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{{about|[[Mario]]'s younger brother from the [[Mario (franchise)|''Mario'' franchise]]|the portrayal of Luigi in the [[Super Mario Bros. (film)|''Super Mario Bros.'' film]]|[[Luigi (film character)]]|his infant counterpart|[[Baby Luigi]]}} | {{about|[[Mario]]'s younger brother from the [[Super Mario (franchise)|''Super Mario'' franchise]]|the portrayal of Luigi in the [[Super Mario Bros. (film)|''Super Mario Bros.'' film]]|[[Luigi (film character)]]|his infant counterpart|[[Baby Luigi]]}} | ||
{{character infobox | {{character infobox | ||
|image=[[File:MPSS Luigi.png|170px]]<br>Artwork | |image=<!--Do not change to Super Mario Bros. Wonder artwork as that features the Parachute Cap ability, making it game specialised.-->[[File:MPSS Luigi.png|170px]]<br>Artwork from ''[[Mario Party Superstars]]'' | ||
|full_name=Luigi Mario<ref>Brian. [http://nintendoeverything.com/miyamoto-says-marios-full-name-is-mario-mario/ Miyamoto says Mario’s full name is “Mario Mario”]. ''Nintendo Everything'' (September 14, 2015). Retrieved September 14th 2015</ref> | |full_name=Luigi Mario<ref>Brian. [http://nintendoeverything.com/miyamoto-says-marios-full-name-is-mario-mario/ Miyamoto says Mario’s full name is “Mario Mario”]. ''Nintendo Everything'' (September 14, 2015). Retrieved September 14th 2015</ref> | ||
|first_appearance=''[[Mario Bros. (Game & Watch)|Mario Bros.]]'' ([[Game & Watch]]) ([[List of games by date#1983|1983]]) | |first_appearance=''[[Mario Bros. (Game & Watch)|Mario Bros.]]'' ([[Game & Watch]]) ([[List of games by date#1983|1983]]) | ||
|species=Human | |species=Human | ||
|latest_appearance=''[[ | |latest_appearance=''[[Super Mario RPG (Nintendo Switch)|Super Mario RPG]]'' ([[Nintendo Switch]]) ([[List of games by date#2023|2023]]) | ||
|latest_portrayal=[[ | |latest_portrayal=[[Kevin Afghani]] ([[List of games by date#2023|2023]]–present) | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{quote|[[ | {{quote|Eek! No one told me there would be gh-gh-ghosts here! I wish I'd brought my [[Poltergust 3000]] with me.|Luigi|Fortune Street}} | ||
'''Luigi''' is [[Mario]]'s younger twin brother, the secondary protagonist of the [[Mario (franchise)|''Mario'' franchise]], and the main protagonist of the ''[[Luigi's Mansion (series)|Luigi's Mansion]]'' series. Throughout his life, he has lived in Mario's shadow, developing both cowardly and heroic tendencies. Despite this, Luigi has helped and fought alongside his brother on many occasions. ''[[Mario Bros. (Game & Watch)|Mario Bros.]]'' for the [[Game & Watch]] marks his first appearance, in which he is an exact copy of Mario. He went on to gain a different color and be used to facilitate a second-player option. However, as Luigi established himself throughout the ''Mario'' | '''Luigi''' is [[Mario]]'s younger but taller twin brother, the secondary protagonist of the [[Super Mario (franchise)|''Super Mario'' franchise]], and the main protagonist of the ''[[Luigi's Mansion (series)|Luigi's Mansion]]'' series. Throughout his life, he has lived in Mario's shadow, developing both cowardly and heroic tendencies. Despite this, Luigi has helped and fought alongside his brother on many occasions. ''[[Mario Bros. (Game & Watch)|Mario Bros.]]'' for the [[Game & Watch]] marks his first appearance, in which he is an exact copy of Mario. He went on to gain a different color and be used to facilitate a second-player option. However, as Luigi established himself throughout the ''Super Mario'' franchise, he gained his own identity as a character. | ||
==Creation and development== | ==Creation and development== | ||
Luigi was created when [[Gunpei Yokoi]] set out to produce ''[[Mario Bros. (game)|Mario Bros.]]''<ref>[https://iwataasks.nintendo.com/interviews/wii/nsmb/0/1/ Iwata Asks: New Super Mario Bros. Wii Vol. 1 Ch. 2]. Retrieved May 2, 2023.</ref><ref>[https://news.denfaminicogamer.jp/column01/180619#i-4 『パックマン』にはじまり『スーパーマリオ』でひとつの完成形に達した“キャラクターの身体機能”「なんでゲームは面白い?」第11回]. Retrieved May 2, 2023. (Contains quote from Yokoi found in 「横井軍平ゲーム館」.)</ref> After observing the two-player competitive and cooperative gameplay of the arcade game ''{{wp|Joust (video game)|Joust}}'', he and [[Shigeru Miyamoto]] wished to incorporate a similar style of gameplay into their game.<ref>[https://loderun.blog.ss-blog.jp/2005-09-18 『マリオブラザーズ』の元ネタは『ジャウスト』? (その1)]. Retrieved May 2, 2023. (Addendum quotes an interview with Miyamoto found in 「ゲーム・マエストロ Vol.1」.)</ref> Their answer to ''Joust''{{'}}s stork-riding player 2 was Luigi, a younger twin brother to Mario, with whom he could compete or cooperate. Like Mario, Luigi received his name from [[Nintendo]] of America. Coincidentally, his name was also noted to be similar to the Japanese word 「類似」 (''ruiji''), meaning "similar",<ref>[http://www.vgfacts.com/attachments/full/2/3293.png News article covering interview with Shigeru Miyamoto]. Retrieved January 24, 2015.</ref> possibly a reference to how Luigi was originally a simple palette swap of Mario. With the 2-player mode in mind, Nintendo and publishing companies such as Atari gave Luigi immediate publicity, making him the star and center of attention in many [[List of | Luigi was created when [[Gunpei Yokoi]] set out to produce ''[[Mario Bros. (game)|Mario Bros.]]''<ref>[https://iwataasks.nintendo.com/interviews/wii/nsmb/0/1/ Iwata Asks: New Super Mario Bros. Wii Vol. 1 Ch. 2]. Retrieved May 2, 2023.</ref><ref>[https://news.denfaminicogamer.jp/column01/180619#i-4 『パックマン』にはじまり『スーパーマリオ』でひとつの完成形に達した“キャラクターの身体機能”「なんでゲームは面白い?」第11回]. Retrieved May 2, 2023. (Contains quote from Yokoi found in 「横井軍平ゲーム館」.)</ref> After observing the two-player competitive and cooperative gameplay of the arcade game ''{{wp|Joust (video game)|Joust}}'', he and [[Shigeru Miyamoto]] wished to incorporate a similar style of gameplay into their game.<ref>[https://loderun.blog.ss-blog.jp/2005-09-18 『マリオブラザーズ』の元ネタは『ジャウスト』? (その1)]. Retrieved May 2, 2023. (Addendum quotes an interview with Miyamoto found in 「ゲーム・マエストロ Vol.1」.)</ref> Their answer to ''Joust''{{'}}s stork-riding player 2 was Luigi, a younger twin brother to Mario, with whom he could compete or cooperate. Like Mario, Luigi received his name from [[Nintendo]] of America. Coincidentally, his name was also noted to be similar to the Japanese word 「類似」 (''ruiji''), meaning "similar",<ref>[http://www.vgfacts.com/attachments/full/2/3293.png News article covering interview with Shigeru Miyamoto]. Retrieved January 24, 2015.</ref> possibly a reference to how Luigi was originally a simple palette swap of Mario. With the 2-player mode in mind, Nintendo and publishing companies such as Atari gave Luigi immediate publicity, making him the star and center of attention in many [[List of advertisements|advertisements]] for the game.<ref name="mbcommercial">[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-G0PA7lDRO8 Commercial for Atari Mario Bros. featuring a live-action Luigi.]</ref><ref>[http://themushroomkingdom.net/mania/a/print/mb-atari.jpg Print ad for ''Mario Bros.'']</ref> | ||
Since his debut in [[List of games by date#1983|1983]], Luigi has been constantly developing. Gameplay differences between him and Mario were first seen in ''[[Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels]]'', which have been carried over into future games and have become standard for the character. After spending years as a palette swap of his brother, Luigi has consistently been given his own graphics since ''[[Super Mario Kart]]'' in 1992 to match his official appearance as Mario's taller, younger brother; though the American release of ''[[Super Mario Bros. 2]]'' portrayed him in this way six years earlier. As he developed, Luigi gained more of a personality; it was as early as the [[DiC Entertainment|DiC]] cartoons that Luigi was shown to be the more cautious of the two brothers, though it was not until ''[[Luigi's Mansion]]'' that this was truly and officially established. | Since his debut in [[List of games by date#1983|1983]], Luigi has been constantly developing. Gameplay differences between him and Mario were first seen in ''[[Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels]]'', which have been carried over into future games and have become standard for the character. After spending years as a palette swap of his brother, Luigi has consistently been given his own graphics since ''[[Super Mario Kart]]'' in 1992 to match his official appearance as Mario's taller, younger brother; though the American release of ''[[Super Mario Bros. 2]]'' portrayed him in this way six years earlier. As he developed, Luigi gained more of a personality; it was as early as the [[DiC Entertainment|DiC]] cartoons that Luigi was shown to be the more cautious of the two brothers, though it was not until ''[[Luigi's Mansion]]'' that this was truly and officially established. | ||
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==History== | ==History== | ||
{{main|History of Luigi}} | |||
Luigi has had a substantial history since his debut in ''[[Mario Bros. (Game & Watch)|Mario Bros.]]'' due to being a protagonist of the franchise. Like Mario and all other characters, his appearances are not limited to the core series, appearing in many spin-offs, literature, and animation. | |||
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==General information== | ==General information== | ||
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Compared to Mario, Luigi is slimmer and taller. A pamphlet for ''[[Super Mario Bros.: Peach-hime Kyūshutsu Dai Sakusen!]]'' gives his height and weight as 158 cm (5 ft. 2 in.) and 62 kg (136 lbs.)<ref name=Pamphlet>{{media link|MarioBrosMovieHeightChart.jpg|''Super Mario Bros.: Peach-hime Kyūshutsu Dai Sakusen!'' pamphlet}}</ref> The Miis in Wii U version of ''Mario & Sonic at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games'' describe Luigi's mustache as "smooth", unlike Mario's "lumpy" mustache. Luigi's sideburn is also different, being a simple round shape while Mario's has an indentation. | Compared to Mario, Luigi is slimmer and taller. A pamphlet for ''[[Super Mario Bros.: Peach-hime Kyūshutsu Dai Sakusen!]]'' gives his height and weight as 158 cm (5 ft. 2 in.) and 62 kg (136 lbs.)<ref name=Pamphlet>{{media link|MarioBrosMovieHeightChart.jpg|''Super Mario Bros.: Peach-hime Kyūshutsu Dai Sakusen!'' pamphlet}}</ref> The Miis in Wii U version of ''[[Mario & Sonic at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games]]'' describe Luigi's mustache as "smooth", unlike Mario's "lumpy" mustache. Luigi's sideburn is also different, being a simple round shape while Mario's has an indentation, and his eyes are thinner than Mario's. | ||
Luigi also wears clothes similar to Mario, but his shirt and cap are green instead of red. Layered over the shirt is blue overalls, which are a darker blue than Mario's. He also has brown work shoes, again darker than Mario's, with tan bottoms that reach above his ankles. Artwork however sometimes shows Luigi with the same color of blue overalls and brown shoes as Mario. The [[Luigi Cap]] is similar to the [[Mario Cap]], being green instead of red and having an "L" replace Mario's signature "M"; the "''L''" was in italic from ''Mario Kart 64'' to ''Luigi's Mansion'' for a few years. In some games, Luigi's cap does play some significance, such as in ''[[Super Mario 64 DS]]'', where just like Mario's and Wario's caps, it can be stolen by [[Klepto]] and cause him to take extra damage so long as he | Luigi also wears clothes similar to Mario, but his shirt and cap are green instead of red. Layered over the shirt is blue overalls, which, starting with ''[[Luigi's Mansion]]'', are a darker blue than Mario's. He also has brown work shoes, again darker than Mario's, with tan bottoms that reach above his ankles. He wears white gloves like Mario. Artwork however sometimes shows Luigi with the same color of blue overalls and brown shoes as Mario. The [[Luigi Cap]] is similar to the [[Mario Cap]], being green instead of red and having an "L" replace Mario's signature "M"; the "''L''" was in italic from ''[[Mario Kart 64]]'' to ''Luigi's Mansion'' for a few years. In some games, Luigi's cap does play some significance, such as in ''[[Super Mario 64 DS]]'', where just like Mario's and Wario's caps, it can be stolen by [[Klepto]] and cause him to take extra damage so long as he is not wearing it. However, this does not occur in other games, such as ''[[Super Mario 3D Land]]'' and ''[[New Super Mario Bros. 2]]'' after collecting the maximum number of lives. | ||
The [[Mario & Luigi (series)|''Mario & Luigi'' series]] up until ''[[Mario & Luigi: Dream Team|Dream Team]]'' consistently depicted Luigi with overalls short enough to reveal his red-and-white striped socks, though the [[Nintendo 3DS]] remake ''[[Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story + Bowser Jr.'s Journey]]'' still shows these socks when his shoe falls off at the beginning of the game. Additionally, the green coloring on his clothing had more of a turquoise/teal color scheme. | |||
Mario and Luigi's color preferences are reflected throughout the land in the form of various enemies, such as [[Koopa Troopa]]s and [[Cheep Cheep]]s, who also come in red and green varieties. These foes even reflect the brothers' personalities, with red ones being more aggressive and green ones acting cautious. In fact, Mario and Luigi are not the only known red and green brothers, with similarly color-coded siblings including [[Cork and Cask]], the [[Red (Super Paper Mario)|Red]] and [[Green]] bridge guards, the [[Armored Harriers]], Massif Bros., [[Elder Shrooboid|Elder]] & [[Junior Shrooboid]] and [[Jellyfish Sisters|Gigi]] and [[Jellyfish Sisters|Merri]]. When [[Tattle|tattling]] the younger of the Armored Harriers, [[Goombella]] theorizes that it may be some sort of rule that younger brothers must wear green, offering a possible explanation for Luigi's trademark green shirt and cap. | Mario and Luigi's color preferences are reflected throughout the land in the form of various enemies, such as [[Koopa Troopa]]s and [[Cheep Cheep]]s, who also come in red and green varieties. These foes even reflect the brothers' personalities, with red ones being more aggressive and green ones acting cautious. In fact, Mario and Luigi are not the only known red and green brothers, with similarly color-coded siblings including [[Cork and Cask]], the [[Red (Super Paper Mario)|Red]] and [[Green]] bridge guards, the [[Armored Harriers]], Massif Bros., [[Elder Shrooboid|Elder]] & [[Junior Shrooboid]] and [[Jellyfish Sisters|Gigi]] and [[Jellyfish Sisters|Merri]]. When [[Tattle|tattling]] the younger of the Armored Harriers, [[Goombella]] theorizes that it may be some sort of rule that younger brothers must wear green, offering a possible explanation for Luigi's trademark green shirt and cap. | ||
