Grass Land

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This article is about the first world from Super Mario Bros. 3 and its remakes. For the first level from Yoshi's Safari, see Grass Land (level). For the musical composition heard here, see Map 1 World.
Grass Land
Grass Land
Map in Super Mario Advance 4
Game Super Mario Bros. 3
Level(s) 8
<< List of worlds >>

Grass Land (alternatively Grasslands[1] or The Grassland[1]) is the first world of Super Mario Bros. 3. It has six regular levels, one Hammer Brother to encounter, one fortress, a Spade Panel, two Toad Houses, and a castle that has been taken over by an airship. In the third level, and in the fortress, Mario can get two out of the three Magic Whistles in the game. Larry Koopa, one of the seven Koopalings, guards this area and is the boss of Grass Land. The world map's natural terrain includes ground similar to that found in 1-1 and 1-3, several hills, rocks, and a moat surrounding the castle. The king of Grass Land wears a turban, and has a beard. During the events of the game, he is turned into a dog by the Koopalings; the SNES and Game Boy Advance versions of Super Mario Bros. 3 instead see him turned into a Cobrat. The world map included in Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 shows that World 1 is bordered by World 2 to the south and World 7 to the east. Likewise, the opening implies that it is in close proximity to the Mushroom Kingdom.

In The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3, Grass Land does not make an explicit appearance; however, its map shows up as the opening curtain when the Mushroom Kingdom is the episode's main setting, implying them to be one and the same or at least its animated equivalent. The Mushroom Kingdom (also sometimes called Mushroomland) appears in almost every episode at some point, as it was where Mario and his friends live. Mario and Luigi live in Toad's house, while Princess Toadstool lives in the Mushroom Castle. The episodes in which this world is shown as the title card are "Reptiles in the Rose Garden", "Princess Toadstool for President", "Reign Storm", "Toddler Terrors of Time Travel", "Dadzilla", "Tag Team Trouble", "Misadventures in Babysitting", "Mush-Rumors", "7 Continents for 7 Koopas", and "True Colors".

In Nintendo World Championships: NES Edition, completing this world is a Legend-difficulty challenge titled World 1 Wizard.

Grass Land's world map theme has gone on to be arranged and included in melodies in several other games. A rendition is played on the level-up option screen in Paper Mario, the Rec Room in Super Mario 64 DS, and the 100 Mario Challenge and Course World menus in Super Mario Maker. A medley of this theme and the Super Mario Bros. overworld theme is played in Mario's Pad in Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars and Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga. Another medley of this music, mixed with Super Mario Bros. 3's overworld theme, can be heard on the stage Yoshi's Island in Super Smash Bros. Melee, Super Smash Bros. Brawl, and Super Smash Bros. for Wii U, and on any Super Mario stage in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. One other medley of this music, mixed with the map music for World 1 from New Super Mario Bros. Wii is the world map theme for World 1 of Puzzle & Dragons: Super Mario Bros. Edition. Additionally, a highly similar theme is used for the Munchlax's Berry Bonanza Flash game, on the now-defunct "Play Games" section of the Pokémon website.[2]

Levels

Image Name Description

SMAS SMB3 World 1-1 Screenshot.png World 1-1 The first level of the game. This level introduces the Super Leaf, along with various enemies.
SMAS SMB3 World 1-2 Screenshot.png World 1-2 A grassy level featuring pipes, which also introduces sloped terrain and Starmen.
SMAS SMB3 World 1-3 Screenshot.png World 1-3 A plain-based level that resembles World 1-1, which introduces Coin Heaven.
SMAS SMB3 World 1-4 Screenshot.png World 1-4 An autoscrolling athletic level featuring multiple moving platforms.
SMAS SMB3 World 1-F Screenshot.png World 1-Fortress The first fortress level of the game. This level introduces Boom Boom, along with various castle aesthetics.
SMAS SMB3 World 1-5 Screenshot.png World 1-5 An underground level, featuring pools of water and another Coin Heaven.
SMAS SMB3 World 1-6 Screenshot.png World 1-6 Another athletic level, featuring moving platforms on tracks.
SMAS SMB3 World 1-A Screenshot.png World 1-Airship The first airship level of the game. This level introduces cannons and Bullet Bills, and its boss is Larry Koopa.
The Hammer Brother battle in Grass Land. World 1-Hammer Bro The Hammer Brother will be on a green plain with various hills to the left and right, as well as a row of seven breakable blocks, with a small chance of the one on the right containing a Fire Flower. Successfully defeating the Hammer Brother will reward the player with a chest that contains a Starman. Note that if the player unlocked the conditions for accessing the Treasure Ship, the Hammer Brother will be replaced with the ship on the map. In the original version only, the head of the flower in this battle is white with no black outline.)

Gallery

Media

Audio.svg Grass Land - BGM
File infoMedia:World 1 Theme Super Mario Bros 3.oga
0:30
Audio.svg Grass Land - BGM (Super Mario All-Stars version)
File infoMedia:SMAS SMB3 World 1 Map.oga
0:30
Help:MediaHaving trouble playing?

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese ワールド1 草原そうげんくに[3][4]
Wārudo1 Sōgen no Kuni
World 1: Grassland Land (alternatively "Grass Land"[5] in-game)
French Pays vert[?] Green land
Pays-vert (Super Mario Bros. 3 instruction booklet)[?] Green-land
German Buschland[?] Bush Land / Jungle Land
Land der Steppe[?] Land of Veldt / Land of Steppe
Italian Mondo dei Prati[6] (Super Mario Bros. 3) Grass World
Prateria (Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3, Nintendo World Championship: NES Edition)[?] Prairie
Portuguese (NOA) Terra da Grama[7] Land of the Grass
Spanish Tierra Verde[?] Green Land

References

  1. ^ a b June 1990. Nintendo Power Volume 13. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 16.
  2. ^ pokemonfanac (July 8, 2010). Munchlax's Berry Bonanza (Pokemon.com). YouTube (English). Retrieved December 4, 2021.
  3. ^ Nintendo (1988). スーパーマリオブラザーズ3 (Sūpā Mario Burazāzu Surī) instruction booklet. Nintendo (Japanese). Page 30.
  4. ^ Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario 3 + Mario Bros. Japanese ending (in kana).
  5. ^ Super Mario Bros. 3 and Super Mario Collection Japanese ending.
  6. ^ Super Mario Bros. 3 Italian manual. Page 30.
  7. ^ November 1991. VideoGame magazine, issue 8A. Editora Sigla (Brazilian Portuguese). Page 10.