VS. Super Mario Bros.: Difference between revisions

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==Pre-production==
==Pre-production==
[[File:Mariosadventure 1986 usa 1299804235.jpg|thumb|150px|left|''Vs. Mario's Adventure'' arcade flyer.]]
At some point in the North American localization of '''''Vs. Super Mario Bros.''''', the game was to be called ''VS. Mario's Adventure''. The only remnant of this earlier title is an arcade flyer with a trademarked name.
At some point in the North American localization of '''''Vs. Super Mario Bros.''''', the game was to be called ''VS. Mario's Adventure''. The only remnant of this earlier title is an arcade flyer with a trademarked name.
<ref>[http://flyers.arcade-museum.com/?page=thumbs&db=videodb&id=6009 VS. Mario's Adventure arcade flyers]</ref>
<ref>[http://flyers.arcade-museum.com/?page=thumbs&db=videodb&id=6009 VS. Mario's Adventure arcade flyers]</ref>

Revision as of 20:49, October 21, 2013

File:VS.SMB.png
The title screen of Vs. Super Mario Bros..

Vs. Super Mario Bros. is a two-player arcade version of Super Mario Bros. (1985, NES) which was released in 1986.

Story

The plot is the same as the original Super Mario Bros., featuring Mario (or Luigi) sets out on a quest to free Princess Toadstool from the evil Bowser and restore the fallen kingdom of the Mushroom People.

Differences

This game is harder than the original Super Mario Bros., with fewer warp zones and power-ups, and more enemies. Some of the courses were even taken from the sequel, Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels, which wasn't released outside of Japan for fear it would be too hard for Western gamers.

Detailed set of level differences

The original NES version of Super Mario Bros. has some levels repeat, with an easier version with some obstacles removed (fire bars in the castle, fewer enemies, etc) earlier on, and then a later "full" version, e.g. 1-3 is the easier version of 5-3; 1-4 is the easier version of 6-4; 2-2/2-3 are the easier version of 7-2/7-3; and 2-4 is the easier version of 5-4.

In the arcade version, most of the "easier versions" (all except 1-3) are replaced by the "harder version" to make way for new levels.

  • Some of the bricks above the end pipe in World 1-2 are removed to prevent anyone from performing the Minus World trick.
  • 1-4 is replaced by 1-4 of The Lost Levels.
  • The Koopa at the ending staircase of 3-1 is replaced with a Goomba, making an infinite 1-Up exploit impossible[1].
  • 3-2 is replaced with the Lost Level's 's 2-2, which is similar, but with more obstacles such as open gaps and a floating pipe towards the end that the player has to use hidden blocks to reach in order to make the jump across a wide gap.
  • 5-3 is replaced by 6-3 from the original game, and level 4-3 from The Lost Levels is then moved to 6-3. This has extremely long jumps to the platforms, and in one case, the player has to hop onto a Parakoopa next to the bluff (when it's at the right height) to reach the platform.
Since 6 is a night world in both the NES and the arcade version, yet 4 is a day world in all three games (including the Lost Levels), the level is converted from a grassy daytime scene to a white-grounded night scene.
  • 6-4 is moved to 2-4 and replaced by 5-4 from the Lost Levels, which also has a lot of long, hard jumps (and some tricky small ones), and an extra long firebar (which do not appear in the original NES version).
  • 7-2/7-3 move up to replace 2-2/2-3, and have their slots filled by 6-2/6-3 of the Lost Levels. These are harder and longer versions of 7-2/7-3, with -2 (a water world) having very little floor, with stretches of low hanging reef, and -3 being an extra long bridge (with lots of gaps) and many more jumping Cheep-Cheeps (with flying Koopas as well).
  • The solution to the "maze" in 7-4 is slightly different[1].
  • 4-4 and 5-4 trade places in the arcade version.

In VS Super Mario Bros., the player can only warp up to World 6, whereas in the NES version, the player can warp to 6, 7, or 8 from the Warp Zone in level 4-2, so there is no way around these extremely difficult levels imported into Worlds 6 and 7.

Various ? Blocks, especially those that contain power-ups, are often either moved to much harder-to-reach places, or even removed altogether.

The player now starts with two lives instead of three, and the timer now runs on 300 game seconds. The coin counter now has three digits instead of two, meaning that Mario/Luigi had to collect more than 100 coins (perhaps up to either 200 or 256) to earn an extra life.

All 1-Up mushrooms are removed, except for the one in World 1-1.

Pre-production

File:Mariosadventure 1986 usa 1299804235.jpg
Vs. Mario's Adventure arcade flyer.

At some point in the North American localization of Vs. Super Mario Bros., the game was to be called VS. Mario's Adventure. The only remnant of this earlier title is an arcade flyer with a trademarked name. [2]

Screenshots

References

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