date=December 21, 1989}}</ref>
*The same councilman also claims that the Academy will last for over nine hundred years. In reality, the Academy was destroyed in 86 BC.<ref>{{cite|author=Reale, Giovanni; Catan, John R.|title=''A History of Ancient Philosophy: The schools of the Imperial Age''|page=207-208|publisher=SUNY Press|isbn=978-0791401293|date=December 21, 1989}}</ref>
*He also does not know whether the god of wine's name is {{wp|Dionysus}} or Bacchus, despite "Bacchus" being the name adopted by the Romans.
*He also does not know whether the god of wine's name is {{wp|Dionysus}} or Bacchus, despite "Bacchus" being the name adopted by the Romans.
*The history page describes the Academy as the first "university," which is incorrect as it did not offer any degrees to its students.
*The history page describes the Academy as the first "university", which is incorrect as it did not offer any degrees to its students.


;[[Cambridge]] (1687)
;[[Cambridge]] (1687)
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*An unnamed painter says that Michelangelo left the tutelage of {{wp|Domenico Ghirlandaio}} simply because he was bored, but Ghirlandaio sent him to {{wp|Lorenzo de' Medici}} as one of his best pupils.<ref>{{cite|author=Clément, Charles|title=''Michelangelo''|publisher=Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington|date=1880|page=8–9}}</ref>
*An unnamed painter says that Michelangelo left the tutelage of {{wp|Domenico Ghirlandaio}} simply because he was bored, but Ghirlandaio sent him to {{wp|Lorenzo de' Medici}} as one of his best pupils.<ref>{{cite|author=Clément, Charles|title=''Michelangelo''|publisher=Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington|date=1880|page=8–9}}</ref>
**The history pages erroneously state that Michelangelo himself "broke his contract" with Ghirlandaio solely because he wanted to study the statues in Medici's garden.
**The history pages erroneously state that Michelangelo himself "broke his contract" with Ghirlandaio solely because he wanted to study the statues in Medici's garden.
**The same painter also gives Mario some "Renaissance Purple" [[Paint]] in what is visibly a modern paint can. Additionally, the term "Renaissance" first appeared in 1858.<ref name="Renaissance">{{cite|author=Johnson, Paul|title=''The Renaissance: A Short History''|publisher=Modern Library|date=August 6, 2002|isbn=978-0812966190}}</ref>
*The same painter also gives Mario some "Renaissance Purple" [[Paint]] in what is visibly a modern paint can. Additionally, the term "Renaissance" first appeared in 1858.<ref name="Renaissance">{{cite|author=Johnson, Paul|title=''The Renaissance: A Short History''|publisher=Modern Library|date=August 6, 2002|isbn=978-0812966190}}</ref>
***He also says that Michelangelo is interested in sculpting the Pope's tomb; although he approached the task enthusiastically, he was specifically commissioned by the Pope to construct the tomb.<ref>{{cite|author=Vasari, Giorgio; Foster, Jonathan (translator); Bohn, Henry G. (translator)|title="Michelangelo Buonarroti" - ''Lives of the Most Eminent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects: Translated from the Italian of Giorgio Vasari''|date=1850|page=246|isbn=978-0375760365}}</ref>
*He also says that Michelangelo is interested in sculpting the Pope's tomb; although he approached the task enthusiastically, he was specifically commissioned by the Pope to construct the tomb.<ref>{{cite|author=Vasari, Giorgio; Foster, Jonathan (translator); Bohn, Henry G. (translator)|title="Michelangelo Buonarroti" - ''Lives of the Most Eminent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects: Translated from the Italian of Giorgio Vasari''|date=1850|page=246|isbn=978-0375760365}}</ref>


;[[Florence]] (1505)
;[[Florence]] (1505)
*An old fresco painter describes [[Leonardo da Vinci]] as a "Renaissance Man.: The term "Renaissance" was not used during the period,<ref name="Renaissance"/> and the whole expression first appeared in 1906.<ref>{{cite|title="Renaissance Man"|publisher=''Merriam-Webster''|url=www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Renaissance%20man|accessdate=December 19, 2017}}</ref>
*An old fresco painter describes [[Leonardo da Vinci]] as a "Renaissance Man". The term "Renaissance" was not used during the period,<ref name="Renaissance"/> and the whole expression first appeared in 1906.<ref>{{cite|title="Renaissance Man"|publisher=''Merriam-Webster''|url=www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/Renaissance%20man|accessdate=December 19, 2017}}</ref>
*The history pages say that Europe was in a 1000-year "slumber" before the Renaissance, which brought a new age of science and art. However, this completely ignores how the Middle Ages contained Renaissances of its own, including the {{wp|Carolingian Renaissance}} and the {{wp|Renaissance of the 12th century}}.
*The history pages say that Europe was in a 1000-year "slumber" before the Renaissance, which brought a new age of science and art. However, this completely ignores how the Middle Ages contained Renaissances of its own, including the {{wp|Carolingian Renaissance}} and the {{wp|Renaissance of the 12th century}}.