However, Luigi has not always chosen to wear his usual green and blue clothes. ''Mario Bros.'' originally dressed Luigi in a black shirt and green overalls, although artwork showed his shirt to be red. Shigeru Miyamoto stated that the green color of clothing for Luigi was inspired by the enemy [[Shellcreeper]].<ref>[http://multiplayerblog.mtv.com/2013/03/11/luigi-101-with-shigeru-miyamoto-origins-importance-and-his-role-in-new-super-luigi-u/]</ref> ''Wrecking Crew'' gave him a magenta pair of overalls and helmet, seemingly leaving him shirtless. Even ''Super Mario Bros.'' gave its Luigi a green shirt and white overalls (although ''[[Super Mario Bros. Deluxe]]'' replaced this with a less aberrant brown shirt and green overalls, leaving his original colors to Fire Luigi, who usually has an inverse scheme), even though his usual palette and appearance had emerged in artwork. Fire Luigi's palette in ''Super Mario Bros.'' uses the color scheme used by [[Fire Mario]]. In both ''Super Mario Adventures'' and ''Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga'', Luigi wears Princess Peach's dress as a disguise. | [[File:Luigi MLPiT.png|100px|thumb|left|Luigi's shorter overalls in the [[Mario & Luigi (series)|''Mario & Luigi'']] series showing his red/white socks]] | ||
However, Luigi has not always chosen to wear his usual green and blue clothes. ''[[Mario Bros. (game)|Mario Bros.]]'' originally dressed Luigi in a black shirt and green overalls, although artwork showed his shirt to be red. Shigeru Miyamoto stated that the green color of clothing for Luigi was inspired by the enemy [[Shellcreeper]].<ref>[http://multiplayerblog.mtv.com/2013/03/11/luigi-101-with-shigeru-miyamoto-origins-importance-and-his-role-in-new-super-luigi-u/]</ref> ''[[Wrecking Crew]]'' gave him a magenta pair of overalls and helmet, seemingly leaving him shirtless. Even ''Super Mario Bros.'' gave its Luigi a green shirt and white overalls (although ''[[Super Mario Bros. Deluxe]]'' replaced this with a less aberrant brown shirt and green overalls, leaving his original colors to Fire Luigi, who usually has an inverse scheme), even though his usual palette and appearance had emerged in artwork. Fire Luigi's palette in ''Super Mario Bros.'' uses the color scheme used by [[Fire Mario]]. In both ''[[Super Mario Adventures]]'' and ''[[Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga]]'', Luigi wears Princess Peach's dress as a disguise. | |||
Luigi originated as being a {{wp|palette swap}} of Mario in his earlier adventures. This applies to ''Mario Bros.'', ''Wrecking Crew'', ''Super Mario Bros.'', ''Super Mario Bros. 3'', ''Super Mario World'', ''Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island'', and in a few versions of ''Mario is Missing!''. Luigi's first depiction as taller and thinner is in ''[[Famicom Grand Prix II: 3D Hot Rally]]'', although Luigi's first unique sprites came in ''Super Mario Bros. 2'', in which his artwork appearance conveniently coincided with the tall [[Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic#Characters (and their Mario counterparts)|Mama]]'s sprite. Nintendo of Japan would not adapt Luigi's artwork differences to his in-game sprite until ''[[Super Mario Kart]]'', although Luigi's various models have been unique almost ever since, even in remakes of games where he was originally a palette swap (such as ''Super Mario All-Stars'', ''Super Mario All-Stars + Super Mario World'', ''Super Mario Advance 2'', and ''Super Mario Advance 4''). However, Luigi's appearance in ''Super Mario Maker 2''{{'}}s ''Super Mario Bros.'' and ''Super Mario Bros. 3'' styles revert to depicting him as a palette swap of Mario - most likely in order to be faithful to his original designs - though in the ''Super Mario Bros. 3'' style, his color scheme is a darker shade of green; on an interesting note, his fire form's colors in both styles are reimagined. In the game's ''Super Mario World '' style, Luigi's unique head shape from ''Super Mario All-Stars + Super Mario World'' is retained, though his body shape and his animations revert to those in ''Super Mario World''. | Luigi originated as being a {{wp|palette swap}} of Mario in his earlier adventures. This applies to ''Mario Bros.'', ''Wrecking Crew'', ''Super Mario Bros.'', ''[[Super Mario Bros. 3]]'', ''[[Super Mario World]]'', ''[[Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island]]'', and in a few versions of ''[[Mario is Missing!]]''. Luigi's first depiction as taller and thinner is in ''[[Famicom Grand Prix II: 3D Hot Rally]]'', although Luigi's first unique sprites came in ''[[Super Mario Bros. 2]]'', in which his artwork appearance conveniently coincided with the tall [[Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic#Characters (and their Mario counterparts)|Mama]]'s sprite. Nintendo of Japan would not adapt Luigi's artwork differences to his in-game sprite until ''[[Super Mario Kart]]'', although Luigi's various models have been unique almost ever since, even in remakes of games where he was originally a palette swap (such as ''[[Super Mario All-Stars]]'', ''[[Super Mario All-Stars + Super Mario World]]'', ''[[Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2]]'', and ''[[Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3]]''). However, Luigi's appearance in ''[[Super Mario Maker 2]]''{{'}}s ''Super Mario Bros.'' and ''Super Mario Bros. 3'' styles revert to depicting him as a palette swap of Mario - most likely in order to be faithful to his original designs - though in the ''Super Mario Bros. 3'' style, his color scheme is a darker shade of green; on an interesting note, his fire form's colors in both styles are reimagined. In the game's ''Super Mario World '' style, Luigi's unique head shape from ''Super Mario All-Stars + Super Mario World'' is retained, though his body shape and his animations revert to those in ''Super Mario World''. | ||
Both Mario and Luigi have been described as "cutesy," to the extent that Shigeru Miyamoto considered redesigning them to "become a bit more grown-up" in the [[Nintendo GameCube|GameCube]] era—for instance, by removing their trademark {{wp|V sign}}.<ref>[http://cube.ign.com/articles/069/069250p1.html IGN] (Accessed on 7-6-09)</ref> However, aside from growing more realistic as graphics have advanced, Luigi and his brother have changed little over the years, and continue to flash the V sign, albeit to a much lesser extent. | Both Mario and Luigi have been described as "cutesy," to the extent that Shigeru Miyamoto considered redesigning them to "become a bit more grown-up" in the [[Nintendo GameCube|GameCube]] era—for instance, by removing their trademark {{wp|V sign}}.<ref>[http://cube.ign.com/articles/069/069250p1.html IGN] (Accessed on 7-6-09)</ref> However, aside from growing more realistic as graphics have advanced, Luigi and his brother have changed little over the years, and continue to flash the V sign, albeit to a much lesser extent. | ||
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In ''[[The Super Mario Bros. Movie]]'', Luigi's appearance receives a few changes. He has more detail on his clothing and hair, and his head is more realistic. In addition, his overall buttons are smaller, similar to Mario. | In ''[[The Super Mario Bros. Movie]]'', Luigi's appearance receives a few changes. He has more detail on his clothing and hair, and his head is more realistic. In addition, his overall buttons are smaller, similar to Mario. | ||
Luigi's appearance has changed quite a bit throughout the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series. In the original ''Super Smash Bros.'', Luigi's overalls are indigo, with his entire appearance being original. In ''Super Smash Bros. Melee'', Luigi borrows his appearance from Nintendo 64-era artwork, right down to having a tan complexion; Luigi's overalls are now their standard navy blue color, though they receive denim textures and back pockets. In ''Super Smash Bros. Brawl'', Luigi uses his contemporary look, though his overalls have further pronounced textures, while his hair and other clothing receive simple detailing. In ''Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS | Luigi's appearance has changed quite a bit throughout the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series. In the original ''[[Super Smash Bros.]]'', Luigi's overalls are indigo, with his entire appearance being original. In ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]'', Luigi borrows his appearance from Nintendo 64-era artwork, right down to having a tan complexion; Luigi's overalls are now their standard navy blue color, though they receive denim textures and back pockets. In ''[[Super Smash Bros. Brawl]]'', Luigi uses his contemporary look, though his overalls have further pronounced textures, while his hair and other clothing receive simple detailing. In ''[[Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS / Wii U]]'', Luigi's model is sleeker and more vibrant, while his hair and clothing lose most of their detailing. In ''[[Super Smash Bros. Ultimate]]'', Luigi receives simple detailing in his hair and clothing once again, albeit not to the same extent as in ''Super Smash Bros. Brawl''. | ||
Luigi has a total of eight selectable costumes to date in the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series, with 4 in ''Super Smash Bros.'' and ''Super Smash Bros. Melee'', 6 in ''Super Smash Bros. Brawl'', and 8 in ''Super Smash Bros. for 3DS'' / ''Wii U'' and ''Super Smash Bros. Ultimate''. In ''Smash 64'' and ''Melee'', Luigi had his first three costumes introduced; the first costume consists of green overalls and a white undershirt and cap, which are derived from Fire Luigi's colors; the second costume consists of blue overalls and a cyan undershirt and cap, resembling Mario's appearance on the American boxart for ''Mario Bros.''; lastly, Luigi's third alternate costume consists of red overalls and a pink undershirt and cap, resembling his appearance in ''Wrecking Crew''. In ''Brawl'', Luigi's fourth and fifth alternate costumes were introduced: the former consists of blue overalls and an orange undershirt and cap, resembling Mario's appearance on the boxart for ''[[Pinball]]''; the latter consists of dark indigo overalls and a purple undershirt and cap, based off of Waluigi's colors. In ''3DS'' / ''Wii U'', Luigi's sixth and seventh alternate costumes are introduced: the former consists of blue overalls, a dark blue cap, and a garbage green undershirt; the latter consists of teal overalls, and a dull yellow undershirt and cap; neither of these costumes have inspirations. | Luigi has a total of eight selectable costumes to date in the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series, with 4 in ''Super Smash Bros.'' and ''Super Smash Bros. Melee'', 6 in ''Super Smash Bros. Brawl'', and 8 in ''Super Smash Bros. for 3DS'' / ''Wii U'' and ''Super Smash Bros. Ultimate''. In ''Smash 64'' and ''Melee'', Luigi had his first three costumes introduced; the first costume consists of green overalls and a white undershirt and cap, which are derived from Fire Luigi's colors; the second costume consists of blue overalls and a cyan undershirt and cap, resembling Mario's appearance on the American boxart for ''Mario Bros.''; lastly, Luigi's third alternate costume consists of red overalls and a pink undershirt and cap, resembling his appearance in ''Wrecking Crew''. In ''Brawl'', Luigi's fourth and fifth alternate costumes were introduced: the former consists of blue overalls and an orange undershirt and cap, resembling Mario's appearance on the boxart for ''[[Pinball]]''; the latter consists of dark indigo overalls and a purple undershirt and cap, based off of Waluigi's colors. In ''3DS'' / ''Wii U'', Luigi's sixth and seventh alternate costumes are introduced: the former consists of blue overalls, a dark blue cap, and a garbage green undershirt; the latter consists of teal overalls, and a dull yellow undershirt and cap; neither of these costumes have inspirations. | ||
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===Personality=== | ===Personality=== | ||
[[File:Lmdmoffart5.jpg|thumb|upright=0.85|Luigi has a cowardly personality, but can be brave when prompted.]] | [[File:Lmdmoffart5.jpg|thumb|upright=0.85|Luigi has a cowardly personality, but can be brave when prompted.]] | ||
Luigi is portrayed as | Luigi is portrayed as a frail, clumsy, self-conscious, and timid person who is most afraid of ghosts, but is kind-hearted and heroic. He overcomes his fears and acts like a hero when necessary, such as when someone or his homeland is in danger or needs help. In keeping with his personality-based [[Power Flower (Super Mario 64 DS)|Power Flower]], a sign in [[Big Boo's Haunt]] in ''Super Mario 64 DS'' describes Luigi as "wispy." In several ''Super Mario'' sports titles, the ''Mario Kart'' series, and especially the [[Mario & Luigi (series)|''Mario & Luigi'']] series, Luigi is shown to get emotional at times, as he cries easily. Though he showed several instances of cowardice in early non-game media such as ''[[The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!]]'', ''[[Luigi's Mansion]]'' exemplifies his skittishness (aside from a few hints in ''Paper Mario'') and has carried over to almost all of Luigi's subsequent appearances. | ||
