World 1-1 (Super Mario Bros.)

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Vandalism is the deliberate defacement of the wiki through lowering the quality, validity, and usability of our articles and other types of pages. However, any edit which is made with the good intent of improving the wiki, even if it were misinformed or poorly considered, is not considered vandalism at the Super Mario Wiki.

Trolling, although not completely synonymous with vandalism, is taken just as seriously. And depending on the frequency and severity, it may also be punishable on the same level. Trolling is the disruption of the wiki's communication channels, which include discussion pages and talk pages of articles and users. This may be through harassing or provoking disagreeable reactions from other users.

Vandalism and trolling are not tolerated in any way at the Super Mario Wiki. This page explains how to recognize vandalism and similar behavior, the procedure and standards of conduct which are to be followed if a vandal is identified, and how to go about restoring pages which have been vandalized.

Identifying vandalism

The following actions are considered vandalism:

  • Blanking pages, or removing large amounts of content from pages without a good reason.
  • Adding false or unrelated information to articles on purpose, or creating pages containing such information.
  • Making edits which are detrimental to the quality of a page, such as capitalizing all words.
  • Spamming pages with advertising or other unsolicited messages.
  • Adding profane or inappropriate content, as well as uploading images containing such content.
  • Posting messages on talk pages with the intention to offend, harass or aggravate other users.

Monitoring the wiki's recent changes page is the best way to detect vandalism as soon as it happens. Edits made without a description, especially by an anonymous user or a user with a red username, should be checked by using the diff link in front of the edit. This will show the difference between the previous revision of the page, and the edit which was made by that user. Additionally, all edits shown on the recent changes page will display whether a large amount of content has been added (+500), or removed (-500). Any large changes to a page should be inspected.

Newly-created pages, which are symbolized on the recent changes page by an N, are also important to check out.

Dealing with a vandal

If you see a user or an IP address who is actively vandalizing the wiki, bring it to an online administrator or a patroller's attention as soon as possible. If no admins appear online, then visit this page and follow the instructions to directly contact the administrative team. One of them should appear online as quickly as possible to deal with the situation. Do not engage with a vandal or troll, whether it be through talk pages or edit summaries. And do not participate in an edit war with a vandal. It is best to report them immediately, and allow the admins to deal with the situation. If you do not feel comfortable about reporting the actions of a troll on an admin's talk page, then you are welcome to send an admin a personal message via the Mario Boards instead.

If a new account has been created with the purpose of vandalizing pages, then that account must immediately be blocked indefinitely. If a registered user has made a mix of constructive edits as well as their minor vandalism, then that user should be dealt with according to the warning policy. If an IP address is caught vandalizing, then that address should be blocked for a limited amount of time (never indefinitely).

Restoring pages which have been vandalized

Admins are equipped with more vandal-fighting functions than the regular user. However, all users are able to manually revert vandalism on a page using the "undo" link found beside the edit on the recent changes page, the page's history or the vandal's contribution list. If several vandal edits have been made to a page by the same user, non-admins are able to revert them all in a single edit using the following instructions:

  1. While viewing the "difference between revisions" page, click "Older edit" or "Newer edit" until you find the most current non-vandalized revision. Alternatively, you can reach the last non-vandalized revision by clicking on that revision's date and time in the page history.
  2. Click on the "edit" tab at the top of the page. You will see a notice in bold font at the top of the page, which reads "You are editing an out-of-date revision of this page".
  3. Without editing the page's content, scroll down to the edit summary and type "reverting vandalism" or "reverting spam".
  4. Save the page. This will remove multiple changes made to a page by a vandal.

Sometimes, a user may have vandalized a large number of pages before an admin steps in to block them. Patrollers and administrators possess a "rollback" feature, which is a quick way to revert a large number of edits made during a vandal attack. Additionally, administrators are able to prevent certain revisions of pages from being viewed by the public. This would be performed if a vandal were to add extremely inappropriate content to an article (i.e. sexually explicit messages, sensitive personal information about a user, links to dangerous websites, etc.).

