Bonus game (Super Mario World): Difference between revisions

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==References in later games==
==References in later games==
*A composition of the bonus game music is one of the songs in ''[[Dance Dance Revolution: Mario Mix]]'', under the title "Step by Step." The rendition combines elements of the [[Switch Palace]] song as well.  
*A composition of the bonus game music is one of the songs in ''[[Dance Dance Revolution: Mario Mix]]'', under the title "Step by Step." The rendition combines elements of the Switch Palace song as well.  
*Certain [[note]]s in ''[[Super Mario Galaxy]]'', ''[[Super Mario Galaxy 2]]'', and ''[[Super Mario 3D Land]]'' play a cover of the bonus game theme.
*Certain [[note]]s in ''[[Super Mario Galaxy]]'', ''[[Super Mario Galaxy 2]]'', and ''[[Super Mario 3D Land]]'' play a cover of the bonus game theme.
**The original theme also makes an appearance in ''[[Super Mario Maker]]'' and ''[[Super Mario Maker for Nintendo 3DS]]'', if the "Bonus Area" [[Soundfrog|sound effect]] is applied to a ''Super Mario World''-themed stage. The ending tune also plays after the player clears the 10 Mario Challenge, or the 100 Mario Challenge on the Easy mode. The "Bonus Area" sound effect reappears in ''[[Super Mario Maker 2]]''.
**The original theme also makes an appearance in ''[[Super Mario Maker]]'' and ''[[Super Mario Maker for Nintendo 3DS]]'', if the "Bonus Area" [[Soundfrog|sound effect]] is applied to a ''Super Mario World''-themed stage. The ending tune also plays after the player clears the 10 Mario Challenge, or the 100 Mario Challenge on the Easy mode. The "Bonus Area" sound effect reappears in ''[[Super Mario Maker 2]]''.

Revision as of 00:48, September 9, 2022

Mario winning 1-Up Mushrooms after completing the minigame.
Mario playing the bonus game in Super Mario World. Here, a "perfect game" of nine Fire Flowers rewards him with eight 1-Up Mushrooms.

The bonus game is a special minigame in Super Mario World. It can be entered only by collecting 100 Goal Stars at the Giant Gates. When this is done, the bonus game automatically starts just after the "iris in" effect at the end of the level.

The bonus game takes place in a Switch Palace-styled room that Mario or Luigi enters via Warp Pipe. There are nine Item Box-like blocks, eight of which are circling around the ninth. The ninth block is the only one that has a stable item in it (a Super Mushroom, Fire Flower, or Super Star); the others are constantly changing their items. The player's task is to hit the circling blocks from below to stop their reels on a matching item. The actual game works just like tic-tac-toe: Three of the same item in a row (vertically, horizontally, or diagonally), no matter which item it is, earns the player a 1-Up Mushroom. The player can win up to eight extra lives.

It is impossible to get exactly seven 1-Up Mushrooms in this bonus game. All attempts to do so either miss the seventh or add an eighth.

References in later games

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese ボーナスゲーム[?]
Bōnasu gēmu
Bonus game
Italian Giro di Bonus[1]
Gioco Bonus[2][3]
Bonus turn
Bonus Game
Portuguese Jogo Bônus[?] Bonus Game

Trivia

  • This minigame is the inspiration behind Mario Roulette, an arcade gambling game exclusive to Japan.
  • In the game's code, the bonus game is either level 0x000 or level 0x100 (depending on the level from which the player arrived). If for any reason a Warp Pipe, door, or other "screen exit" warps to one of these levels, a player using that exit will get stuck in an endless bonus game, at least until the timer expires or they exit by pressing Start Button and Select Button.
  • Reverse engineering has shown that Super Stars and Mushrooms have a 3/8 chance of appearing, while Fire Flowers have a 2/8 chance.[4]
  • The 1-Up Mushrooms that appear behave differently from normal ones; specifically, they cannot be eaten by Yoshi (except in the GBA version of the game).

References