A few ''Paper Mario'' games portray a bolder Luigi. In ''[[Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door]]'', he is more arrogant and boastful while telling long and elaborate stories, which Mario and his partner fall asleep to; his partners claim his stories are heavily embellished. [[Super Luigi (series)|The novelizations]] of his escapades describe them with even more flowery exaggerations, stating for instance that he played an earth spirit in the [[List of implied locations#Jazzafrazz Town|Jazzafrazz Town]] Drama Slam (whereas, according to [[Hayzee]], he played grass on the side of the road,) and that he awoke [[Cranberry]] with "a soft call" (which his partners claim is instead a sneeze). | |||
Another recurring element of Luigi's personality is his apparent complex of being overlooked compared to Mario. Although his Superstar status has earned him many fans, including [[Luigi Fan Club|an entire fan club]] led by [[Toadia]] and multiple supporting [[Toad (species)|Toads]] (one of which claims to be his biggest fan in ''Super Mario 64 DS''), even Bowser and the [[Koopa Troop]] have occasional trouble with remembering his name (as seen in ''Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga''), and he appears to be almost unknown in the [[Beanbean Kingdom]]. Although Luigi's biggest reactions to his frequent overlookings in the ''Mario & Luigi'' series are a few "…"s and face-faults, his inattention was played up for comic relief in ''Paper Mario'', where he complains about being left behind and perpetually trains for that [[Luigi's Mansion|elusive next adventure]]. Luigi's bio in ''[[Mario Party 5]]'' states that he has been gaining popularity in recent years. | Another recurring element of Luigi's personality is his apparent complex of being overlooked compared to Mario. Although his Superstar status has earned him many fans, including [[Luigi Fan Club|an entire fan club]] led by [[Toadia]] and multiple supporting [[Toad (species)|Toads]] (one of which claims to be his biggest fan in ''Super Mario 64 DS''), even Bowser and the [[Koopa Troop]] have occasional trouble with remembering his name (as seen in ''Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga''), and he appears to be almost unknown in the [[Beanbean Kingdom]]. Although Luigi's biggest reactions to his frequent overlookings in the ''Mario & Luigi'' series are a few "…"s and face-faults, his inattention was played up for comic relief in ''Paper Mario'', where he complains about being left behind and perpetually trains for that [[Luigi's Mansion|elusive next adventure]]. Luigi's bio in ''[[Mario Party 5]]'' states that he has been gaining popularity in recent years. | ||
Luigi's state of being in the shadow of his brother shows strongly in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Brawl]]''. For instance, his Final Smash, Negative Zone, seemed to have developed because of living in his brother's shadow | Luigi's state of being in the shadow of his brother shows strongly in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Brawl]]''. For instance, the North American version of the game implies that his Final Smash in that game, Negative Zone, seemed to have developed because of living in his brother's shadow and represents his negative feelings about being overshadowed by him for this long and the darkest thoughts that developed with time. Despite this, however, the Negative Zone would later be replaced, and [[Masahiro Sakurai]] did not intend to play up Luigi's overshadowed status, instead aiming to make him "everyone's favorite man in green."<ref name="smash"/> Luigi's state in the shadow of Mario is present in other ''[[Super Smash Bros. (series)|Super Smash Bros.]]'' games, since the original ''[[Super Smash Bros.]]'' addresses him as the "eternal understudy" when he is unlocked; ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]'' also refers to him in a similar manner, and his cinematic in the game's Adventure Mode shows him [[smashwiki:Footstool Jump|Footstool Jump]]ing on Mario, signifying his jealousy of his brother. In ''[[Super Smash Bros. for Wii U]]'', whenever a Palutena's Guidance conversation is activated when fighting against Luigi, Viridi and [[Palutena]] are quick to point out Luigi's status as "number two" in relativity to Mario, even though [[Pit]] held him in a higher regard. Despite the fact that he is not seen with the same regard as Mario, Luigi is very loyal to him, and his love for his brother pushes him to help him when he's in danger regardless of his fears, including defeating his nemesis, [[King Boo]], multiple times to save Mario. | ||
The ''Super Smash Bros.'' series also portrays Luigi more of a coward and buffoon than in his home series, including his awkward attack animations, and in a cutscene in [[smashwiki:The Subspace Emissary|The Subspace Emissary]], he acts afraid of [[wikirby:Waddle Dee|Waddle Dees]], which are normally harmless. | |||
In ''[[Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time]]'', the [[Star Temple gate]] (which supposedly knows all) passes Luigi as "unworthy" to enter. It also mentions that Luigi did something either embarrassing or foolish which he has kept a secret ever since. However, in an interview with a localizer [[Nate Bihldorff]], he stated that Luigi had no dark secret, and it was actually a reference to Luigi's constantly living in the shadow of his brother. "''The point of the scene''," Bihldorff said, "''was to build Luigi up 'as a guy who was always living in the shadow of his older brother and that he needs to break out of that mold sometimes. But the way the text was originally phrased, it definitely made him sound like he had some deep dark secret that was awful. I think the powers that be were looking at it like, 'We don't want to paint Luigi as a bad guy here.{{'}}{{'}}''"<ref>Totilo, S. (December 1, 2005). "[https://www.mtv.com/news/1517252/gamers-wonder-if-nintendo-will-serve-more-mustard-of-doom/ Gamers Wonder if Nintendo Will Serve More Mustard of Doom]". ''MTV''. Accessed July 16, 2022.</ref> Even the game itself makes a straightforward point that Luigi has a large heart, as proven when he hits the [[Aurora Block]] and it grows to a gigantic size, flattening him. | In ''[[Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time]]'', the [[Star Temple gate]] (which supposedly knows all) passes Luigi as "unworthy" to enter. It also mentions that Luigi did something either embarrassing or foolish which he has kept a secret ever since. However, in an interview with a localizer [[Nate Bihldorff]], he stated that Luigi had no dark secret, and it was actually a reference to Luigi's constantly living in the shadow of his brother. "''The point of the scene''," Bihldorff said, "''was to build Luigi up 'as a guy who was always living in the shadow of his older brother and that he needs to break out of that mold sometimes. But the way the text was originally phrased, it definitely made him sound like he had some deep dark secret that was awful. I think the powers that be were looking at it like, 'We don't want to paint Luigi as a bad guy here.{{'}}{{'}}''"<ref>Totilo, S. (December 1, 2005). "[https://www.mtv.com/news/1517252/gamers-wonder-if-nintendo-will-serve-more-mustard-of-doom/ Gamers Wonder if Nintendo Will Serve More Mustard of Doom]". ''MTV''. Accessed July 16, 2022.</ref> Even the game itself makes a straightforward point that Luigi has a large heart, as proven when he hits the [[Aurora Block]] and it grows to a gigantic size, flattening him. | ||
He is also shown at times to be clumsy. Luigi often trades his jumping skills with slippery traction. He is also accident-prone as evidenced in the ''Mario & Luigi'' games and in the ending of ''New Super Mario Bros. Wii'', where he accidentally locked himself out of the hot air balloon that Peach and Mario were on while waving goodbye to the Toads, and also ended up collapsing while trying to enter the hot air balloon, due to it having flown off. Several key art and cutscenes show Luigi being involved in accidents or misfortune such as his [[:File:MKDS Mario Peach Luigi and Blooper Artwork.png|getting inked by a Blooper]] in ''Mario Kart DS'', [[:File:Luigi MSS.jpg|dropping baseballs]] in ''Mario Super Sluggers'', [[:File:Nintendo Tokyo Mario character merch art.png|getting hit by a Spiny]] in promotional art, and [[:File:Super Nintendo World Bag Art.jpg|getting attacked by a Piranha Plant]] in key art for Super Nintendo World. Luigi's clumsiness also helped set the entire plot of ''[[Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam]]'' in motion when he accidentally bumps into a bookshelf after he gets startled from a Scaredy-Rat. In ''[[Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door]]'', he accidentally bumps one of his partners, [[Blooey]] the [[Blooper]], into a volcano while trying to stop evil, burning him to a golden crisp. In contrast, | In ''[[Luigi's Mansion]]'', when analyzing objects with the [[Game Boy Horror]], Luigi is shown to be concerned about cleanliness, often complaining about the abundance of dust and moth holes in the mansion and saying that it would never pass the white glove test. He also hates animal cruelty and when animals are skinned as hunting trophies, reacting in horror and disgust to the embalmed animal heads and animal pelts scattered in the [[Safari Room]]. It is also shown that Mario and Luigi wash their hats differently: Luigi washes his hat by hand and disapproves of Mario washing his in a washing machine, thinking that it is a waste. He is also refined and enjoys art, which is also shown in ''[[Mario Superstar Baseball]]'' and ''[[Mario Super Sluggers]]'', where some of his possible teams' names are the Luigi Gentlemen in the former and the Luigi Knights in the latter. | ||
He is also shown at times to be clumsy. Luigi often trades his jumping skills with slippery traction. He is also accident-prone as evidenced in the ''Mario & Luigi'' games and in the ending of ''New Super Mario Bros. Wii'', where he accidentally locked himself out of the hot air balloon that Peach and Mario were on while waving goodbye to the Toads, and also ended up collapsing while trying to enter the hot air balloon, due to it having flown off. Several key art and cutscenes show Luigi being involved in accidents or misfortune such as his [[:File:MKDS Mario Peach Luigi and Blooper Artwork.png|getting inked by a Blooper]] in ''Mario Kart DS'', [[:File:Luigi MSS.jpg|dropping baseballs]] in ''Mario Super Sluggers'', [[:File:Nintendo Tokyo Mario character merch art.png|getting hit by a Spiny]] in promotional art, and [[:File:Super Nintendo World Bag Art.jpg|getting attacked by a Piranha Plant]] in key art for [[Super Nintendo World]]. Luigi's clumsiness also helped set the entire plot of ''[[Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam]]'' in motion when he accidentally bumps into a bookshelf after he gets startled from a Scaredy-Rat. In ''[[Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door]]'', he accidentally bumps one of his partners, [[Blooey]] the [[Blooper]], into a volcano while trying to stop evil, burning him to a golden crisp. His clumsiness is particularly emphasized in ''[[Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon]]'', which director Bryce Holliday stated was drawn from the 1990 British comedy series ''{{wp|Mr. Bean}}''.<ref>Lien, Tracy (March 15, 2013). [https://www.polygon.com/2013/3/15/4110408/luigis-mansion-dark-moon-wont-just-rely-on-nostalgia-to-win-players Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon won't just rely on nostalgia to win players, developers say]. ''Polygon''. Retrieved October 27, 2023.</ref> In contrast, Luigi can be very agile and can do many stunts Mario can not, often jumping higher than Mario and perform special jumping-related abilities such as scuttling. | |||
Luigi's | Luigi's neutral focused expression in ''[[Mario Kart 8]]'', read as sneering by internet onlookers, has given rise to an {{wp|Internet meme}} in which Luigi is depicted as sour and relentless, seemingly rejoicing when his opponents are sabotaged during races.<ref>CZbwoi (June 1, 2014). [https://youtu.be/PpxDuNFBVj8 Luigi Ridin' Dirty - Death Stare in Mario Kart 8]. ''YouTube''. Retrieved May 14, 2023.</ref> Dubbed "<span class="plainlinks">[http://knowyourmeme.com/memes/luigis-death-stare Luigi's Death Stare]</span>", the meme [[List of references on the Internet#Luigi's Death Stare|has been acknowledged and embraced by Nintendo]] as a facet of his character: in one instance, a screenshot of ''[[Mario Kart 8 Deluxe]]'' showing Luigi being pursued by a [[Red Shell]] is humorously described by Nintendo Australia and New Zealand as "{{wp|Irresistible force paradox|Unstoppable force meets immovable object.}}"<ref>NintendoAUNZ (May 9, 2017). [https://twitter.com/NintendoAUNZ/status/861807979821232128 Unstoppable force meets immovable object. #MarioKart]. ''Twitter''. Retrieved May 14, 2023. ([https://web.archive.org/web/20200518232540/https://twitter.com/NintendoAUNZ/status/861807979821232128 Archived] May 18, 2020, 23:25:40 UTC via Wayback Machine.)</ref><ref>NintendoAUNZ (May 9, 2017). [https://www.facebook.com/NintendoAUNZ/photos/819423471548121 Unstoppable force meets immovable object.] ''Facebook''. Retrieved May 14, 2023.</ref> | ||
===Speech=== | ===Speech=== | ||
