Mario Bros. (game)

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Template:Articleabout Template:Redirectshere Template:Infobox Arcade Game Mario Bros. is an arcade game made by Nintendo and released in 1983. It was also released on the NES, Atari 2600, Atari 5200, and Atari 7800. The game introduces the first appearance of Luigi in a game, and is the first installment in the Mario Bros. series. It was also released for the Virtual Console on the Wii for 500 Wii Points.

A port of the Mario Bros. also appears on the Game & Watch, but without color and two screens. Mario Bros. is included as a separate mini-game, playing like the original game with updated graphics in the Two-player mode of Super Mario Bros. 3 for the NES, and for the RPG game Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga and all 4 games on the Super Mario Advance series on the Game Boy Advance. For these Game Boy Advance remake games, there is also an added two to four-player battle mode, meaning that other players can join the player's game through the use of a GBA link cable. Also, in every remake for the Game Boy Advance, the Shellcreepers are replaced by Spinies. Mario Bros. is also ported to the e-Reader under the name, Mario Bros.-e. And in 1995 a sequel called Mario Clash was released on the short lived Virtual Boy.

Story

The story of this game revolves around two plumbers, Mario and Luigi, who are working in the sewers.[1]. The sewers are overrun by waves of enemies and the Mario Bros. have to defeat the enemies and get coins to receive their pay.

Gameplay

File:MarioBros7.png
Mario in Phase 1 of the NES version.

The game features a simple stage in which the player plays in an endless game. Enemies come from the pipes on the top and head downwards, where they may enter the pipes again to return to the top. The goal in each Phase is to defeat all enemies. This is done by jumping against the floor when enemies are walking on from below to knock them out, and then the player has to kick them away. When all enemies are defeated, the player gets to the next phase. In later levels, different types of enemies and harming fireballs appear. From time to time, there is a bonus level where the player has to collect all coins in order to get a 1-Up.

Characters

Playable

Enemies

  • Shellcreeper - The first enemies in the game, a possible relation to Koopas. They are replaced by Spinies in the Super Mario Advance games, but reappear in the Virtual Console version.
  • Sidestepper - Crab creatures that are harder to defeat and have appeared in various games. They first appear in Phase 4 (5 in Japan).
  • Fighter Fly - Flies that jump up and down. They first appear in Phase 6 (7 in Japan).
  • Slipice - Ice creatures that appear in a lot of games. They have been renamed Freezie, and first appear in Phase 9 (10 in Japan). When one is defeated, it covers its platform in ice, hence the name.
  • Icicle - They first appear in phase 16 (17 in Japan) and attack by dropping from the ceiling.
  • Fireball - Red ones attack by bouncing around the stage. Green ones, also known as Hurricanes, act slightly differently by going straight instead of bouncing around. They can be defeated by bashing them from underneath, just as they hit the ground. The player can also use a POW Block to defeat them as well. The sprites for green fireballs are swapped with Boos in the Super Mario All-Stars version.

Remake Exclusives

  • Koopa Troopa (Super Mario Bros. 3 version)
  • Spiny (Super Mario Bros. 3, Super Mario Advance and Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga versions)
  • Boo (Super Mario All-Stars Version)

Artwork

Mario Bros.-e

Mario Bros.-e

Mario Bros.-e is a game for the e-Reader, released on November 11, 2002 for only the United States. The game is a port of the NES version and the plot of the game is exactly same as the original game. The only difference from the NES version is that there are Green, Red, Yellow, and Blue Shellcreepers throughout the game, and there is no two-player support.

References in Later Games

Trivia

  • Phase 2 was removed for non-Japanese versions of the game.
  • There is a Game and Watch game titled "Mario Bros.", in which Mario and Luigi have to prepare cakes moving along a conveyer belt.
  • There's a trick in the game where Mario or Luigi can stay behind a Warp Pipe and not get damaged by enemies. However, fireballs can still harm them.
  • The music that plays when the player begins Phase 1 is Mozart's Eine kleine Nachtmusik, which is also featured in Dance Dance Revolution: Mario Mix and Super Smash Bros. Brawl.
  • Like in Donkey Kong, Mario's clothes are different on the game cover and different in the game.
  • A cameo appearance of the Mario Bros. arcade appears in Tron Legacy in the arcade center.
  • Due to limitations, the NES version has notably reduced graphics. The wheels were removed from the pipes, and the enemy introduction screens were removed entirely.

References


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