Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2

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Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2
File:Box NA - Super Mario World Super Mario Advance 2.png
For alternate box art, see the game's gallery.
Developer Nintendo EAD
Publisher Nintendo
Platform(s) Game Boy Advance
Virtual Console (Wii U)
Release date Game Boy Advance:
Template:ReleaseVirtual Console (Wii U):
Template:Release[?]
Language(s) English (United States)
French (France)
German
Spanish (Spain)
Japanese
Simplified Chinese
Genre 2D platformer
Rating(s)
ESRB:E - Everyone
PEGI:3 - Three years and older
USK:0 - All ages
Mode(s) Single player, multiplayer
Input
Wii U:
Wii Remote (horizontal)
Game Boy Advance:

Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2 (or Super Mario Advance 2: Super Mario World) is a reissue of Super Mario World made for the Game Boy Advance and developed by Nintendo Entertainment Analysis and Development (EAD). It is the second title in the Super Mario Advance series and was released in Japan on December 14, 2001; in North America on February 11, 2002; and in Europe and Australia in April 2002. There are numerous gameplay, visual, and level design changes from the original game, but the most noticeable alteration is making the game for one player only instead of two. However, Luigi is still playable but this time as an alternate character.

The game was successful, selling over 5,460,000 copies worldwide, with at least 3,290,000 copies in the United States.[citation needed] The classic game Mario Bros. has been included in the game (like the other Super Mario Advance games), with multiplayer. Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2 was rereleased on the Wii U's Virtual Console in Japan on April 3, 2014; in North America on December 25, 2014; and in Europe and Australia in March 2016.

Gameplay and premise

Main article: Super Mario World
Mario, Luigi, and Peach in Dinosaur Land in Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2
Mario and Luigi arrive at Dinosaur Land with Peach.

The gameplay and plot are the same as in the original version of Super Mario World for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. Players take control of either Mario or Luigi, adventuring through Dinosaur Land to foil the evil King Bowser and his Koopalings, who have kidnapped Princess Toadstool (also known as Princess Peach) and imprisoned seven of the native Yoshis in eggs. Players navigate through the game's worlds via an overworld map featuring paths connecting to action panels, fortresses, etc. The playfields of the levels are populated with obstacles and enemies, with the player traversing the stage by making use of basic techniques from the NES Mario titles, like running, jumping, swimming, dodging, and defeating enemies; and those new to the original Super Mario World, like the Spin Jump.

The same power-ups from the original release are retained, including the basic power-ups of the Super Mushroom, Fire Flower, and Starman; and the Cape Feather, introduced in the original game. The Super Mushroom increases Mario or Luigi's size; the Fire Flower gives him a fireball attack; the Starman makes him invincible; and the Cape Feather allows him to fly and to attack enemies by spinning. Also returning is Yoshi, the Mario brothers' sidekick and riding mount from the original Super Mario World, who is able to eat most enemies and gain special abilities from holding colored Koopa shells in his mouth. The game also contains blue, yellow, and red Yoshis, which become available to Mario and Luigi from any level in the game after he has found their eggs in Star World and fed them enough enemies or objects to grow them to maturity. When holding any Koopa shell in his mouth, these Yoshis gain the ability that corresponds to its own color, in addition to that of the shell.

Outside of the main mode of play, players may also play a remake of the Mario Bros. game, included in all the other games in the Super Mario Advance series, which supports anywhere from one to four players.

Controls

The Wii U allows controls to be customized

Game Boy Advance

Wii U (default)

  • +Control Pad: Move
  • R Button: Spin Jump
  • A Button: Jump / Select level
  • B Button: Run (with +Control Pad) / Shoot fireball (as Fire Mario)
  • L Button: Pan camera / Toggle world map camera
  • Plus Button: Pause
  • Minus Button: Use item in Item Stock / Show stats

Changes from the original game

Super Mario Advance 2 has considerably less significant differences from the game it ports than the first Super Mario Advance. Nevertheless, the game contains many gameplay, visual, and other changes from the original Super Mario World, which are explained as follows.

Gameplay

Mario and Luigi's different jump heights.
Mario's and Luigi's height differences in their respective jumps

Several changes were made to the gameplay, some to accommodate the GBA's different button layout, and others to to further refine the game:

  • The game's original two-player feature, making the game for only one player. Because of this, Luigi is reworked as an optional character, who can be swapped out with Mario by pressing R Button on the world maps.