Luigi's voice is thinner, deeper and more nasal than Mario's, with a thick Italian accent. When he talks, he often awkwardly and nervously stammers, indicating timidity and a lack of confidence, such as during his recording to promote Year of Luigi.<ref>NintendoEverything. (August 22, 2013). "[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ijgUasX_YmA Audio recording from Luigi]". ''YouTube''. Accessed October 30, 2022.</ref> Like Mario, he often refers to himself in the third person. | Luigi's voice is thinner, deeper and more nasal than Mario's, with a thick Italian accent. When he talks, he often awkwardly and nervously stammers, indicating timidity and a lack of confidence, such as during his recording to promote Year of Luigi.<ref>NintendoEverything. (August 22, 2013). "[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ijgUasX_YmA Audio recording from Luigi]". ''YouTube''. Accessed October 30, 2022.</ref> Like Mario, he often refers to himself in the third person. According to [[Charles Martinet]], who voiced Luigi from ''[[Mario Kart 64]]'' to ''[[Mario + Rabbids Sparks of Hope]]'', the character's voice originated from requests from audiences to speak to him during [[Mario in Real Time]] events. Because Luigi did not have a rigged model for the attraction, Martinet devised a voice that he could perform while keeping his face as still as possible (and thus not activating the motion-capture technology used to animate Mario), giving the illusion that Luigi was communicating from offscreen.<ref>psnmermaid925 (February 8, 2014). [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UReCxGzQRvw luigi]. YouTube. Retrieved February 6, 2024.</ref> | ||
Early on in ''Mario'' history, Luigi did not have any voice acting, due to technical limitations on the [[Nintendo Entertainment System|NES]] and [[Super Nintendo Entertainment System|SNES]]. Luigi also didn't receive text dialogue, making him silent like his brother. However, Luigi received voice acting in the 1986 ''Mario'' anime film, as well as the ''Amada Anime Mario Series'' (1987-1989), though he exclusively speaks in Japanese. Luigi first spoke English in ''The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!'', where he spoke with a Brooklyn accent, provided by [[Danny Wells]]; Luigi later spoke with the same accent in future DIC Entertainment cartoons, though he is portrayed by [[Tony Rosato]], who provides a higher, yet raspier voice than Wells. Luigi also spoke with this accent in the PC and CD-ROM versions of ''Mario is Missing!'', making this the first game to give him voice acting. Four years later in ''Mario Kart 64'', Luigi received two voice actors: | Early on in ''Super Mario'' history, Luigi did not have any voice acting, due to technical limitations on the [[Nintendo Entertainment System|NES]] and [[Super Nintendo Entertainment System|SNES]]. Luigi also didn't receive text dialogue, making him silent like his brother. However, Luigi received voice acting in the 1986 ''Super Mario'' anime film, as well as the ''Amada Anime Mario Series'' (1987-1989), though he exclusively speaks in Japanese. Luigi first spoke English in ''The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!'', where he spoke with a Brooklyn accent, provided by [[Danny Wells]]; Luigi later spoke with the same accent in future DIC Entertainment cartoons, though he is portrayed by [[Tony Rosato]], who provides a higher, yet raspier voice than Wells. Luigi also spoke with this accent in the PC and CD-ROM versions of ''Mario is Missing!'', making this the first game to give him voice acting. Four years later in ''Mario Kart 64'', Luigi received two voice actors: Charles Martinet in overseas versions, and [[Julien Bardakoff]] in the Japanese version. The former provides him with a soft voice and strong Italian accent, while the latter provides him with a higher-pitched, less evident accent. Julien Bardakoff reprises his role as Luigi in ''Mario Party'', ''Mario Party 2'', and ''Mario Kart: Super Circuit''. In most games, Charles Martinet voices Luigi, and had portrayed him until his shift to [[Mario Ambassador]] in 2023. In more recent games like ''[[Luigi's Mansion 3]]'' and ''[[Mario Kart Tour]]'', his voice has become raspier, deeper and even more nasal due to Martinet aging. | ||
However, Martinet's portrayal of Luigi has varied. Despite having a unique voice since ''Mario Kart 64'', the first two ''Super Smash Bros.'' games have Luigi use higher-pitched versions of Mario's voice clips, with his clip for using [[Luigi Cyclone]] being directly taken from the latter. ''Luigi's Mansion'' retains his unique voice, though it sounds higher in pitch, and somewhat akin to Mario's. However, all future installments, including recent ''Super Smash Bros.'' games, give him his distinct voice that is lower in pitch than Mario's (though like him, he has a considerably deeper voice in contemporary ''Super Smash Bros.'' games). | However, Martinet's portrayal of Luigi has varied. Despite having a unique voice since ''Mario Kart 64'', the first two ''Super Smash Bros.'' games have Luigi use higher-pitched versions of Mario's voice clips, with his clip for using [[Luigi Cyclone]] being directly taken from the latter. ''Luigi's Mansion'' retains his unique voice, though it sounds higher in pitch, and somewhat akin to Mario's. However, all future installments, including recent ''Super Smash Bros.'' games, give him his distinct voice that is lower in pitch than Mario's (though like him, he has a considerably deeper voice in contemporary ''Super Smash Bros.'' games). | ||
In most modern ''Mario'' games, Luigi speaks via catchphrases such as "Ho-ho!", "Let's-a go!", "Yahoo!", "Oh yeah!", and "Mamma mia!", as well as "It's-a me, Luigi!", a variation of Mario's famous quote. In the ''Paper Mario'' series, Luigi is mostly silent aside from the odd grunt, though he receives text dialogue to represent what he is saying; in the first three games, Luigi speaks English without an accent, though ''Paper Mario: Color Splash'' gives him an Italian accent while speaking. In the ''Mario & Luigi'' series, Luigi speaks through unintelligible gibberish that only in-game characters can understand. | In most modern ''Super Mario'' games, Luigi speaks via catchphrases such as "Ho-ho!", "Let's-a go!", "Yahoo!", "Oh yeah!", and "Mamma mia!", as well as "It's-a me, Luigi!", a variation of Mario's famous quote. In the ''Paper Mario'' series, Luigi is mostly silent aside from the odd grunt, though he receives text dialogue to represent what he is saying; in the first three games, Luigi speaks English without an accent, though ''Paper Mario: Color Splash'' gives him an Italian accent while speaking. In the ''Mario & Luigi'' series, Luigi speaks through unintelligible gibberish that only in-game characters can understand. | ||
Two months before the release of ''[[Super Mario Bros. Wonder]]'', Charles Martinet retired from voicing characters in the franchise, and [[Kevin Afghani]] succeeded him in voicing Mario, Luigi and Wario, with Afghani's take on Luigi being near-identical to Martinet's. | |||
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===Age=== | ===Age=== | ||
[[File:Stork and Babies Artwork - Yoshi's New Island.png|thumb|The | [[File:Stork and Babies Artwork - Yoshi's New Island.png|thumb|The stork, carrying the newborn Mario Bros. to their parents]] | ||
While Luigi was conceived as an identical twin during the development of ''[[Mario Bros. (game)|Mario Bros.]]'', Nintendo introduced him simply as Mario's younger brother. In early media, Luigi was described as Mario's much younger brother. In the pamphlet for ''[[Super Mario Bros.: Peach-hime Kyūshutsu Dai Sakusen!]]'', his age is estimated to be around 23, two years younger than Mario.<ref name=Pamphlet></ref> | While Luigi was conceived as an identical twin during the development of ''[[Mario Bros. (game)|Mario Bros.]]'', Nintendo introduced him simply as Mario's younger brother. In early media, when the franchise was not fully established, Luigi was described as Mario's much younger brother. In the pamphlet for ''[[Super Mario Bros.: Peach-hime Kyūshutsu Dai Sakusen!]]'', his age is estimated to be around 23, two years younger than Mario.<ref name=Pamphlet></ref> "[[Family Album "The Early Years"|Family Album 'The Early Years']]" implies that Luigi was born after Mario by several years. | ||
However, ''Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island'' and ''Yoshi Touch & Go''<ref>The ''Yoshi Touch & Go'' instruction booklet states that the Stork is carrying a pair of newborn twins (referring to Mario and Luigi) on page six.</ref> | However, ''Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island'' and ''Yoshi Touch & Go''<ref>The ''Yoshi Touch & Go'' instruction booklet states that the Stork is carrying a pair of newborn twins (referring to Mario and Luigi) on page six.</ref> describe the brothers as twins. The reissue of the former, ''Yoshi's Island: Super Mario Advance 3'', does not explicitly call them twins, but it notes that Luigi is Mario's younger brother, carried to their parents at the same time. | ||
Many video game sources still refer to Luigi as the younger brother, indicating that Luigi may have been the second born twin. For example, in ''Super Paper Mario'', [[Luvbi]] refers to Mario and Luigi as twins at the end of chapter 7-1. Despite the small age difference, Luigi directly refers to Mario as "big bro" in the same game on more than one occasion. Also, while Luigi's Trophy description in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Brawl]]'' also referred to him as "younger twin brother" | Many video game sources still refer to Luigi as the younger brother, indicating that Luigi may have been the second born twin. For example, in ''Super Paper Mario'', [[Luvbi]] refers to Mario and Luigi as twins at the end of chapter 7-1. Despite the small age difference, Luigi directly refers to Mario as "big bro" in the same game on more than one occasion. Also, while Luigi's Trophy description in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Brawl]]'' also referred to him as "younger twin brother," Colonel Roy Campbell calls Luigi a "kid brother" to Snake during Snake's Codec conversation in the same game. In the ''Mario'' cartoon series, Luigi playfully refers to Mario as his "little big brother," likely due to their height difference. Since Mario is stated to be 26 years old in the Japanese version of ''Super Smash Bros. Melee'' and 24 or 25 by Shigeru Miyamoto,<ref>Griffin, A. (September 30, 2016) [http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/gaming/mario-super-age-24-25-nintendo-shigeru-miyamoto-game-character-a7338911.html Mario is only 24 years old, creator Shigeru Miyamoto says in unearthed interview]. ''Independent''. Retrieved May 28, 2023.</ref> then, provided it is correct, Luigi is the same age. | ||
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===Powers and abilities=== | ===Powers and abilities=== | ||
Luigi's abilities are usually exactly the same as Mario's, such as in ''Mario Bros.'', ''Super Mario Bros.'', and ''Super Mario World'' so as to not give players advantages over each other. In most instances where one player can choose between the two brothers, however, Luigi is given his own gameplay quirks. This first occurred in ''Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels'', where Luigi can jump higher than Mario but has lower traction and speed. In the American ''Super Mario Bros. 2'', Luigi once again features the highest jump, but comparatively low speed and power. Luigi's high jumps but low traction would return in ''[[Super Mario | Luigi's abilities are usually exactly the same as Mario's, such as in ''Mario Bros.'', ''Super Mario Bros.'', and ''Super Mario World'' so as to not give players advantages over each other. In most instances where one player can choose between the two brothers, however, Luigi is given his own gameplay quirks. This first occurred in ''Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels'', where Luigi can jump higher than Mario but has lower traction and speed. In the American ''Super Mario Bros. 2'', Luigi once again features the highest jump, but comparatively low speed and power. Luigi's high jumps but low traction would return in ''[[Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2]]'', which, unlike its original version, allowed players to switch between Mario and Luigi at any time on the map screen. In three-dimensional adventures, such as ''Super Mario 64 DS'', ''Super Mario Galaxy'', and ''Super Mario Galaxy 2'' Luigi is usually faster than Mario (at the cost of poorer acceleration), but retains his classic high jumps and poor traction. In addition, when either carrying a large object on his back, or when left extremely terrified, his jumping abilities are reduced significantly to the extent of appearing inferior to Mario's. This is best demonstrated during the climax of ''Luigi's Mansion 3'' where the two brothers are racing to the top of the hotel to locate Peach. Mario in particular is able to cross large gaps up the stairs with a single bound, while by contrast, Luigi has to hug the wall to cross over to the other side. | ||
As aforementioned, Luigi has a higher top speed, but poorer acceleration than his brother in ''Super Mario 64 DS'', along with poor traction and increased agility. In this game, the two brothers are the fastest in all speeds. Luigi's jumps are perhaps at their strongest in this game; not only can Luigi jump higher than his brother, but he can also [[scuttle]] to slow his fall. His backflip has the same effect as being caught in a [[tornado]] or stomping a [[Fly Guy]], allowing for a very slow descent. Unlike Mario, however, Luigi cannot [[Wall Jump]] in this game. As a result of his agility and lightness, Luigi can walk on water for a short time. Luigi's [[Power Flower (Super Mario 64 DS)|Power Flower]] ability is [[Vanish Mario|Vanish Luigi]], allowing him to disappear for invincibility and the ability to walk through certain obstacles. | As aforementioned, Luigi has a higher top speed, but poorer acceleration than his brother in ''Super Mario 64 DS'', along with poor traction and increased agility. In this game, the two brothers are the fastest in all speeds. Luigi's jumps are perhaps at their strongest in this game; not only can Luigi jump higher than his brother, but he can also [[scuttle]] to slow his fall. His backflip has the same effect as being caught in a [[tornado]] or stomping a [[Fly Guy]], allowing for a very slow descent. Unlike Mario, however, Luigi cannot [[Wall Jump]] in this game. As a result of his agility and lightness, Luigi can walk on water for a short time. Luigi's [[Power Flower (Super Mario 64 DS)|Power Flower]] ability is [[Vanish Mario|Vanish Luigi]], allowing him to disappear for invincibility and the ability to walk through certain obstacles. | ||
