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|latest_appearance=''[[Super Mario All-Stars Limited Edition]]'' ([[List of games by date#2010|2010]])
|latest_appearance=''[[Super Mario All-Stars Limited Edition]]'' ([[List of games by date#2010|2010]])
}}
}}
'''Spade Panels''',<ref name="smasmanual">''Super Mario All-Stars'' instruction booklet, pages 31-32.</ref><ref name="smb3manual">''Super Mario Bros. 3'' English instruction booklet, page 21.</ref> also known as '''Flip Games'''<ref>The ''Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3'' Player's Guide, page 18.</ref> or '''Spade Houses''',<ref>''Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3'' Prima's Official Strategy Guide back cover.</ref> are small [[panel (Super Mario Bros. 3)|panel]]s on overworld maps in ''[[Super Mario Bros. 3]]'' that can be used to earn [[Extra life|extra live]]s for [[Mario]] or [[Luigi]]. Once the player enters one, they can play a [[minigame]] hosted by a [[Toad (species)|Toad]]. Its gameplay is similar to that of a slot machine, in which parts of pictures slide past on panels and the player must line up three of the same panel to make a picture and win extra lives. There are [[Super Mushroom|Mushroom]], [[Fire Flower|Flower]], and [[Super Star|Star]] icons, granting two, three, and five extra lives when lined up as the '''Mushroom Picture''',<ref name="smasmanual"/><ref name="smb3manual"/> the '''Flower Picture''',<ref name="smasmanual"/><ref name="smb3manual"/> and the '''Star Picture''',<ref name="smasmanual"/><ref name="smb3manual"/> respectively, similar to the [[Goal (Super Mario Bros. 3)|goal]] at the end of nearly every [[level]]. If any of the panels are mismatched, no extra lives are awarded.
'''Spade Panels''',<ref name="smasmanual">{{cite|language=en|publisher=Nintendo of America|date=1993|title=''Super Mario All-Stars'' instruction booklet|page=31&ndash;32}}</ref><ref name="smb3manual">{{cite|language=en|publisher=Nintendo of America|date=1990|title=''Super Mario Bros. 3'' instruction booklet|page=21}}</ref> also known as '''Flip Games'''<ref>{{cite|author=Peterson, Erik|title=''Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3'' Player's Guide|date=2003|publisher=Nintendo of America|language=en-us|page=18|isbn=1930206-37-2}}</ref> or '''Spade Houses''',<ref>''Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3'' Prima's Official Strategy Guide back cover</ref> are small [[panel (Super Mario Bros. 3)|panel]]s on overworld maps in ''[[Super Mario Bros. 3]]'' that can be used to earn [[Extra life|extra lives]] for [[Mario]] or [[Luigi]]. Once the player enters one, they can play a [[minigame]] hosted by a [[Toad (species)|Toad]]. Its gameplay is similar to that of a slot machine, in which parts of pictures slide past on three different reels, and the player must line up three matching parts to make a picture and win extra lives. There are [[Super Mushroom|Mushroom]], [[Fire Flower|Flower]], and [[Super Star|Star]] icons on each reel, granting two, three, and five extra lives when lined up as the '''Mushroom Picture''',<ref name="smasmanual"/><ref name="smb3manual"/> the '''Flower Picture''',<ref name="smasmanual"/><ref name="smb3manual"/> and the '''Star Picture''',<ref name="smasmanual"/><ref name="smb3manual"/> respectively, similarly to the [[Goal (Super Mario Bros. 3)|goal]] at the end of nearly every [[level]]. If any of the picture parts are mismatched, no extra lives are awarded. The player gets only one chance to play the minigame, after which the Spade Panel disappears.