See also

Template:Levelbox

World 1-1 is the first level of World 1 in Super Mario Bros., and the first level overall in said game; thus, it is the first level in general of the entire Super Mario series. The first screen of the level is also the game's title screen when starting it up. It contains the basics of the Super Mario Bros. game, getting the player ready for the journey ahead. The level consists of Magic Mushrooms, standard enemies such as Little Goombas and Koopa Troopas, a lot of coins, a hidden secret bonus area that allows the player to skip most of the level, Fire Flowers, pits, and a flagpole at the end. According to Shigeru Miyamoto, World 1-1 was one of the later levels created, due to the "fun" courses created first being more suited for late game, where players were more familiar with how Super Mario Bros. works.[1]

Due to its iconic notability, the level has been re-created in many games, including Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3, New Super Mario Bros. Wii, New Super Mario Bros. 2 (as part of the first stage of the Gold Classics Pack), Super Smash Bros. Brawl, Super Paper Mario, Super Mario Maker for Nintendo 3DS as the first level of Super Mario Challenge, in a theater in the Metro Kingdom of Super Mario Odyssey, and Super Mario Maker 2 as the 4-star difficulty level Super Mario Bros. W1-1?.

Layout

World 1 (SMB)
Map of World 1-1

This level starts out on a brick path. As Mario or Luigi moves forward, a Little Goomba appears and starts walking towards them. They then reach the first ? Block of the game, and afterward the six block triangle formation of ? Blocks and regular Brick Blocks (with a Magic Mushroom inside the left block). A set of Pipes can be found, with Little Goombas located in between them. The final pipe among the set leads to a bonus area of coins and can be entered to bypass much of the level. After that, assuming the pipe was not taken, there is a hidden 1 up Mushroom block and a pit followed by another ? Block containing an item, possibly a Magic Mushroom or Fire Flower, depending on the their form. Additionally, Little Goombas start falling down from a long row of blocks above. There is a Brick Block down below contains ten coins that the plumbers can retrieve by jumping repeatedly underneath the brick. There are two Brick Blocks after that; the second one contains a Starman. Then there is a ? Block triangle formation. The top block contains a Fire Flower (or a Magic Mushroom if Mario is small). A Koopa Troopa and more Little Goombas appear. Brick Blocks and ? Blocks can be found, followed by a pyramid-like set of Hard Blocks with a gap in the middle. After that is another pyramid-like set of blocks, this time with a pit in the middle. Just following is another pipe that cannot be entered (which is the exit from the bonus area mentioned earlier), followed by two Little Goombas and four blocks in a row (three Brick Blocks and a coin-holding ? Block). Afterwards is another inaccessible pipe, the ending staircase for the level, and the flagpole, which is reused in all underground and underwater stages in the game.

Super Mario Bros. Deluxe challenges

Challenge Mode
The Yoshi Egg's location
Challenge Mode
The first Red Coin

In Super Mario Bros. Deluxe, Mario or Luigi can collect five Red Coins, find a hidden Yoshi Egg, and get a medal based on their score. The Yoshi Egg is found in a Hidden Block within the first set of pyramid-like steps, and the score to beat is 32000. The Red Coin locations are:

  • On the row of blocks at the start of the level.
  • In the first ten-coin block after the second pit. The player needs to collect all the coins first before the Red Coin appears.
  • In the third ? Block soon after the second Red Coin.
  • On top of the Brick Blocks soon after the third Red Coin. The player needs to use the single Brick Block as a platform.
  • In the final ? Block of the level.

Enemies

Name Count
File:Goomba2.gif
Little Goomba
16
A Green Koopa Troopa walking from Super Mario Bros.
Green Koopa Troopa
1

Level statistics

Feature Count Notes
A Coin from Super Mario Bros.
Coin
39 10 in ? blocks, up to 10 in one Coin Block, and 19 in open air in the secret area.
SMB Supermushroom.png
Magic Mushroom
3 Replaced by Fire Flowers if Mario is already Super Mario.
Fire Flower
Fire Flower
3 Replaces Magic Mushrooms if Mario is Super Mario.
A Starman from Super Mario Bros.
Starman
1 Hidden in a Brick Block.
SMB 1-up Mushroom Sprite.png
1 up Mushroom
1 Hidden in an invisible block.
Secret Area 1 Entrance to the secret area is in the 4th pipe. Contains 19 coins. Exits out at the 5th pipe, near the end.

Gallery

Trivia

References

  1. ^ Eurogamer. (September 7, 2015). Miyamoto on World 1-1: How Nintendo made Mario's most iconic level. YouTube. Retrieved December 27, 2017.

Template:SMB Levels