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Electricity is sometimes depicted as Luigi's answer to Mario's fire. In ''Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga'', Luigi is given the ability to harness and release electricity with a technique known as the [[Thunderhand]], alongside his other specialty, the [[High Jump]], to coincide with Mario's [[Spin Jump]]. This is referenced in ''Super Paper Mario'' with Mr. L's nickname of "The Green Thunder," and in ''[[Mario Strikers Charged]]'' where Luigi's [[Mega Strike]] involves controlling plasma. | Electricity is sometimes depicted as Luigi's answer to Mario's fire. In ''Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga'', Luigi is given the ability to harness and release electricity with a technique known as the [[Thunderhand]], alongside his other specialty, the [[High Jump]], to coincide with Mario's [[Spin Jump]]. This is referenced in ''Super Paper Mario'' with Mr. L's nickname of "The Green Thunder," and in ''[[Mario Strikers Charged]]'' where Luigi's [[Mega Strike]] involves controlling plasma. | ||
Luigi is often associated to ice as a polar opposite to Mario's fire. Ice Luigi's [[Special Item (Mario Kart series)|special item]] in ''[[Mario Kart Arcade GP DX]]'' is an [[Ice Ball]], and in ''[[Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS / Wii U]]'', Ice Balls are one of Luigi's custom moves, serving as the second variation for his Fireball. In ''[[Mario Golf: Super Rush]]'', Luigi's [[Special Shot]] is Ice Flower Freeze, and his Special Dash in Speed Golf is Speed-Skate Dash; both moves involve Luigi taking out an Ice Flower and transforming into his [[Ice Mario|Ice form]], while in the latter case, he ice-skates along the course while leaving behind an ice trail (similar to his [[Ice Mario (Super Mario Galaxy)|Ice form]] from ''[[Super Mario Galaxy]]''). Unlockable sports gear in ''[[Mario Sports Superstars]]'' uses Ice Flowers as Luigi's emblem, referencing his ice abilities. | Luigi is often associated to ice as a polar opposite to Mario's fire. Ice Luigi's [[Special Item (Mario Kart series)|special item]] in ''[[Mario Kart Arcade GP DX]]'' is an [[Ice Ball]], and in ''[[Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS]] / [[Super Smash Bros. for Wii U|Wii U]]'', Ice Balls are one of Luigi's custom moves, serving as the second variation for his Fireball. In ''[[Mario Golf: Super Rush]]'', Luigi's [[Special Shot]] is Ice Flower Freeze, and his Special Dash in Speed Golf is Speed-Skate Dash; both moves involve Luigi taking out an Ice Flower and transforming into his [[Ice Mario|Ice form]], while in the latter case, he ice-skates along the course while leaving behind an ice trail (similar to his [[Ice Mario (Super Mario Galaxy)|Ice form]] from ''[[Super Mario Galaxy]]''). Unlockable sports gear in ''[[Mario Sports Superstars]]'' uses Ice Flowers as Luigi's emblem, referencing his ice abilities. | ||
Aside from this, ''Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga'' also depicts him as being good at acting and disguises, as he dressed up as Princess Peach via her extra dress, with his acting being convincing enough that both Fawful and Bowletta ended up tricked into swapping out the real Peach with Luigi. An earlier instance of such was in ''Super Mario Adventures'', which showed Luigi dressing as Peach and a nurse, with both disguises being convincing enough to fool a Big Boo, Bowser, and the Koopalings. | Aside from this, ''Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga'' also depicts him as being good at acting and disguises, as he dressed up as Princess Peach via her extra dress, with his acting being convincing enough that both Fawful and Bowletta ended up tricked into swapping out the real Peach with Luigi. An earlier instance of such was in ''Super Mario Adventures'', which showed Luigi dressing as Peach and a nurse, with both disguises being convincing enough to fool a Big Boo, Bowser, and the Koopalings. | ||
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===Roles taken=== | ===Roles taken=== | ||
Though Luigi is a heroic character in the ''Mario'' games, he is usually made as a sidekick to Mario, although in some media and games he is referred to as a partner. In the ''Mario & Luigi'' games, he is the cowardly partner to [[Mario]], and is occasionally forced to be brave. He is the hero of a separate adventure the player does not get to play or see in ''[[Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door]]'', where he is a coward who changes the story to make himself look more heroic. In ''[[Super Paper Mario]]'' he was not a sidekick, but rather one of the four heroes, which made him equal to Mario. He was also brainwashed by [[Nastasia]] to become a villain, [[Mr. L]], and was later brainwashed again by [[Dimentio]] to become [[Super Dimentio]], the final boss. His sidekick role was completely different in ''[[Mario is Missing!]]'', ''[[Luigi's Mansion]]'' and its [[Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon|sequel]], where he was the sole main character who had to rescue Mario. He has also taken the role of [[Dr. Luigi|a doctor]], similar to [[Dr. Mario|his brother]], as shown in ''[[Dr. Luigi]]''. Overall, Luigi's role in games is usually the same as Mario's when they appear together. | Though Luigi is a heroic character in the ''Super Mario'' games, he is usually made as a sidekick to Mario, although in some media and games he is referred to as a partner. In the ''Mario & Luigi'' games, he is the cowardly partner to [[Mario]], and is occasionally forced to be brave. He is the hero of a separate adventure the player does not get to play or see in ''[[Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door]]'', where he is a coward who changes the story to make himself look more heroic. In ''[[Super Paper Mario]]'' he was not a sidekick, but rather one of the four heroes, which made him equal to Mario. He was also brainwashed by [[Nastasia]] to become a villain, [[Mr. L]], and was later brainwashed again by [[Dimentio]] to become [[Super Dimentio]], the final boss. His sidekick role was completely different in ''[[Mario is Missing!]]'', ''[[Luigi's Mansion]]'' and its [[Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon|sequel]], where he was the sole main character who had to rescue Mario. He has also taken the role of [[Dr. Luigi|a doctor]], similar to [[Dr. Mario|his brother]], as shown in ''[[Dr. Luigi]]''. Overall, Luigi's role in games is usually the same as Mario's when they appear together. | ||
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====Family==== | ====Family==== | ||
{{main|Mario and Luigi's family}} | {{main|Mario and Luigi's family}} | ||
[[File:SMWGPB3 Cover.png|thumb|upright=1.4|Luigi has a | [[File:SMWGPB3 Cover.png|thumb|upright=1.4|Luigi has a close and caring relationship with his older but shorter brother Mario, if not occasionally competing against him.]] | ||
[[File:Mario and Luigi Dream Team Hug.gif|150px|thumb|left|Luigi and Mario hug after reuniting with each other | [[File:Mario and Luigi Dream Team Hug.gif|150px|thumb|left|Luigi and Mario hug after reuniting with each other in ''Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam'']] | ||
[[Mario]] is Luigi's older but shorter twin brother. Luigi often accompanies him on his adventures, most prominently in the ''Mario & Luigi'' series. While there is some sibling rivalry between the two<ref>The ''Super Mario Kart'' manual (page 21) states that "Mario and Luigi have had a friendly rivalry that goes back to their childhood."</ref>, with Luigi sometimes feeling jealous and overshadowed by his brother, he also admires and looks up to him, wishing to be "a great plumber like his brother Mario" in ''Super Mario RPG'', and he is very loyal to him, helping him out whenever he can and fighting by his side against several enemies. As twins, the two share a brotherly bond so strong that when they were babies, it functioned telepathically, as Baby Mario could sense where his brother was after they were separated by Kamek and his minions. The brothers still keep their strong brotherly love and their tight-knit bond in adulthood, as they share a house and frequently help and save each other, both showing to be very protective of each other. In the [[Mario & Luigi (series)|''Mario & Luigi'' series]], they often hug each other when they reunite after getting separated, relieved that the other is alright, and if one of the brothers is defeated and loses consciousness during a battle, the other one will panic and carry his fainted brother on his shoulders while being on the defensive or running away, at the cost of being weighed down and reacting slower when countering with his hammer or dodging with a jump. | |||
While Mario is generally the more heroic and active of the two, Luigi too saved him on multiple occasions, starting with ''Mario is Missing!'' and subsequently in games such as ''Luigi's Mansion'' and its sequels, fighting his arch-enemy [[King Boo]] and facing his fear of ghosts on three different occasions to rescue him, the Toads and Peach, adamantly refusing to escape without saving his brother and his friends first. Mario is shown to be proud of Luigi when he is rescued: in ''Dark Moon'', he calls Luigi "number one" while energically shaking his hand and says, "That's my bro," and in ''[[Luigi's Mansion 3]]'', he says "Way to go" both times he is rescued, and when they reunite before the final showdown against King Boo, Mario is so overjoyed to see that Luigi has come to save him once again that he rushes to Luigi and gives him a big hug to thank him. | |||
In ''[[Super Mario Odyssey]]'', Luigi shows himself to be very supportive of his brother's decisions when it comes to fashion choices. When talking to Luigi before starting the [[Balloon World]] minigame, Luigi will often comment on Mario's current costume, stating that he "looks good" in the outfit he wears, even when some frighten him. When Mario wears Peach's Wedding Dress, his own groom tux, or Bowser's Tuxedo, Luigi will comment with surprise that he didn't know Mario was about to get married, only for him to realize that Mario is only wearing that outfit for fun, then respecting his decision to wear the outfit. ''Dream Team'' reveals that Luigi's deepest motivation for [[Giant Luigi|persevering]] through fearsome situations is his love for his brother, shown in his subconscious from [[Dream's Deep]] with inner thoughts such as "Big bro in danger!" and "I gotta help my bro!" This is also shown in the ''Luigi's Mansion'' series, where despite his fear of ghosts, he persists in searching for Mario. | |||
While they are rarely shown, Mario and Luigi's [[Papa Mario|father]] and [[Mama Mario|mother]] are referenced a number of times, though Mama Mario appears in several episodes of ''[[The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!]]'' Several other relatives are also mentioned or shown in various medias, such as their aunts, uncles, grandparents, and cousins. | Just as Luigi shows a strong brotherly love to him, Mario also loves his brother dearly, considering him a special person. In ''[[Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story]]'', he willing to give him proper credit for his heroism when it is due, like when they defeated the [[Shroob]]s, and declares to [[Princess Lipid]] that his brother is worth more than a treasure to him, and in ''Partners in Time'', when the [[Star Temple gate|Star Gate]] badmouths Luigi and causes him to burst out crying, Mario objects in anger and takes his brother's defense, with his baby self even going as far as repeatedly whacking the gate with his hammer, though it turns out that it was only to test Mario and the babies' loyalty to him. Mario and Luigi are often partners in spin-offs and in ''[[Mario Superstar Baseball]]'' and its sequel ''[[Mario Super Sluggers]]'', which have the [[Chemistry]] mechanic, they have good chemistry, working well together. Even when they hit each other in the ''Mario & Luigi'' series to access new areas or to perform some attacks, they trust each other to do so. | ||
The strong brotherly love between Mario and Luigi is also a prominent part of ''[[The Super Mario Bros. Movie]]''. When Luigi was bullied during their childhood, Mario protected him by attacking who was responsible, and he has as a strong admiration of him ever since then, constantly praising him and staying by his side in every step of the way despite not always agreeing with his reckless and risky decisions. As his big brother, Mario has always been very protective of Luigi, protecting him from bullies and dangers, and in turn, Luigi reassures him that he's not a weight to him when he confides in him about his insecurities. Also, Mario often calls Luigi "Lu", a nickname he uses as a show of affection to him. When Bowser indirectly mentions Princess Peach, of whom he's obsessively in love with, and asks him if she would find Mario attractive, he responds by saying that she would if she's a girl with good tastes, indirectly showcasing that he will always support Mario's relationship with Peach if they end up together. While he takes on Bowser to protect the Mushroom Kingdom, Mario self-imposed objective is not to defeat him, but to save his brother, and after Luigi almost falls to his death in the lava and is barely saved by him, Mario is on the verge of tears as he hugs him tight. Even though Luigi isn't as much as a fighter as Mario, he can still be just as protective of him, as seen with how he faces his fears and saves Mario's life by blocking Bowser's Fire Breath with a manhole, giving them enough time to grab the [[Super Star]] and defeat him together. After they get separated, they constantly think about each other, with Mario mentioning during his second night in the Mushroom Kingdom that they had never been apart for such a long time, and their website and other media about the movie also refer to them as each other's best friend. Like in the games, they share a bedroom, both in their old apartment in [[Brooklyn]], where they lived with their family, and at the end of the movie, after moving out in a new house in the Mushroom Kingdom. | |||