Rather than just a pallet swap of Mario as in the first game, Luigi plays differently from Mario in several ways:

    • Luigi jumps higher, but more slowly than Mario, and scuttles in midair as he jumps, similar to how he did in the first Super Mario Advance. When Luigi flies using the Cape, he flies slightly higher than Mario, but not as fast.
    • Luigi suffers from worse traction and lower running speed than his brother.
    • Fire Luigi's fireballs bounce higher than Fire Mario's.
    • When Luigi is riding him, Yoshi does not instantly swallow enemies; instead, he can spit them out and use them to attack other enemies, automatically swallowing them after a brief amount of time.
    • If Luigi hits a Coin Block, all of the coins inside it will spill out of the block at once instead of collecting them one by one.
  • The Fall event, previously made available after the player cleared the Special Zone, is now locked until the player has cleared all 96 exits, and not only Koopa Troopas, Bullet Bills, and Piranha Plants, but also Goombas and Pokeys have their appearances changed.
  • A status menu is added, accessible by pressing Select Button on the world maps, which allows players to check their total play time, score, how many levels they have played (and which brother they used in which levels), and whether or not they have collected all the Dragon Coins in a given level.
    • Once all the levels have been cleared, the player can press A Button to automatically access the levels that they select.
  • After the colored Yoshis have been unlocked in Star World, eggs contained in Prize Blocks will spawn different colored Yoshis depending on which power-up Mario or Luigi currently has.
  • The save system is updated to allow players to save at any time, whether on the playfield or in the world maps, as opposed to the original game, which only allowed saving after completing a Ghost House, fortress, or castle.
    • The player's life count and power-ups are also saved.
  • The maximum life count is raised to 999, and the maximum number of extra lives the player can get from jumping on or hitting enemies is raised from three to five.
    • If the player earns at least 10 consecutive lives, a flower and text stating how many lives the player earned scrolls across the screen.
  • The time limit for Bowser's Castle has been increased from 400 seconds to 800 and 600 for the front and back doors, respectively.
    • When battling Bowser in the SNES version, the timer and scoring are disabled, with the HUD only displaying the reserve item, if the player has one. In the GBA version, the full HUD is displayed during the battle, with the scoring and timer remaining in effect throughout. After Bowser is defeated, and Mario or Luigi go up to the princess, the time remaining is multiplied and added to the score as usual when completing a level before the ending sequence begins.
  • When Mario or Luigi are hit when in caped or fire form, they only revert to their super forms, keeping their reserve item.
  • Yoshi will lay an egg containing an item after eating ten red berries. The SNES version always produced a Super Mushroom, while in the GBA version, the item depends on the Yoshi's color:
    • Green Yoshi - Super Mushroom
    • Yellow Yoshi - Super Star
    • Red Yoshi - Fire Flower
    • Blue Yoshi - Cape Feather
  • Defeating climbing Koopas consecutively counts towards a point chain in the GBA version, as does defeating enemies while sliding down slopes.
  • As the GBA lacks the X Button and Y Button buttons, it is not possible to shoot fireballs while holding Shells or Grab Blocks.
  • In the SNES version, the player could replay a completed castle or fortress by holding the L Button and R Button buttons when selecting the level. The GBA version does not allow the player to reenter the castles or fortresses until after Bowser is defeated, at which point the player may replay any of the castles and fortresses without the need for a special button combination.
  • In the bonus game:
    • In the SNES version, Mario/Luigi performs a V sign regardless of the outcome. In the GBA version, Mario/Luigi looks down with sadness if he doesn't win.
    • When Mario/Luigi wins in a bonus game, the matching icons flashed in the SNES version, whereas the GBA version also shows lines connecting the matching icons.
  • Mario/Luigi is capable of climbing beanstalks faster if B Button is held while climbing in the GBA version.
  • In the SNES version, only the normal green Yoshi hatched from eggs found in question blocks. In the GBA version, a different color Yoshi can be found in the question blocks based on which color Yoshi has been found in Star World and fed enough enemies or objects to grow to maturity, as well as the power-up Mario or Luigi currently has. The possible outcomes are as follows (forms written in italics will always spawn that particular Yoshi, assuming it has already been found and fed in Star World, whereas forms not written in italics will randomly spawn a Yoshi among those which have already been unlocked):
    • Green Yoshi for Small Mario, Super Mario, Fire Mario (if Red Yoshi has not been found and fed yet), and Caped Mario (if Blue Yoshi has not been found and fed yet).
    • Yellow Yoshi for Small Mario, Super Mario, Fire Mario (if Red Yoshi has not been found and fed yet), and Caped Mario (if Blue Yoshi has not been found and fed yet).
    • Red Yoshi for Small Mario, Super Mario, Fire Mario, and Caped Mario (if Blue Yoshi has not been found and fed yet).
    • Blue Yoshi for Small Mario, Super Mario, Fire Mario (if Red Yoshi has not been found and fed yet) and Caped Mario.


