A Super Mario variety blog.
Screenshots, photos, sprites, gifs, scans and more from all around the world of Super Mario Bros.


Officially licensed Paper Mario: Sticker Star tissue boxes from Japan.
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In Super Mario 64, touching the space underneath the wall near the beginning segment of Whomp’s Fortress in the manner depicted will cause Mario to instantaneously transport upward to the top of that wall, saving him from dying due to falling.
Main Blog | Twitter | Patreon | Small Findings | Source: info
The data for Paper Mario contains an unused “Defend” function for Mario, which makes him crouch and increases his Defense stat by 1 (note how the Spiked Goomba, which has an Attack stat of 2, deals 1 damage, and the regular Goomba with an Attack stat of 1 deals no damage). This is identical in function and animation to the Defend function later used in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door.
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The Valiant Super Mario Bros. comics feature Shy Guys making various expressions with their masks. This does not usually happen in other media; whenever it does happen (like in Mario Strikers Charged), it is not as pronounced as seen in these comics.
Main Blog | Twitter | Patreon | Source: The Best Of The Super Mario Bros (US), 1990
Illustrations from an officially licensed Yoshi’s Island picture book from Japan.
Main Blog | Twitter | Patreon | Source: twitter.com user “blacktangent”
Behind-the-scenes photos from the making of the Mario and Luigi mascot costume heads used by costume company KCL Productions for many North American Nintendo commercials.
Main Blog | Twitter | Patreon | Small Findings | Source: see bottom of image
1990 comic promoting various NES accessories from the British Club Nintendo magazine. Note that the comic features two aliens that are based on Tatanga, the villain from Super Mario Land; however, unlike Tatanga, who kidnaps Princess Daisy, they kidnap Princess Peach instead.
Main Blog | Twitter | Patreon | Source: flickr.com user “Tanooki’s Stuff”
Limited edition officially licensed 1996 Yoshi plush with larger-than-usual eyes from Japan.
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The background music for the writing process on the Famicom Disk Writer kiosks. The Famicom Disk Writer kiosks were stations available across Japan in the late 1980s and 1990s where customers could pay a small fee to copy games to their rewritable Famicom Disk System disks, as an alternative to video game rental. During operation, the kiosks would show animations of Mario and Luigi that represented parts of the writing process.
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