Although Luigi and Mario generally have positive interactions with each other, some media do show sibling conflict, mostly due to sibling rivalry and how they get competitive with each other. In ''Mario Power Tennis'', when Luigi wins a match, he is congratulated by Mario, though the latter intentionally steps on Luigi's foot and squirms his own foot against it, which leaves Luigi looking confused and uneasy for what happened. Mario and Luigi's heated argument is the central plot for the episode "[[Oh, Brother!]]" in ''[[The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3]]'', with Mario getting kidnapped and forced to attack him because of a [[Lame Brainer|mind-control helmet]] afterwards, but Luigi saves him after successfully overloading the device and the brothers make up, promising to not get into fights with each other ever again. In a ''Super Paper Mario'' adaptation in ''Super Mario-kun'', Mario has pleaded a brainwashed Mr. L to recall the "fond memories" he had with his brother, only for Mr. L to humorously remember the very unpleasant experiences with Mario and get angrier. One of ''Super Mario Maker 2''{{'}}s title screen animations show Mario cautiously trying to take a key away from Luigi only for the latter to run away with the key, and for Mario to forcefully take the key from Luigi. Performing an action with either the hammer or Hand Powers on the leading brother in ''[[Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga]]'' before unlocking the map-related skill causes him to get angry and scold the other, and in ''Partners in Time'', after everyone lose consciousness from falling into the [[Gritzy Caves]] and Baby Mario smacks Luigi in the head with his hammer to wake him up, he gets enraged and gives him a stern scolding, accidentally making the babies cry, and Mario has a minor argument with his brother after waking up to this scene, reprimanding him for causing the babies to cry, resulting in Luigi bursting into tears as well. | |||
Overall, while Luigi does feel jealous of Mario due to him being in his brother's shadow and their fame inequality, he does not complain much about it and is always available to help him in the times of need, protecting his friends and the Mushroom Kingdom by his side and keeping a very strong and healthy relationship with him. | |||
While they are rarely shown, Mario and Luigi's [[Papa Mario|father]] and [[Mama Mario|mother]] are referenced a number of times, though Mama Mario appears in several episodes of ''[[The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!]]'', and both of Mario and Luigi's parents make a full appearance in ''[[The Super Mario Bros. Movie]]''. Several other relatives are also mentioned or shown in various medias, such as their aunts, uncles (including [[Uncle Arthur]] and [[Uncle Tony]] from the 2023 film), grandparents, and cousins. | |||
====Friends==== | ====Friends==== | ||
One of Luigi's closest friends is Yoshi, and the two are often referred to as "The Green Team" when partnered up in spin-offs, although in the ''Mario Baseball'', series their chemistry is only neutral. Their relationship is much closer in the [[Super Mario World (television series)|''Super Mario World'' TV Show]], which depicted Yoshi as having originally thought Luigi was his mother and still enjoys hearing Luigi tell him bedtime stories, as seen in the episode [[Mama Luigi]]. He is also good friends with [[Toad]], although they are not quite as close as Toad is with Mario, and while other Toads are almost unanimous in their praise and adoration of Mario, their opinions on Luigi vary greatly between individuals. Some are unabashed fans of Luigi, with one in ''Super Mario 64 DS'' even asserting that "We'll have to call you the Luigi Brothers soon!", while others are disbelieving that Luigi | One of Luigi's closest friends is Yoshi, and the two are often referred to as "The Green Team" when partnered up in spin-offs, although in the ''Mario Baseball'', series their chemistry is only neutral. Their relationship is much closer in the [[Super Mario World (television series)|''Super Mario World'' TV Show]], which depicted Yoshi as having originally thought Luigi was his mother and still enjoys hearing Luigi tell him bedtime stories, as seen in the episode [[Mama Luigi]]. He is also good friends with [[Toad]], although they are not quite as close as Toad is with Mario, and while other Toads are almost unanimous in their praise and adoration of Mario, their opinions on Luigi vary greatly between individuals. Some are unabashed fans of Luigi, with one in ''Super Mario 64 DS'' even asserting that "We'll have to call you the Luigi Brothers soon!", while others are disbelieving that Luigi measures up to Mario due to his clumsiness and fearful nature, with one going so far as to call him "The world's most inept and least charismatic brother". Similarly, Luigi's relationship with Starlow is far less cordial than she is with Mario, with her often belittling and mistreating him, but at the same time acknowledging that despite not being as great as Mario, he is still a hero in his own way. As seen in both ''Dream Team'' and ''Paper Jam'', she has grown fond of him over time, though she still has the tendency to tease him. | ||
[[File:LuigiRosalinaSMG.png|thumb|Luigi's picture with Rosalina]] | [[File:LuigiRosalinaSMG.png|thumb|Luigi's picture with Rosalina]] | ||
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[[File:Daisy Circuit statue MKWii.png|thumb|upright=1.1|left|A fountain from [[Daisy Circuit]] depicting a statue of Luigi and Daisy. (''Mario Kart Wii'')]] | [[File:Daisy Circuit statue MKWii.png|thumb|upright=1.1|left|A fountain from [[Daisy Circuit]] depicting a statue of Luigi and Daisy. (''Mario Kart Wii'')]] | ||
It has been stated that Luigi has a crush on Daisy, and the attraction appears to be mutual. In Daisy's second appearance in the ''Mario'' | It has been stated that Luigi has a crush on Daisy, and the attraction appears to be mutual. In Daisy's second appearance in the ''Super Mario'' franchise, ''NES Open Tournament Golf'', she served as Luigi's caddy, just as Peach was caddying for Mario, and as her trophy in ''Super Smash Bros. Melee'' points out, since that point "some gossips started portraying her as Luigi's answer to Mario's Peach". They are often paired up in spin-off games: they are seen golfing together in ''Mario Golf Toadstool Tour'', are "buddy players" with good chemistry in the ''[[Mario Baseball (series)|Mario Baseball]]'' series, they appear together in the [[Miracle Book]] pages from ''Mario Party 6'', and in ''Mario Kart Wii'', there is a giant, golden statue on the [[Daisy Circuit]] that shows the two holding hands and dancing together, along with another of their respective younger counterparts: [[Baby Luigi]] and [[Baby Daisy]]. Their team names from the ''Mario Party'' series include "Steady Sweeties" and "Tango Tanglers", and when Daisy received her trophy from Luigi in ''Mario Power Tennis'', she says, "Hey, sweetie! I'll take that". | ||
Another one of Luigi's friendships can also be seen with Professor E. Gadd. Although the only interactions between them are not frequent, they work very well together. E. Gadd shows much trust in Luigi, despite Luigi's cowardly nature. Throughout ''Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon'', E. Gadd jokingly holds Luigi in low regards, though he also states to be proud of him for courageously exploring the hostile ghost filled mansions as well as defeating the various [[Possessor]] ghosts. Luigi was also devastated to see E. Gadd trapped in a painting in ''Luigi's Mansion 3'', showing that Luigi cares about his well-being, as well as understanding that E. Gadd can help him save the others. | Another one of Luigi's friendships can also be seen with Professor E. Gadd. Although the only interactions between them are not frequent, they work very well together. E. Gadd shows much trust in Luigi, despite Luigi's cowardly nature. Throughout ''Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon'', E. Gadd jokingly holds Luigi in low regards, though he also states to be proud of him for courageously exploring the hostile ghost filled mansions as well as defeating the various [[Possessor]] ghosts. Luigi was also devastated to see E. Gadd trapped in a painting in ''Luigi's Mansion 3'', showing that Luigi cares about his well-being, as well as understanding that E. Gadd can help him save the others. | ||
Luigi is shown to get along with [[Rabbid Luigi|his Rabbid counterpart]], because they are willing to cooperate in order to defeat the [[Megabug]], and restore order to the [[Mushroom Kingdom]]. Group artwork for ''Mario + Rabbids Kingdom Battle'' shows the two characters posing together, while their in-game interactions are also friendly. Rabbid Luigi even possesses a few similarities to Luigi, such as being timid and polite in personality, as well as favoring long-ranged over close-quarter combat. In ''Mario & Sonic at London 2012 Olympic Games'', Luigi is shown to be good friends with [[Miles "Tails" Prower]], with them having a special victory animation in the sequels; later on, in ''[[Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020]]'', the two sidekicks would not hesitate to team up in order to rescue Mario and Sonic from the Tokyo64. | Luigi is shown to get along with [[Rabbid Luigi|his Rabbid counterpart]], because they are willing to cooperate in order to defeat the [[Megabug]], and restore order to the [[Mushroom Kingdom]]. Group artwork for ''Mario + Rabbids Kingdom Battle'' shows the two characters posing together, while their in-game interactions are also friendly. Rabbid Luigi even possesses a few similarities to Luigi, such as being timid and polite in personality, as well as favoring long-ranged over close-quarter combat. In ''Mario & Sonic at London 2012 Olympic Games'', Luigi is shown to be good friends with [[Tails|Miles "Tails" Prower]], with them having a special victory animation in the sequels; later on, in ''[[Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020]]'', the two sidekicks would not hesitate to team up in order to rescue Mario and Sonic from the Tokyo64. | ||
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====Enemies/Rivals==== | ====Enemies/Rivals==== | ||
[[File:LuigiMansion2-LuigiKingBoo.png|thumb|King Boo intimidates Luigi.]] | [[File:LuigiMansion2-LuigiKingBoo.png|thumb|King Boo intimidates Luigi.]] | ||
Though [[Bowser]]'s main rivalry is with Mario, he views Luigi as almost | Though [[Bowser]]'s main rivalry is with Mario, he views Luigi as almost as great of a threat as his brother in games such as ''Super Mario Galaxy'' and its sequel. At other times, Bowser has trouble even remembering Luigi's name, particularly in the ''Mario & Luigi'' series where he often defaults to calling him "Green 'Stache" (although Bowser finally calls Luigi by his real name at the end of ''Mario & Luigi: Dream Team''). Rather than Bowser, Luigi's arch-nemesis is actually [[King Boo]], whom he met and defeated single-handedly in ''Luigi's Mansion'' when the ghost king kidnapped Mario. King Boo would later try to get revenge in ''Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon'' and ''Luigi's Mansion 3'', and the rivalry can be seen in other series as well, such as the ''Mario Baseball'' games, in which Luigi (along with Mario) shares bad chemistry with the Boo king, ''Super Mario 64 DS'', where King Boo (known as Big Boo in the English version) was the one keeping the key locking Luigi away, and the Adventure Tour of ''Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games'', where King Boo selects Luigi to face him in Polatraits due to the latter's fear of ghosts. | ||
Another heated rivalry exists between Luigi and Waluigi, with the two sharing bad chemistry in all the games they appear in together, and acting hostile and rude towards each other, such as Luigi making a gesture at Waluigi to anger him in ''Mario Tennis'', the two scowling at each other in the ''Mario Party 3'' group picture, and Waluigi's vandalism of Luigi's picture in the opening movie of ''Mario Power Tennis''. Waluigi is constantly seen harassing Luigi, whether by humiliating him during the sports competition, following him wherever he goes, or even directly confronting him. The origins of their animosity is unknown, however jealousy may be a factor, as both Luigi and Waluigi have a crush on Princess Daisy, who rejects Waluigi. Luigi himself, while he despises Waluigi, mostly prefers to ignore him and his antics. | Another heated rivalry exists between Luigi and Waluigi, with the two sharing bad chemistry in all the games they appear in together, and acting hostile and rude towards each other, such as Luigi making a gesture at Waluigi to anger him in ''Mario Tennis'', the two scowling at each other in the ''Mario Party 3'' group picture, and Waluigi's vandalism of Luigi's picture in the opening movie of ''Mario Power Tennis''. Waluigi is constantly seen harassing Luigi, whether by humiliating him during the sports competition, following him wherever he goes, or even directly confronting him. The origins of their animosity is unknown, however jealousy may be a factor, as both Luigi and Waluigi have a crush on Princess Daisy, who rejects Waluigi. Luigi himself, while he despises Waluigi, mostly prefers to ignore him and his antics. | ||