Other

Example of Super Mario Advance 2's level design vs. the original Super Mario World's
An example of the redesigned levels: In Donut Plains 1, this pair of pipes is added, likely to prevent Mario or Luigi from abruptly grabbing the key and entering the keyhole.

Level design

Several levels and areas are altered to accommodate for the Game Boy Advance's lack of vertical screen space, as well as to adjust their difficulty. Notable changes include:

Art

Some colors, text, and animations are altered as follows:

  • With the GBA being technically inferior to the SNES, the developers reduced the display resolution to fit better on the GBA (resulting in a "screen crunch"), and brightened the original color palettes to accommodate the absence of a backlight in the handheld's original model.
  • The Mario brothers' overalls were changed to the standard blue.
  • As in the special compilation cartridge Super Mario All-Stars + Super Mario World, Luigi has his own sprite set independent of Mario's, rather than just being a recolor of Mario. However, his sprite is a new design based on his appearance in Super Mario Advance. Unlike Super Mario All-Stars + Super Mario World, all of his poses are identical to Mario's.
  • Peach's sprites were redesigned to more accurately resemble her official appearance (incorporating her established lighter dress color, hair thickness, and blue earring coloration).
  • Bowser and Yoshi's arm colors were corrected to their main skin colors.
  • The Pidgit Bill is redesigned to look like the original Pidgits from Super Mario Bros. 2.
  • The brown boss door in the Chocolate Fortress stage, the only one of its kind in the SNES version, is recolored red like the rest of the boss doors.
  • The eggs of the seven captured Yoshis are recolored to fit the coloring of the Yoshis trapped inside of them.
  • The Koopalings and Bowser gain an additional finger on their hands.
  • After the 96 exits are completed, most Message Blocks congratulate the player on finding the secret world and completing all the exits.
  • The heading "Point of Advice" on Message Blocks is changed to "Tourist Tips".
  • As Yoshi can spit enemies back out while being ridden by Luigi, enemies such as Mega Moles, Dolphins, Wigglers, Lakitus, Volcano Lotuses, Porcu-Puffers, Super Koopas, and even Floating Mines have new alternate defeat sprites seen when Yoshi spits them out. In the case of Blargg, only his eyes are spit out by Yoshi.
  • Magikoopas no longer use the incorrectly-mapped unique palette that they had in the original, instead using the default blue, which is mapped correctly.
  • The Top Secret Area is represented by a unique smiling hill icon on the world map.
  • After Bowser is defeated, the castle and fortress icons on the world map have their lower portions rebuilt, while still retaining the white flag in place of the upper portion.
  • When a different color Yoshi is found for the first time in Star World and fully grown, a text box appears where the Yoshi thanks the player for rescuing it and tells the player what it can do when carrying any color shell in its mouth.