In ''[[Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3]]'', if a Spade Panel is matched up correctly, further Spade Panels will change to '''{{conjectural|Heart Panels}}'''. The Stars are replaced by [[Super Leaf|Leaf]] icons that give seven extra lives. Clearing one of these turns further Heart Panels into '''{{conjectural|Club Panels}}''', and the Super Leaves change to "3" icons that reward 10 extra lives. Clearing a Club Panel turns further panels into '''{{conjectural|Diamond Panels}}''', where only one picture can be lined up, making it impossible to lose. Earning a minimal number of lives at previous panels results in a Mushroom Picture, while higher numbers yield a random picture, and each picture gives the corresponding number of extra lives. If the player clears a Diamond Panel, or fails at any of the other ones, then all panels will revert to Spade Panels, restarting the process. [[Completion|Clearing all levels]] makes all Spade Panels reusable.
In ''[[Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3]]'', if a Spade Panel is matched up correctly, further Spade Panels change to '''{{conjectural|Heart Panels}}'''. The Stars are replaced by [[Super Leaf]] icons that give seven extra lives. Clearing one of these turns further Heart Panels into '''{{conjectural|Club Panels}}''', and the Super Leaves change to "3" icons that reward 10 extra lives. Clearing a Club Panel turns further panels into '''{{conjectural|Diamond Panels}}''', where only one picture can be lined up, making it impossible to lose. Earning a minimal number of lives at previous panels results in a Mushroom Picture, while higher numbers yield a random picture, and each picture gives the corresponding number of extra lives. If the player clears a Diamond Panel, or fails at any of the other ones, all panels revert to Spade Panels, restarting the process. [[Completion|Clearing all levels]] makes all Spade Panels reusable.


A special Spade Panel, the [[N-Mark Spade Panel]], appears every 80,000 [[point]]s. When it is activated, the player plays a card game for prizes, with a total of nine prizes per game. After the game, all prizes earned are included in the player's inventory. Unlike with the other Spade Panel games, a player can make two mistakes during an N-Mark Spade Panel game before being returned to the [[world]] map; when the next 80,000 points are achieved, they can continue the game from where they left off.
A special Spade Panel, the [[N-Mark Spade Panel]], appears every 80,000 [[point]]s. When it is activated, the player plays a card game for prizes, with a total of nine prizes per game. After the game, all prizes earned are included in the player's inventory. Unlike with the other Spade Panel games, a player can make two mistakes during an N-Mark Spade Panel game before being returned to the [[world]] map; when the next 80,000 points are achieved, the player can continue the game off where they left.


In ''[[Super Mario Maker 2]]'', while the Spade Panel itself does not appear, its minigame reappears as part of the version 3.0.0 update in one of the [[Toad House]]s the player can place on the world map in World Maker. They are distinguished by the Super Star on the Toad House's roof.
In ''[[Super Mario Maker 2]]'', while the Spade Panel itself does not appear, its minigame reappears in the [[Super Mario Maker 2#World Maker|World Maker]] mode as [[Match & Win!]], which can be played in one of the [[Toad House]]s the player can place on the world map. Unlike the game it is based on, Match & Win! is deterministic and can be reliably timed by the player.
 
==Mechanics==
During the minigame, when the player presses {{button|nes|A}} to stop one of the reels, a random number generator is used to add an arbitrary amount of delay before the reel starts to slow down and stop on a certain picture. The delay times for all reels are randomized during the introductory cutscene, and the delay of the first reel continues to be randomized until the player stops the reel; however, the delays of the second and third reels are fixed when the player leaves the cutscene and the reels start spinning.<ref name=RGMechEx>{{cite|author=Retro Game Mechanics Explained|date=October 7, 2023|url=www.youtube.com/watch?v=QGeLzCmUDDk|title=SMB3 Roulette & Card Matching Games Explained|language=en|publisher=YouTube|accessdate=December 26, 2023}}</ref>
 
The following table shows the minimum and maximum possible delay times for each reel, along with the range between the maximum and minimum delay. The column labeled "Timing window" denotes the number of frames during which a certain picture can be obtained if the reel starts slowing down immediately—i.e., zero delay frames are added.<ref name=RGMechEx/>
 
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Reel !! Minimum delay !! Maximum delay !! style="background-color:lightblue;" | Delay range !! style="background-color:pink;" | Timing window
|-
| First reel || 32 frames || 47 frames || style="background-color:lightblue;" | 16 frames || style="background-color:pink;" | 19 frames
|-
| Second reel || 32 frames || 63 frames || style="background-color:lightblue;" | 32 frames || style="background-color:pink;" | 19 frames
|-
| Third reel || 64 frames || 127 frames || style="background-color:lightblue;" | 64 frames || style="background-color:pink;" | 16 frames
|}
 
The image below visualizes these values; the delay range is highlighted in blue, and the timing window with zero delay frames is highlighted in red.
 