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Just as Luigi's relationships with Daisy and King Boo nearly mirror Mario's with Peach and Bowser, respectively, his arch-rivalry with Waluigi parallels the one between Mario and Wario. Wario himself does not show as much antagonism towards Luigi as Waluigi, although the two do not get along well and it has been shown that Wario enjoys giving Luigi trouble, such as by tying his shoelaces together<ref>[http://www.gameboyadvance.com/wario/ ''Wario Land 4'' official website (now defunct)] (Accessed on 7-3-09)</ref>. However, Luigi has rescued Wario from [[Chief Chilly]] in ''Super Mario 64 DS'', indicating some degree of respect for the two. | Just as Luigi's relationships with Daisy and King Boo nearly mirror Mario's with Peach and Bowser, respectively, his arch-rivalry with Waluigi parallels the one between Mario and Wario. Wario himself does not show as much antagonism towards Luigi as Waluigi, although the two do not get along well and it has been shown that Wario enjoys giving Luigi trouble, such as by tying his shoelaces together<ref>[http://www.gameboyadvance.com/wario/ ''Wario Land 4'' official website (now defunct)] (Accessed on 7-3-09)</ref>. However, Luigi has rescued Wario from [[Chief Chilly]] in ''Super Mario 64 DS'', indicating some degree of respect for the two. | ||
In the first two installments of the ''Mario & Sonic series'', Luigi shares a competitive, friendly rivalry with [[Shadow the Hedgehog]] similar to his brother is with [[Sonic the Hedgehog]]. They competed in Hurdles and raced in Skating races (the latter in which [[Metal Sonic]] outpaced them and the opening's epilogue shows them standing side-by-side afterwards). | In the first two installments of the ''Mario & Sonic series'', Luigi shares a competitive, friendly rivalry with [[Shadow (character)|Shadow the Hedgehog]] similar to his brother is with [[Sonic|Sonic the Hedgehog]]. They competed in Hurdles and raced in Skating races (the latter in which [[Metal Sonic]] outpaced them and the opening's epilogue shows them standing side-by-side afterwards). | ||
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*'''Bio:''' ''Compared to Mario, he is a bit less powerful, but Luigi is good at ball handling. His specialty is playing up front, at the net.'' | *'''Bio:''' ''Compared to Mario, he is a bit less powerful, but Luigi is good at ball handling. His specialty is playing up front, at the net.'' | ||
*'''Bio 2:''' ''Like his brother, Luigi is pretty good at everything. Although not as powerful as Mario, he has greater accuracy and is excellent at coming into the net.'' | *'''Bio 2:''' ''Like his brother, Luigi is pretty good at everything. Although not as powerful as Mario, he has greater accuracy and is excellent at coming into the net.'' | ||
==List of appearances== | |||
{{Construction|section=y}} | |||
{|class=wikitable | |||
|- | |||
!width=30%|Title | |||
!width=20%|Year | |||
!width=20%|System/Format | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Bros. (Game & Watch)|Mario Bros.]]''||1983||[[Game & Watch]] | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Bros. (game)|Mario Bros.]]''||1983||Arcade, [[Nintendo Entertainment System|NES]] | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Bros. Special]]''||1984||[[NEC PC-88]] | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Punch Ball Mario Bros.]]''||1984||NEC PC-88 | |||
|- | |||
|[[Family BASIC]]||1984|| | |||
|- | |||
|''[[VS. Wrecking Crew]]''||1984||Arcade | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Wrecking Crew]]''||1985||NES | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario Bros.]]''||1985||NES | |||
|- | |||
|''[[VS. Super Mario Bros.]]''||1986||Arcade | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels]]''||1986||NES (Disk System) | |||
|- | |||
|''[[I am a teacher: Super Mario Sweater]]''||1986||NES (Disk System) | |||
|- | |||
|''[[All Night Nippon: Super Mario Bros.]]''||1986||NES (Disk System) | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Golf: Japan Course]]''||1987||NES (Disk System) | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Famicom Grand Prix II: 3D Hot Rally]]''||1988||NES (Disk System) | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario Bros. 2]]''||1988||NES | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario Bros. 3]]''||1988||NES | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Kaettekita Mario Bros.]]''||1988||NES (Disk System) | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Tetris]]''||1989||[[Game Boy]] | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Luigi's Hammer Toss]]''||1990||[[Super Mario Bros. Watch]] | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario World]]''||1990||[[Super Nintendo Entertainment System|SNES]] | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Teaches Typing]]''||1991, 1994||{{Wp|MS-DOS}}, {{wp|Windows}} | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Yoshi (game)|Yoshi]]''||1991||NES, Game Boy | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario Bros. Print World]]''||1991||MS-DOS | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario Bros. & Friends: When I Grow Up]]''||1992||MS-DOS | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario Bros. (pinball)|Super Mario Bros.]]'' (pinball)||1992||Arcade | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario Kart]]''||1992||SNES | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario is Missing!]]''||1992, 1993||MS-DOS, SNES, NES | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Undōkai]]''||1993||Arcade | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario World (arcade)|Super Mario World]]''||1993||Arcade | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario All-Stars]]''||1993||SNES | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario & Wario]]''||1993||SNES | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario's Early Years! Fun with Letters]]''||1993, 1994||MS-DOS, SNES | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario's Early Years! Fun with Numbers]]''||1994||MS-DOS, SNES | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario's Early Years! Preschool Fun]]''||1994||MS-DOS, SNES | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario All-Stars + Super Mario World]]''||1994||SNES | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Hotel Mario]]''||1994||[[CD-i]] | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario's Tennis]]''||1995||[[Virtual Boy]] | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island]]''||1995||SNES | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Clash]]''||1995||Virtual Boy | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars]]''||1996||SNES | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Teaches Typing 2]]''||1996||MS-DOS | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Kart 64]]''||1996||[[Nintendo 64]] | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Game & Watch Gallery]]''||1997||Game Boy | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Excitebike: Bun Bun Mario Battle]]''||1997||[[Satellaview]] | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Game & Watch Gallery 2]]''||1997, 1998||Game Boy, [[Game Boy Color|GBC]] | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Wrecking Crew '98]]'''||1998||SNES | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Party]]''||1998||Nintendo 64 | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Smash Bros.]]''||1999||Nintendo 64 | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario Bros. Deluxe]]''||1999||GBC | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Golf (Nintendo 64)|Mario Golf]]''||1999||Nintendo 64 | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Game & Watch Gallery 3]]''||1999||GBC | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Golf (Game Boy Color)|Mario Golf]]''||1999||GBC | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Artist: Paint Studio]]''||1999||[[Nintendo 64DD]] | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Party 2]]''||1999||Nintendo 64 | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Tennis (Nintendo 64)|Mario Tennis]]''||2000||Nintendo 64 | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Paper Mario]]''||2000||Nintendo 64 | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Tennis (Game Boy Color)|Mario Tennis]]''||2000||GBC | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario Advance]]''||2001||[[Game Boy Advance|GBA]] | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Kart: Super Circuit]]''||2001||GBA | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Family]]''||2001||GBC | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Luigi's Mansion]]''||2001||[[Nintendo GameCube|GameCube]] | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]''||2001||GameCube | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2]]''||2001||GBA | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Yoshi's Island: Super Mario Advance 3]]''||2002||GBA | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Party 4]]''||2002||GameCube | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Game & Watch Gallery 4]]''||2002||GBA | |||
|- | |||
|''[[E-Reader|Mario Bros.-e]]''||2002||[[E-Reader]] | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario Fushigi no Janjan Land]]''||2003||Arcade | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Party-e]]''||2003||E-Reader | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3]]''||2003||GBA | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Golf: Toadstool Tour]]''||2003||GameCube | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Kart: Double Dash!!]]''||2003||GameCube | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Party 5]]''||2003||GameCube | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga]]''||2003||GBA | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario Bros.|Classic NES Series: Super Mario Bros.]]''||2004||GBA | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Golf: Advance Tour]]''||2004||GBA | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Wrecking Crew|Famicom Mini: Wrecking Crew]]''||2004||GBA | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Donkey Konga 2]]''||2004||GameCube | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door]]''||2004||GameCube | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario Bros. 2|Famicom Mini: Super Mario Bros. 2]]''||2004||GBA | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario Fushigi no Korokoro Party]]''||2004||Arcade | |||
|- | |||
|''[[WarioWare: Twisted!]]''||2004||GBA | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Power Tennis]]''||2004||GameCube | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Party 6]]''||2004||GameCube | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario 64 DS]]''||2004||[[Nintendo DS]] | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Party Advance]]''||2005||GBA | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Yoshi Touch & Go]]''||2005||Nintendo DS | |||
|- | |||
|''[[NBA Street V3]]''||2005||GameCube | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Yakuman DS]]''||2005||Nintendo DS | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Dance Dance Revolution: Mario Mix]]''||2005||GameCube | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Superstar Baseball]]''||2005||GameCube | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Tennis: Power Tour]]''||2005||GBA | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Kart Arcade GP]]''||2005||Arcade | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario Fushigi no Korokoro Party 2]]''||2005||Arcade | |||
|- | |||
|''[[SSX on Tour]]''||2005||GameCube | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Princess Peach]]''||2005||Nintendo DS | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Party 7]]''||2005||GameCube | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Kart DS]]''||2005||Nintendo DS | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario Strikers]]''||2005||GameCube | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time]]''||2005||Nintendo DS | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Tetris DS]]''||2006||Nintendo DS | |||
|- | |||
|''[[New Super Mario Bros.]]''||2006||Nintendo DS | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Hoops 3-on-3]]''||2006||Nintendo DS | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Yoshi's Island DS]]''||2006||Nintendo DS | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Kart Arcade GP 2]]''||2007||Arcade | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Paper Mario]]''||2007||[[Wii]] | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Strikers Charged]]''||2007||Wii | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Party 8]]''||2007||Wii | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Itadaki Street DS]]''||2007||Nintendo DS | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario Galaxy]]''||2007||Wii | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games]]''||2007, 2008||Wii, Nintendo DS | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Party DS]]''||2007||Nintendo DS | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Smash Bros. Brawl]]''||2008||Wii | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Kart Wii]]''||2008||Wii | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Super Sluggers]]''||2008||Wii | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Party Fushigi no Korokoro Catcher]]''||2009||Arcade | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Power Tennis|New Play Control! Mario Power Tennis]]''||2009||Wii | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story]]''||2009||Nintendo DS | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Calculator]]''||2009||[[Nintendo DSi]] | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Clock]]''||2009||Nintendo DSi | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games]]''||2009||Wii, Nintendo DS | |||
|- | |||
|''[[New Super Mario Bros. Wii]]''||2009||Wii | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario Galaxy 2]]''||2010||Wii | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario All-Stars Limited Edition]]''||2010||Wii | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Sports Mix]]''||2010||Wii | |||
|- | |||
|''[[New Super Mario Bros. Wii Coin World]]''||2011||Arcade | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Super Mario 3D Land]]''||2011||[[Nintendo 3DS]] | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario & Sonic at the London 2012 Olympic Games]]''||2011, 2012||Wii, Nintendo 3DS | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Fortune Street]]''||2011||Wii | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Mario Kart 7]]''||2011||Nintendo 3DS | |||