Introduction and Cutscenes

Additional cutscenes were added or changed:

  • A pre-title introductory cinema scene is added, where Mario, Luigi, and the princess arrive in Dinosaur Land by hot-air balloon, the brothers fly around Yoshi's Island with capes, and upon their return to the landing spot they find the princess missing and become puzzled; if the player has won the final battle, the ending of the cutscene instead shows the princess being escorted by a Yoshi while Mario and Luigi fly behind.
  • The intro scene where it is stated that the player is in Dinosaur Land and Bowser has kidnapped the princess originally had Mario standing, and if the player presses a button before the text box appears, Mario would start into a moving pose before being frozen in place once the text is on screen. In the GBA version, the player cannot control the characters before the scene cuts to the world map. Luigi is added to the intro scene, pacing back and fourth as Mario looks up at the text box.
  • Two other cinematics are added in the GBA version:
    • When the player has collected all the Dragon Coins, a cutscene is shown where the Dragon Coins fall from above, piling up on a platform, with a large coin in the center that Yoshi swallows and lays an egg that contains a Peach coin, followed by Mario and Luigi appearing to do their V poses.
    • After all 96 exits are cleared, a cutscene is shown where Luigi is tossing Mario Masks from the hot air balloon, followed by a message congratulating the player on finding all exits and telling the player to try a slightly different Dinosaur Land. Mario is then shown stomping a Koopa and taking away its shell, leaving the Koopa with the mask that lands in front of it.

Following clearing a castle stage, the text is changed as follows:

  • It now says both Mario and Luigi defeated the Koopaling, rather than just Mario or Luigi.
  • Iggy is described as "crazed" rather than "demented", as the latter is considered rude in some regions.
  • The grammar and general flow of the text has been improved:
    • Wendy O. Koopa has "sung her swan song" rather than her "last song".
    • Chocolate Island is called "deliciously dangerous" instead of "dangerous (but tasty)".

Ending

The ending is also altered significantly, as follows:

  • Both mentions of Mario are accompanied by mentions of Luigi, and vice versa.
  • Instead of being mentioned as simply "the princess", Peach is now referred to by her now-standard original Japanese name, even though all uses of the name "Princess Toadstool" from the original release are retained.
  • Whenever the player replays the level after the first time Bowser is defeated, the text simply states: "Mario and Luigi's adventure is over."
  • Luigi is added in the credits sequence and the return to Yoshi's house.
    • In the former, either Mario or Luigi (depending on whoever was not used to defeat Bowser) is placed at the end of the line behind the eggs of the trapped Yoshis.
    • Because of Yoshi's arms being recolored to match his body, there is an error in the scene where Mario, Luigi, Peach, Yoshi, and the trapped Yoshis arrive at Yoshi's house: the mouths of the green and blue Yoshis match their respective colors rather than being shared with the red and yellow Yoshis when they celebrate, even after the trapped Yoshis hatch from their respective eggs. This error doesn't exist in the SNES original.
  • The Magikoopa is added to the "cast list" of enemies after the credits, appearing next to the Grinder.
  • While the enemies have their new appearances in the fall variation of the "cast list", their names remain unchanged in the GBA version.
  • The "THE END" screen that appears after the enemy parade is completely overhauled:
    • Mario, Peach, and Luigi are represented with a custom-drawn illustration.
    • The text is restyled to be red with a navy-blue outline.
    • The background, though initially white, changes to a grass hill when a camera snapshot is heard.
    • When this screen is displayed, the player is no longer required to reset the system; they can return to the Yoshi's Island world map upon pressing Start Button, where they are given the option to save.

Sound

The soundtrack has been changed as follows:

  • The quality of the entire soundtrack is downgraded for the GBA's inferior sound chip.
  • Digital voice acting is contributed for Mario and Luigi by Charles Martinet, with a combination of new voice clips and those ripped from the first Super Mario Advance game.
  • The Boos were given laughter effects.
  • The Koopalings will shriek upon being dumped into lava pools.
    • Shooting them with fireballs also makes the "boss hit" sound.
  • New sound effects have also been added for certain actions and events: sliding/skidding, opening the net gates, scanning the map, Amazing Flyin' Hammer Brothers throwing hammers, when a Magikoopa appears, hitting a bonus block without collecting 30 coins, the transition of items in the Roulette Block, the timer on the Count-Lifts, Bowser dropping the large bowling balls and getting hit by a Mecha Koopa, and a Koopaling dropping from the ceiling.
  • The pitch of the death jingle is increased by five half steps.
  • While Mario/Luigi is in balloon form, the tempo of the music is decreased, and a warning sound is added for when the balloon effect is about to expire.