[[File:SMB3 Spade Panel Delay Frames.png|700px]]
 
The delay range for the first reel (16 frames) is three frames fewer than its timing window (19 frames), meaning that for each full revolution of the reels, the player has a window of three frames to press {{button|nes|A}} to guarantee that the reel will stop on a desired picture, regardless of any added delay. However, the delay ranges for the second and third reels (32 and 64 frames, respectively) are larger than their timing windows (19 and 16 frames, respectively), meaning that the delay can potentially cause the reel to skip over the entire timing window for a certain picture; therefore, it is impossible for the player to guarantee that the second and third reels will stop on a desired picture. For the third reel, the minimum delay of 64 frames is equivalent to one full revolution of the reel, and the maximum delay of 127 frames is equivalent to two full revolutions, essentially meaning that the third reel can start slowing down anywhere on the reel and stop on any of the pictures, regardless of when the player presses {{button|nes|A}}. Thus, the outcome of the minigame cannot be determined by the player whatsoever.


==Gallery==
==Gallery==
Line 41: Line 63:
==Names in other languages==
==Names in other languages==
{{foreign names
{{foreign names
|Jap=スペードパネル<ref>''Super Mario Bros. 3'' Japanese instruction booklet, page 19.</ref>
|Jap=スペードパネル
|JapR=Supēdo Paneru
|JapR=Supēdo Paneru
|JapM=Spade Panel
|JapM=Spade Panel
|JapC=<ref>{{cite|title=スーパーマリオブラザーズ3 (''Sūpā Mario Burazāzu Surī'') instruction booklet|page=19|date=1988|publisher=Nintendo|language=ja}}</ref>
|Fre=Panneau Pique
|FreM=Spade Panel
|FreC=<ref>{{cite|title=''Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3'' instruction booklet|page=50|date=2003|language=fr|publisher=Nintendo of Europe}}</ref>
|Ger=Pik-Feld
|GerM=Spade Field
|GerC=<ref>{{cite|title=''Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3'' instruction booklet|page=30|date=2003|language=de|publisher=Nintendo of Europe}}</ref>
|Ita=Quadro del segno di picche
|ItaM=Spade symbol square
|ItaC=<ref>{{cite|title=''[[Super Mario Bros. 3]]'' manual|page=16|publisher=Nintendo|language=it}}</ref>
|Ita2=Pannello picche
|Ita2M=Spade panel
|Ita2C=<ref>{{cite|title=''[[Super Mario All-Stars]] 25th Anniversary Edition'' manual|page=17|publisher=Nintendo of Europe|language=it|date=2010}}</ref>
|Ita3=Asso di picche
|Ita3M=Ace of Spade
|Ita3C=<ref>{{cite|title=''[[Super Mario Bros. 3]]'' (3DS - Virtual Console) Italian e-manual|page=10}}</ref>
|Spa=Panel de Picas
|SpaM=Panel of Spades
|SpaC=<ref>{{cite|title=''Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3'' instruction booklet|page=90|date=2003|language=de|publisher=Nintendo of Europe}}</ref>
}}
}}