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*[[Kublai Khan]] suggests that his father was {{wp|Ögedei Khan}}, despite his actual father being {{wp|Tolui}}.
*[[Kublai Khan]] suggests that his father was {{wp|Ögedei Khan}}, despite his actual father being {{wp|Tolui}}.
*Several characters reference [[Marco Polo]]'s [[Book of Marco Polo]], including a merchant who gives Mario a few pages from it. However, Marco only wrote it after returning to [[Venice]], while he was imprisoned with writer {{wp|Rustichello da Pisa}}.<ref>{{cite|author=Jackson, Peter|title="Marco Polo and His 'Travels'" - ''Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies'' Vol. 61, No. 1|date=1998|page=84–85}}</ref>
*Several characters reference [[Marco Polo]]'s [[Book of Marco Polo]], including a merchant who gives Mario a few pages from it. However, Marco only wrote it after returning to [[Venice]], while he was imprisoned with writer {{wp|Rustichello da Pisa}}.<ref>{{cite|author=Jackson, Peter|title="Marco Polo and His 'Travels'" - ''Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies'' Vol. 61, No. 1|date=1998|page=84–85}}</ref>
**Also, they are insistent on its title being "Book of Marco Polo," but this is not the actual title of the book. It is ''Les voyages de Marco Polo''<ref name="WDL Voyages">{{cite|title="The Travels of Marco Polo" - ''WDL RSS''|publisher=National Library of Sweden|url=www.wdl.org/en/item/14300/|accessdate=December 19, 2017}}</ref> (''The voyages of Marco Polo'') or ''Le Devisement du Monde''<ref>{{cite|author=Florescu, Mihaela L.|title="Marco Polo's Le Devisement Du Monde – Narrative Voice, Language and Diversity by Simon Gaunt (Review)" - ''Comitatus''|publisher=Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, UCLA|date=August 20, 2014|url=muse.jhu.edu/article/552501}}</ref> (''The Description of the World'') in French, ''Il Milione'' (''The Million'') in Italian,<ref>{{cite|author=Polo, Marco; Pizzorusso, Valeria Bertolucci (editor)|title=''Il Milione Letteratura italiana Einaudi''|date=1975|archive=web.archive.org/web/20050131044534/http://www.letteraturaitaliana.net/PDF/Volume_1/t24.pdf|accessdate=May 5, 2024}}</ref> and ''The Travels of Marco Polo''<ref name="WDL Voyages"/> in English. The closest name is an 1871 English translation by {{wp|Henry Yule}} titled, ''The Book of Ser Marco Polo, the Venetian, Concerning the Kingdoms and Marvels of the East''.<ref>{{cite|author=Yule, Henry|title=''The Book of Ser Marco Polo, the Venetian, Concerning the Kingdoms and Marvels of the East'' Vol. 1|publisher=Cambridge University Press|date=1871}}</ref>
*Also, they are insistent on its title being "Book of Marco Polo", but this is not the actual title of the book. It is ''Les voyages de Marco Polo''<ref name="WDL Voyages">{{cite|title="The Travels of Marco Polo" - ''WDL RSS''|publisher=National Library of Sweden|url=www.wdl.org/en/item/14300/|accessdate=December 19, 2017}}</ref> (''The voyages of Marco Polo'') or ''Le Devisement du Monde''<ref>{{cite|author=Florescu, Mihaela L.|title="Marco Polo's Le Devisement Du Monde – Narrative Voice, Language and Diversity by Simon Gaunt (Review)" - ''Comitatus''|publisher=Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, UCLA|date=August 20, 2014|url=muse.jhu.edu/article/552501}}</ref> (''The Description of the World'') in French, ''Il Milione'' (''The Million'') in Italian,<ref>{{cite|author=Polo, Marco; Pizzorusso, Valeria Bertolucci (editor)|title=''Il Milione Letteratura italiana Einaudi''|date=1975|archive=web.archive.org/web/20050131044534/http://www.letteraturaitaliana.net/PDF/Volume_1/t24.pdf|accessdate=May 5, 2024}}</ref> and ''The Travels of Marco Polo''<ref name="WDL Voyages"/> in English. The closest name is an 1871 English translation by {{wp|Henry Yule}} titled, ''The Book of Ser Marco Polo, the Venetian, Concerning the Kingdoms and Marvels of the East''.<ref>{{cite|author=Yule, Henry|title=''The Book of Ser Marco Polo, the Venetian, Concerning the Kingdoms and Marvels of the East'' Vol. 1|publisher=Cambridge University Press|date=1871}}</ref>
*A sage claims that China had glasses when Europe did not, but this is incorrect: they were first documented in Italy in 1306,<ref>{{cite|author=Ilardi, Vincent|title-"The Invention of Spectacles Revisited" - ''Renaissance Vision from Spectacles to Telescopes'', vol. 259|publisher=American Philosophical Society|date=2007|page=4–5|isbn=978-0871692597}}</ref> while none of Marco Polo's writings reference them.<ref>{{cite|author=Needham, Joseph|title="Eye-Glasses and Spectacles" - ''Science and Civilisation in China, Vol. 4: Physics and Physical Technology''|publisher=Cambridge University Press|date=1962|page=118–119}}</ref>
*A sage claims that China had glasses when Europe did not, but this is incorrect: they were first documented in Italy in 1306,<ref>{{cite|author=Ilardi, Vincent|title-"The Invention of Spectacles Revisited" - ''Renaissance Vision from Spectacles to Telescopes'', vol. 259|publisher=American Philosophical Society|date=2007|page=4–5|isbn=978-0871692597}}</ref> while none of Marco Polo's writings reference them.<ref>{{cite|author=Needham, Joseph|title="Eye-Glasses and Spectacles" - ''Science and Civilisation in China, Vol. 4: Physics and Physical Technology''|publisher=Cambridge University Press|date=1962|page=118–119}}</ref>