Reception

Reviews
Release Reviewer, Publication Score Comment
Game Boy Advance Derek "DC" Collins, Gamespy 91/100 "While there are arguments that Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2 breathes new life into the 2D gaming genre, I highly doubt that this title is capable of that. First, this is not a new game. It's been around for a over a decade, and the fact that a game of this caliber has to be rehashed in order for the kiddies to appreciate it doesn't wash. Secondly, while Super Mario Advance 2 represents the Golden Age of gaming on a smaller screen, this game is not anything but what it was to gamers 10 years ago -- one terrific good time."
Game Boy Advance Jeff Gerstmann, GameSpot 9.4/10 "Super Mario World is one of the greatest games ever made. The Game Boy Advance version adds a handful of amenities to cater a little bit more to the portable crowd, but these changes serve only to enhance an already extraordinary game. New multiplayer options would have been nice, but in the end, this is a game that no Game Boy Advance library should be without."
Aggregators
Compiler Platform / Score
Metacritic 92
GameRankings 92.36%

Development and staff

See also: List of Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2 staff

As shown in published screenshots, an early build retained the original game's HUD, which was altered in the final to fit in better with the GBA's screen resolution.[1] Even the original test levels were left in the game; they can be accessed via a glitch.

The game was produced by Mario creator Shigeru Miyamoto, and directed by Hiroyuki Kimura with supervision from original SNES directors Takashi Tezuka and Toshihiko Nakago. The new graphics were designed by Emi Tomita, and the new audio cues were composed by Yasushi Ida and Taiju Suzuki. This was the last entry in the Mario franchise to be produced under Hiroshi Yamauchi's administration as president of Nintendo.

Glitches

Y00

These glitches only occur in Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2. For a list of glitches that are exclusive to the original Super Mario World or occur in both versions of the game, see here.

  • After having found all 96 exits, the player can simultaneously press a +Control Pad button and Select Button to trigger the status screen, then choose a level and move in an incorrect way going to an incorrect level. Pressing A Button will result in no response, an endless bonus game, an actual level, or an inaccessible level like the intro level. Some levels (i.e. #2 Morton's Plains) if beaten will glitch the game drastically if the normal exit is taken or revert to the original overworld if the secret exit is taken. For some reason, getting more than 96 exits through this glitch reverts the overworld back to the normal overworld and saving is fatal. Through this glitch, it is possible for the player to access a test level and unused intro from the original game by going to Star World 3, pressing right on the +Control Pad and Select Button simultaneously, and selecting the second Star Road on the list at the level screen.
  • If Mario/Luigi is riding Yoshi with 999 lives, the player may enter a level with possibly at least a 1-Up Mushroom (i.e. Yoshi's Island 2) that was already beaten, stick Yoshi's tongue to the 1-Up Mushroom, and rapidly press Start Button when Yoshi's mouth is full. Upon returning to the map screen from the pause menu, the player's life counter shows up as Y00 (1000). This glitch is temporary, and the life counter resets if the player enters another level.
  • After completing the game, Mario and Luigi should return to the flattened Yellow Switch Palace, then the player must very quickly press Select Button and down on +Control Pad, then select Chocolate Island 3. From there, Mario or Luigi will begin a winding trek back to the flattened Yellow Switch Palace; however, it will display Chocolate Island 3's name instead of "Yellow Switch Palace." Upon pressing A Button, Mario or Luigi will be able to re-enter the Yellow Switch Palace. It should be noted that after returning here, the Yellow ! Switch will not be found at the end as it has already been pressed. Therefore, Mario or Luigi must manually exit the level since there is no other way out.
  • In the level Outrageous, if Mario or Luigi is riding a Yoshi and falls into the bottomless pit before the last Bullet Bill stand, he can jump off the Yoshi at the very last second and then be damaged by a Bullet Bill. This must be done in a frame-perfect manner. After beating the level, Mario or Luigi will be riding a Silver Yoshi that acts as a Yellow Yoshi. After Silver Yoshi eats all of the red berries in a level, an egg will hatch not to reveal a Super Mushroom, Fire Flower, Cape Feather, or Starman, but instead a Beach Koopa.

Gallery

For this subject's image gallery, see Gallery:Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2.

Media

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Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese スーパーマリオアドバンス2[?]
Sūpā Mario Adobansu Tsū
Super Mario Advance 2
Chinese 超级马力欧世界[?]
Chāojí Mǎlì'ōu Shìjiè
Super Mario World

References

Template:Mario games