==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*This minigame's theme music is arranged in ''[[Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars]]'' (for [[Grate Guy's Casino]]), ''[[Super Mario 64 DS]]'', ''[[New Super Mario Bros.]]'' (both for the minigames [[Wanted!]], [[Connect the Characters]], and [[Mario's Slides]]), ''[[Paper Mario: Sticker Star]]'', ''[[Paper Mario: Color Splash]]'' (both for [[Snifit or Whiffit]]), ''[[Mario Party: Island Tour]]'' (for the minigame theme "Slowly Bubble Up"), and ''[[Super Mario Odyssey]]'' (for the [[slots]] minigame).
*[[Spinning Slots|This minigame's theme music]] is arranged in ''[[Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars]]'' (for [[Grate Guy's Casino]]), ''[[Super Mario 64 DS]]'', ''[[New Super Mario Bros.]]'' (both for the minigames [[Wanted!]], [[Connect the Characters]], and [[Mario's Slides]]), ''[[Paper Mario: Sticker Star]]'', ''[[Paper Mario: Color Splash]]'' (both for ''[[Snifit or Whiffit]]''), ''[[Mario Party: Island Tour]]'' (for the minigame theme "Slowly Bubble Up"), and ''[[Super Mario Odyssey]]'' (for the [[Slots]] minigame).
*This minigame's theme music in ''[[Super Mario Bros. 3]]'' is a looped sample from the bass-line (or pause music) from ''[[Super Mario Bros. 2]]''{{'}}s ground theme.
*This minigame's theme music in ''Super Mario Bros. 3'' is a looped sample from the bassline (or pause music) from ''[[Super Mario Bros. 2]]''{{'}}s [[Ground Theme (Super Mario Bros. 2)|Ground Theme]].
*Much like the case with [[Bowser]]'s wristbands from the original ''[[Super Mario Bros.]]'', in the sprites for Mario and the Toad in the Spade Panel cutscene, due to the NES supporting just three colors for each sprite, Mario/Luigi's gloves and the white parts of the Toad's body, including the primary color for his mushroom "hat" and pants, are actually transparent and appear white due to the sprites appearing in front of a white background. This also results in the Toad gaining an orange pixel (formed from the brick outlines of the wall) on his sprite if one looks closely enough.
*Much like the case with [[Bowser]]'s wristbands from the original ''[[Super Mario Bros.]]'', in the sprites for Mario and the Toad in the Spade Panel cutscene, due to the NES supporting just three colors for each sprite, Mario/Luigi's gloves and the white parts of the Toad's body, including the primary color for his mushroom "hat" and pants, are actually transparent and appear white due to the sprites appearing in front of a white background. This also results in the Toad gaining an orange pixel (formed from the brick outlines of the wall) on his sprite if one looks closely enough.



Latest revision as of 11:01, November 15, 2024

Spade Panel
SMB3 Spade Panel.pngSpade Panel
Spade Panel
First appearance Super Mario Bros. 3 (1988)
Latest appearance Super Mario All-Stars Limited Edition (2010)

Spade Panels,[1][2] also known as Flip Games[3] or Spade Houses,[4] are small panels on overworld maps in Super Mario Bros. 3 that can be used to earn extra lives for Mario or Luigi. Once the player enters one, they can play a minigame hosted by a Toad. Its gameplay is similar to that of a slot machine, in which parts of pictures slide past on three different reels, and the player must line up three matching parts to make a picture and win extra lives. There are Mushroom, Flower, and Star icons on each reel, granting two, three, and five extra lives when lined up as the Mushroom Picture,[1][2] the Flower Picture,[1][2] and the Star Picture,[1][2] respectively, similarly to the goal at the end of nearly every level. If any of the picture parts are mismatched, no extra lives are awarded. The player gets only one chance to play the minigame, after which the Spade Panel disappears.

In Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3, if a Spade Panel is matched up correctly, further Spade Panels change to Heart Panels. The Stars are replaced by Super Leaf icons that give seven extra lives. Clearing one of these turns further Heart Panels into Club Panels, and the Super Leaves change to "3" icons that reward 10 extra lives. Clearing a Club Panel turns further panels into Diamond Panels, where only one picture can be lined up, making it impossible to lose. Earning a minimal number of lives at previous panels results in a Mushroom Picture, while higher numbers yield a random picture, and each picture gives the corresponding number of extra lives. If the player clears a Diamond Panel, or fails at any of the other ones, all panels revert to Spade Panels, restarting the process. Clearing all levels makes all Spade Panels reusable.

A special Spade Panel, the N-Mark Spade Panel, appears every 80,000 points. When it is activated, the player plays a card game for prizes, with a total of nine prizes per game. After the game, all prizes earned are included in the player's inventory. Unlike with the other Spade Panel games, a player can make two mistakes during an N-Mark Spade Panel game before being returned to the world map; when the next 80,000 points are achieved, the player can continue the game off where they left.