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;[[Mainz]] (1455)
;[[Mainz]] (1455)
*Mario receives a [[Tea Bag]] from a librarian, despite tea bags first being created in the opening years of the 1900s and only being commercially available in the 1920s.<ref>{{cite|author=Begley, Sarah|title=The History of the Tea Bag|publisher=Time|date=September 3, 2015|url=time.com/3996712/a-brief-history-of-the-tea-bag|accessdate=December 20, 2017}}</ref>
*Mario receives a [[Tea Bag]] from a librarian, despite tea bags first being created in the opening years of the 1900s and only being commercially available in the 1920s.<ref>{{cite|author=Begley, Sarah|title=The History of the Tea Bag|publisher=Time|date=September 3, 2015|url=time.com/3996712/a-brief-history-of-the-tea-bag|accessdate=December 20, 2017}}</ref>
**The same librarian says that Gutenberg loved to read books as a kid, but not much is actually known about Gutenberg's early life.<ref>{{cite|author=Wallau, Heinrich|title=Johann Gutenberg|publisher=The Catholic Encyclopedia, Robert Appleton Company|url=www.newadvent.org/cathen/07090a.htm|accessdate=December 20, 2017}}</ref>
*The same librarian says that Gutenberg loved to read books as a kid, but not much is actually known about Gutenberg's early life.<ref>{{cite|author=Wallau, Heinrich|title=Johann Gutenberg|publisher=The Catholic Encyclopedia, Robert Appleton Company|url=www.newadvent.org/cathen/07090a.htm|accessdate=December 20, 2017}}</ref>


;[[Menlo Park]] (1879)
;[[Menlo Park]] (1879)
*A hardware store clerk says that he has all of [[Thomas Edison]]'s phonograph records, including "{{wp|Mary Had a Little Lamb}}." While Edison did indeed test his invention with the poem,<ref>{{cite|author=Stross, Randolph|title=The Incredible Talking Machine|publisher=TIME.com|date=June 23, 2010|archive=web.archive.org/web/20130817090940/http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1999143_1999210_1999211,00.html|accessdate=December 20, 2017}}</ref> this recording was not publicly available.
*A hardware store clerk says that he has all of [[Thomas Edison]]'s phonograph records, including "{{wp|Mary Had a Little Lamb}}". While Edison did indeed test his invention with the poem,<ref>{{cite|author=Stross, Randolph|title=The Incredible Talking Machine|publisher=TIME.com|date=June 23, 2010|archive=web.archive.org/web/20130817090940/http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1999143_1999210_1999211,00.html|accessdate=December 20, 2017}}</ref> this recording was not publicly available.
*A hotel owner mentions Edison's creation of an {{wp|alkaline battery}}, which he only patented in 1904.<ref>Edison, Thomas. Edison Storage Battery Co. ''Alkaline Battery''. No. US 827297 A, 1904.</ref>
*A hotel owner mentions Edison's creation of an {{wp|alkaline battery}}, which he only patented in 1904.<ref>Edison, Thomas. Edison Storage Battery Co. ''Alkaline Battery''. No. US 827297 A, 1904.</ref>