In Super Mario Maker 2, while the Spade Panel itself does not appear, its minigame reappears in the World Maker mode as Match & Win!, which can be played in one of the Toad Houses the player can place on the world map. Unlike the game it is based on, Match & Win! is deterministic and can be reliably timed by the player.

Mechanics[edit]

During the minigame, when the player presses A Button to stop one of the reels, a random number generator is used to add an arbitrary amount of delay before the reel starts to slow down and stop on a certain picture. The delay times for all reels are randomized during the introductory cutscene, and the delay of the first reel continues to be randomized until the player stops the reel; however, the delays of the second and third reels are fixed when the player leaves the cutscene and the reels start spinning.[5]

The following table shows the minimum and maximum possible delay times for each reel, along with the range between the maximum and minimum delay. The column labeled "Timing window" denotes the number of frames during which a certain picture can be obtained if the reel starts slowing down immediately—i.e., zero delay frames are added.[5]

Reel Minimum delay Maximum delay Delay range Timing window
First reel 32 frames 47 frames 16 frames 19 frames
Second reel 32 frames 63 frames 32 frames 19 frames
Third reel 64 frames 127 frames 64 frames 16 frames

The image below visualizes these values; the delay range is highlighted in blue, and the timing window with zero delay frames is highlighted in red.

A visualization of the mechanics of the Spade Panel minigame from Super Mario Bros. 3. The window of time where the player can normally obtain a certain picture on each reel is highlighted in red, and the variance of arbitrary delay time for each reel is highlighted in blue.

The delay range for the first reel (16 frames) is three frames fewer than its timing window (19 frames), meaning that for each full revolution of the reels, the player has a window of three frames to press A Button to guarantee that the reel will stop on a desired picture, regardless of any added delay. However, the delay ranges for the second and third reels (32 and 64 frames, respectively) are larger than their timing windows (19 and 16 frames, respectively), meaning that the delay can potentially cause the reel to skip over the entire timing window for a certain picture; therefore, it is impossible for the player to guarantee that the second and third reels will stop on a desired picture. For the third reel, the minimum delay of 64 frames is equivalent to one full revolution of the reel, and the maximum delay of 127 frames is equivalent to two full revolutions, essentially meaning that the third reel can start slowing down anywhere on the reel and stop on any of the pictures, regardless of when the player presses A Button. Thus, the outcome of the minigame cannot be determined by the player whatsoever.

Gallery[edit]

Super Mario Bros. 3[edit]

Super Mario All-Stars[edit]

Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3[edit]

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese スペードパネル[6]
Supēdo Paneru
Spade Panel
French Panneau Pique[7] Spade Panel
German Pik-Feld[8] Spade Field
Italian Quadro del segno di picche[9] Spade symbol square
Pannello picche[10] Spade panel
Asso di picche[11] Ace of Spade
Spanish Panel de Picas[12] Panel of Spades

Trivia[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d 1993. Super Mario All-Stars instruction booklet. Nintendo of America (English). Page 31–32.
  2. ^ a b c d 1990. Super Mario Bros. 3 instruction booklet. Nintendo of America (English). Page 21.
  3. ^ Peterson, Erik (2003). Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 Player's Guide. Nintendo of America (American English). ISBN 1930206-37-2. Page 18.
  4. ^ Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 Prima's Official Strategy Guide back cover
  5. ^ a b Retro Game Mechanics Explained (October 7, 2023). SMB3 Roulette & Card Matching Games Explained. YouTube (English). Retrieved December 26, 2023.
  6. ^ 1988. スーパーマリオブラザーズ3 (Sūpā Mario Burazāzu Surī) instruction booklet. Nintendo (Japanese). Page 19.
  7. ^ 2003. Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 instruction booklet. Nintendo of Europe (French). Page 50.
  8. ^ 2003. Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 instruction booklet. Nintendo of Europe (German). Page 30.
  9. ^ Super Mario Bros. 3 manual. Nintendo (Italian). Page 16.
  10. ^ 2010. Super Mario All-Stars 25th Anniversary Edition manual. Nintendo of Europe (Italian). Page 17.
  11. ^ Super Mario Bros. 3 (3DS - Virtual Console) Italian e-manual. Page 10.
  12. ^ 2003. Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 instruction booklet. Nintendo of Europe (German). Page 90.