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;[[Trinidad|Pacific Ocean]] (1521)
;[[Trinidad|Pacific Ocean]] (1521)
*[[Juan Sebastian Del Cano]] describes [[Ferdinand Magellan]]'s wanderlust, and how he wants to travel the world simply for the sake of it. However, from the start, his intention was to discover a route to the {{wp|Maluku Islands}}.<ref>{{cite|author=Guillemard, Francis Henry Hill|title="The Passage of the Strait" - ''The Life of Ferdinand Magellan and the First Circumnavigation of the Globe: 1480-1521''|publisher=George Phillip & Son|date=1891|page=67, 82, 93, and 102}}</ref>
*[[Juan Sebastian Del Cano]] describes [[Ferdinand Magellan]]'s wanderlust, and how he wants to travel the world simply for the sake of it. However, from the start, his intention was to discover a route to the {{wp|Maluku Islands}}.<ref>{{cite|author=Guillemard, Francis Henry Hill|title="The Passage of the Strait" - ''The Life of Ferdinand Magellan and the First Circumnavigation of the Globe: 1480-1521''|publisher=George Phillip & Son|date=1891|page=67, 82, 93, and 102}}</ref>
**Also, the game spells his name as "Del Cano," which is a misspelling.<ref>{{cite|author=Múgica, S.|title=Elcano y No Cano|publisher=Euskomedia.org|format=PDF|url=www.euskomedia.org/PDFAnlt/riev/11/11194213.pdf}}</ref>
*Also, though the game spells his name as "Del Cano", which is a misspelling.<ref>{{cite|author=Múgica, S.|title=Elcano y No Cano|publisher=Euskomedia.org|format=PDF|url=www.euskomedia.org/PDFAnlt/riev/11/11194213.pdf}}</ref>
*Mario gives a [[Telescope (Trinidad)|Telescope]] to Juan, despite them being first patented in 1608.<ref>{{cite|author=Helden, Albert von|title="The Telescope"|publisher=The Galileo Project|date=1995|url=galileo.rice.edu/sci/instruments/telescope.html}}</ref>
*Mario gives a [[Telescope (Trinidad)|Telescope]] to Juan, despite them being first patented in 1608.<ref>{{cite|author=Helden, Albert von|title="The Telescope"|publisher=The Galileo Project|date=1995|url=galileo.rice.edu/sci/instruments/telescope.html}}</ref>
*Mario receives a [[Rat Trap]] holding a {{wp|Mousetrap#Spring-loaded_bar_mousetrap|spring-loaded bar}} from the ship's bosun, despite this being first patented in 1894.<ref>Hooker, William C. ''Animal-trap''. No. US 827297 A, Nov 6, 1894.</ref>
*Mario receives a [[Rat Trap]] holding a {{wp|Mousetrap#Spring-loaded_bar_mousetrap|spring-loaded bar}} from the ship's bosun, despite this being first patented in 1894.<ref>Hooker, William C. ''Animal-trap''. No. US 827297 A, Nov 6, 1894.</ref>
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==References to other games==
==References to other games==
*''[[Super Mario World]]'': Most of the music cues are direct arrangements of music cues from ''Super Mario World'': for example, the title screen music is an arrangement of the [[Vanilla Dome]] theme which also incorporates the melody from ''Super Mario World''{{'}}s [[Castle]] theme. Most of the game's character sprites are also repurposed.
*''[[Super Mario World]]'': Most of the music cues are direct arrangements of music cues from ''Super Mario World'': for example, the title screen music is an arrangement of the [[Vanilla Dome]] theme which also incorporates the melody from ''Super Mario World''{{'}}s [[Castle]] theme.


==Gallery==
==Gallery==
{{main|Gallery:Mario's Time Machine}}
===Logo===
<gallery>
<gallery>
MariosTimeMachineLogo.png|The game's logo
MariosTimeMachineLogo.png|Logo
MTM SNES Title Screen.png|Title screen
</gallery>
MTM SNES Time Surfing.png|Mario "Time Surfing"
 
BowserRunsTimeMachineSnes.gif|Sprite of Bowser
===Screenshots===
<gallery>
MTM SNES Title Screen.png|The title screen.
Timulator in MiM SNES opening.png|Bowser and his Koopas with the [[Timulator]].
MTM SNES Time Surfing.png|Mario "Time Surfing".
MTM SNES Declaration of Independence Returned.png|Mario returns the Declaration of Independence.
MTM SNES Orleans.png|Mario in Orleans.
MTM SNES Bowser Flees.png|Bowser appears.
MTM SNES Bad Ending 1.png|Ending #1: Paradise, the place where Bowser makes his escape.
MTM SNES Bad Ending 2.png|Ending #2: The text indicates that the player made a mistake.
MTM SNES Good Ending.png|Ending #3: A dinosaur foot about to to crush Bowser.
</gallery>
 
===Sprites===
<gallery>
Mario in Mario's Time Machine.png|[[Mario]]
BowserRunsTimeMachineSnes.gif|[[Bowser]]
</gallery>
</gallery>


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[[Category:Super Nintendo Entertainment System games]]
[[Category:Super Nintendo Entertainment System games]]
[[Category:1993 games]]
[[Category:1993 games]]
[[Category:1994 games]]

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