|} | |||
==Portrayals== | ==Portrayals== | ||
Luigi has been voiced by the following people: | |||
The first live-action portrayal of Luigi was by an unknown actor in an Atari commercial for ''Mario Bros.'' from 1983.<ref name="mbcommercial" /> The following is a list of all of the people who have portrayed Luigi. | The first live-action portrayal of Luigi was by an unknown actor in an Atari commercial for ''Mario Bros.'' from 1983.<ref name="mbcommercial" /> The following is a list of all of the people who have portrayed Luigi. | ||
*{{wp|Yū Mizushima}} - ''[[Super Mario Bros.: Peach-hime Kyūshutsu Dai Sakusen!]]'', ''[[Super Mario World: Mario to Yoshi no Bōken Land]]'' | *{{wp|Yū Mizushima}} - ''[[Super Mario Bros.: Peach-hime Kyūshutsu Dai Sakusen!]]'', ''[[Super Mario World: Mario to Yoshi no Bōken Land]]'' | ||
* | *{{wp|Naoki Tatsuta}} - ''[[Amada Anime Series: Super Mario Bros.]]'' | ||
*Bob Sorenson - ''[[Mario is Missing!]]'' | *Bob Sorenson - ''[[Mario is Missing!]]'' | ||
*[[Danny Wells]] - ''[[The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!]]'' | *[[Danny Wells]] - ''[[The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!]]'' | ||
*[[Tony Rosato]] - ''[[The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3]]'', ''[[Super Mario World (television series)|Super Mario World]]'' | *[[Tony Rosato]] - ''[[The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3]]'', ''[[Super Mario World (television series)|Super Mario World]]'' | ||
*Jørn Rosenville - Live action segments for the Danish dub of ''The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3'' | *Jørn Rosenville - Live action segments for the Danish dub of ''The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3'' | ||
*[[Julien Bardakoff]] - ''[[Mario Kart 64]]'' (Japanese version only), ''[[Mario Party]]'', ''[[Mario Party 2]]'', ''[[Mario Kart: Super Circuit]]'' | *[[Julien Bardakoff]] - ''[[Mario Kart 64]]'' (Japanese version only), ''[[Mario Party]]'', ''[[Mario Party 2]]'', ''[[Mario Kart: Super Circuit]]'' | ||
*[[John Leguizamo]] – [[Super Mario Bros. (film)|''Super Mario Bros.'' film]] | |||
*[[Marc Graue]] - ''[[Hotel Mario]]'' | |||
*[[Charles Martinet]] - [[Mario in Real Time]], ''[[Mario Kart 64]]'' (overseas version only)-''[[Mario + Rabbids Sparks of Hope]]'' | |||
*Vinny Balbo - ''[[Mario Kart 8]]'' Mercedes-Benz GLA commercial | |||
*[[Charlie Day]] - ''[[The Super Mario Bros. Movie]]'' | *[[Charlie Day]] - ''[[The Super Mario Bros. Movie]]'' | ||
*[[Kevin Afghani]] - ''[[Super Mario Bros. Wonder]]''-present | |||
==Gallery== | ==Gallery== | ||
{{main-gallery}} | {{main-gallery}} | ||
<i><gallery perrow=6> | <i><gallery perrow=6> | ||
MB Luigi Artwork.png|[[Mario Bros. (game)|Mario Bros.]] | MB Luigi Artwork.png|''[[Mario Bros. (game)|Mario Bros.]]'' | ||
LuigiSMB2NES.png|[[Super Mario Bros. 2]] | LuigiSMB2NES.png|''[[Super Mario Bros. 2]]'' | ||
File:Smas-smb3 Luigi2.png|''[[Super Mario World]]'' | |||
MK64 Luigi.png|[[Mario Kart 64]] | MK64 Luigi.png|''[[Mario Kart 64]]'' | ||
Luigis Mansion Luigi Poltergust Artwork.jpg|[[Luigi's Mansion]] | Luigis Mansion Luigi Poltergust Artwork.jpg|''[[Luigi's Mansion]]'' | ||
File:Mparty4 luigi.jpg|''[[Mario Party 4]]'' | |||
Luigi | File:Luigi MLPiT.png|''[[Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time]]'' | ||
File:Luigi SPM artwork.jpg|''[[Super Paper Mario]]'' | |||
Luigi MP10.png|''[[Mario Party 10]]'' | |||
Luigi Artwork | File:Luigi - Aces Artwork.png|''[[Mario Tennis Aces]]'' | ||
Luigi | File:MPS Luigi.png|''[[Mario Party Superstars]]'' | ||
TSMBM Luigi.png|''[[The Super Mario Bros. Movie]]'' | |||
</gallery></i> | </gallery></i> | ||
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*"''I'm-a Luigi, number one!''" - ''[[Mario Kart 64]]'' | *"''I'm-a Luigi, number one!''" - ''[[Mario Kart 64]]'' | ||
*"''Hello...?''" - ''[[Luigi's Mansion]]'' / ''[[Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon]]'' | *"''Hello...?''" - ''[[Luigi's Mansion]]'' / ''[[Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon]]'' | ||
*"''Come here, doggy.''" - ''Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon'' | *"''Come here, [[Polterpup|doggy]].''" - ''Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon'' | ||
*"''MARIO!!!''" - ''Luigi's Mansion'' / ''Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon'' | *"''MARIO!!!''" - ''Luigi's Mansion'' / ''Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon'' | ||
*"''You wanna switch, bro?''" - ''[[Super Mario Galaxy 2]]'' | *"''You wanna switch, bro?''" - ''[[Super Mario Galaxy 2]]'' | ||
Line 1,074: | Line 517: | ||
*"''Oh, what happened?''" - ''[[Mario Kart 8]] / [[Mario Kart 8 Deluxe]] | *"''Oh, what happened?''" - ''[[Mario Kart 8]] / [[Mario Kart 8 Deluxe]] | ||
*"''Ha ha ha! I'm the best!''" - ''[[Mario Party 4]]'' / ''[[Mario Party 5]]'' | *"''Ha ha ha! I'm the best!''" - ''[[Mario Party 4]]'' / ''[[Mario Party 5]]'' | ||
*"''Nothing can hurt us...as long as we're together...!''" - ''[[The Super Mario Bros. Movie]]'' | |||
* ''"Let's take a photo together!"'' - [[Super Nintendo World]] | |||
*''"Wowie zowie!"'' - ''[[Luigi's Mansion 3]]'' / ''[[Super Mario Bros. Wonder]]'' | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
*[[Baby Luigi]] | *[[Baby Luigi]] | ||
*[[Mr. L]] | *[[Mr. L]] | ||
==Voice samples== | |||
{{media table | |||
|file1=MK64 Luigi Win.oga | |||
|title1=''[[Mario Kart 64]]'' | |||
|description1="''I'm-a Luigi, number one!''" ([[Charles Martinet]], 1996) | |||
|length1=0:03 | |||
|file3=Luigi Let'sGo SMBW.oga | |||
|title3=''[[Super Mario Bros. Wonder]]'' | |||
|description3="''Let's-a go!''· ([[Kevin Afghani]], 2023) | |||
|length3=0:01 | |||
}} | |||
==Names in other languages== | ==Names in other languages== | ||
Line 1,087: | Line 545: | ||
*Coincidentally, "Luigi" translates from Italian as "famous warrior," which is ironic or apt given the circumstance. Luigi is often portrayed as being the "lesser brother" and a coward, although he is an iconic video game hero as well. | *Coincidentally, "Luigi" translates from Italian as "famous warrior," which is ironic or apt given the circumstance. Luigi is often portrayed as being the "lesser brother" and a coward, although he is an iconic video game hero as well. | ||
**The Japanese pronunciation of Luigi (ルイージ, ''Ruīji'') is also comparable to a Japanese word for similar ({{hover|類似|ルイジ}}, ''ruiji'') which is pronounced almost identically, save for a shorter "i" sound. This coincidentally matches Luigi having been created as a color swap of Mario. | **The Japanese pronunciation of Luigi (ルイージ, ''Ruīji'') is also comparable to a Japanese word for similar ({{hover|類似|ルイジ}}, ''ruiji'') which is pronounced almost identically, save for a shorter "i" sound. This coincidentally matches Luigi having been created as a color swap of Mario. | ||
*A collectable ''[[Mario & Wario]]'' card mistakenly spells Luigi's name as "Ruigi", due to incorrectly transliterating his Japanese name (''Ruīji'').<ref>[https://jp.mercari.com/item/m96319774122 マリオとワリオ S&Bスナック G-4 メンコ? ルイージ]. ''jp.mercari.com''. Retrieved March 3, 2023. ([https://web.archive.org/web/20230303054730/https://jp.mercari.com/item/m96319774122 Archived] March 3, 2023, 05:47:30 UTC via Wayback Machine.)</ref> A similar mistake can also be seen on artwork used in a 1985 Japanese guide for ''[[Wrecking Crew]]'', as an "R" is printed on Luigi's overalls.<ref>オロチ(Famicom Archivist) (June 9, 2022). [https://twitter.com/oroti_famicom/status/1535109172840509440 【マリオ無駄知識】 多くの日本人にとって「L」と「R」の違いなど重要ではありません。ファミリーコンピュータマガジン1985年9月号に掲載された『レッキングクルー』の攻略記事には「R」の文字が刻まれたオーバーオール姿のルイージが描かれています。彼は「Ruigi」ではなく「Luigi」なのに!]. ''Twitter''. Retrieved March 3, 2023. ([https://web.archive.org/web/20220610035903/https://twitter.com/oroti_famicom/status/1535109172840509440 Archived] June 10, 2022, 03:59:03 UTC via Wayback Machine.)</ref> | *A collectable ''[[Mario & Wario]]'' card mistakenly spells Luigi's name as "Ruigi", due to incorrectly transliterating his Japanese name (''Ruīji'').<ref>[https://jp.mercari.com/item/m96319774122 マリオとワリオ S&Bスナック G-4 メンコ? ルイージ]. ''jp.mercari.com''. Retrieved March 3, 2023. ([https://web.archive.org/web/20230303054730/https://jp.mercari.com/item/m96319774122 Archived] March 3, 2023, 05:47:30 UTC via Wayback Machine.)</ref> | ||
**A similar mistake can also be seen on artwork used in a 1985 Japanese guide for ''[[Wrecking Crew]]'', as an "R" is printed on Luigi's overalls.<ref>オロチ(Famicom Archivist) (June 9, 2022). [https://twitter.com/oroti_famicom/status/1535109172840509440 【マリオ無駄知識】 多くの日本人にとって「L」と「R」の違いなど重要ではありません。ファミリーコンピュータマガジン1985年9月号に掲載された『レッキングクルー』の攻略記事には「R」の文字が刻まれたオーバーオール姿のルイージが描かれています。彼は「Ruigi」ではなく「Luigi」なのに!]. ''Twitter''. Retrieved March 3, 2023. ([https://web.archive.org/web/20220610035903/https://twitter.com/oroti_famicom/status/1535109172840509440 Archived] June 10, 2022, 03:59:03 UTC via Wayback Machine.)</ref> | |||
*In the first page of the ''[[Nintendo Power]]'' magazine for ''Luigi's Mansion'', Luigi is mistakenly referred to as [[Mario]]'s older brother. | *In the first page of the ''[[Nintendo Power]]'' magazine for ''Luigi's Mansion'', Luigi is mistakenly referred to as [[Mario]]'s older brother. | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{NIWA|SmashWiki=1}} | {{NIWA|SmashWiki=1|StarfyWiki=1}} | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
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{{MSBL}} | {{MSBL}} | ||
{{M+RSOH}} | {{M+RSOH}} | ||
{{TSMBM}}}} | {{TSMBM}} | ||
{{SMBW}}}} | |||
[[de:Luigi]] | [[de:Luigi]] | ||
[[it:Luigi]] | [[it:Luigi]] | ||
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[[Category:Mario & Sonic at the London 2012 Olympic Games characters]] | [[Category:Mario & Sonic at the London 2012 Olympic Games characters]] | ||
[[Category:Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games characters]] | [[Category:Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games characters]] | ||
[[Category:Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020]] | [[Category:Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 characters]] | ||
[[Category:Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games characters]] | [[Category:Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games characters]] | ||
[[Category:Mario & Sonic at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games characters]] | [[Category:Mario & Sonic at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games characters]] | ||
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[[Category:Mario & Wario]] | [[Category:Mario & Wario]] | ||
[[Category:Mario Bros.]] | [[Category:Mario Bros.]] | ||
[[Category:Mario Bros. (Game & Watch)]] | |||
[[Category:Mario Clash]] | [[Category:Mario Clash]] | ||
[[Category:Mario Golf (Nintendo 64) characters]] | [[Category:Mario Golf (Nintendo 64) characters]] | ||
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[[Category:Mario Kart Wii characters]] | [[Category:Mario Kart Wii characters]] | ||
[[Category:Mario Kart Wii trading cards]] | [[Category:Mario Kart Wii trading cards]] | ||
[[Category:Mario lookalikes]] | |||
[[Category:Mario Party characters]] | [[Category:Mario Party characters]] | ||
[[Category:Mario Party 2 characters]] | [[Category:Mario Party 2 characters]] | ||
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[[Category:Super Mario amiibo line]] | [[Category:Super Mario amiibo line]] | ||
[[Category:Super Mario Bros.]] | [[Category:Super Mario Bros.]] | ||
[[Category:Super Mario Bros. 2]] | |||
[[Category:Super Mario Bros. 3]] | |||
[[Category:Super Mario Bros. Deluxe]] | [[Category:Super Mario Bros. Deluxe]] | ||
[[Category:Super Mario Bros.: Peach-hime Kyūshutsu Dai Sakusen!]] | |||
[[Category:Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels]] | [[Category:Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels]] | ||
[[Category:Super Mario Bros. | [[Category:Super Mario Bros. Wonder characters]] | ||
[[Category:Super Mario Galaxy characters]] | [[Category:Super Mario Galaxy characters]] | ||
[[Category:Super Mario Galaxy 2 characters]] | [[Category:Super Mario Galaxy 2 characters]] |
Revision as of 22:19, May 11, 2024
- This article is about Mario's younger brother from the Super Mario franchise. For the portrayal of Luigi in the Super Mario Bros. film, see Luigi (film character). For his infant counterpart, see Baby Luigi.
Luigi | |
---|---|
Artwork from Mario Party Superstars | |
Full name | Luigi Mario[1] |
Species | Human |
First appearance | Mario Bros. (Game & Watch) (1983) |
Latest appearance | Super Mario RPG (Nintendo Switch) (2023) |
Latest portrayal | Kevin Afghani (2023–present) |
- “Eek! No one told me there would be gh-gh-ghosts here! I wish I'd brought my Poltergust 3000 with me.”
- —Luigi, Fortune Street
Luigi is Mario's younger but taller twin brother, the secondary protagonist of the Super Mario franchise, and the main protagonist of the Luigi's Mansion series. Throughout his life, he has lived in Mario's shadow, developing both cowardly and heroic tendencies. Despite this, Luigi has helped and fought alongside his brother on many occasions. Mario Bros. for the Game & Watch marks his first appearance, in which he is an exact copy of Mario. He went on to gain a different color and be used to facilitate a second-player option. However, as Luigi established himself throughout the Super Mario franchise, he gained his own identity as a character.
Creation and development
Luigi was created when Gunpei Yokoi set out to produce Mario Bros.[2][3] After observing the two-player competitive and cooperative gameplay of the arcade game Joust, he and Shigeru Miyamoto wished to incorporate a similar style of gameplay into their game.[4] Their answer to Joust's stork-riding player 2 was Luigi, a younger twin brother to Mario, with whom he could compete or cooperate. Like Mario, Luigi received his name from Nintendo of America. Coincidentally, his name was also noted to be similar to the Japanese word 「類似」 (ruiji), meaning "similar",[5] possibly a reference to how Luigi was originally a simple palette swap of Mario. With the 2-player mode in mind, Nintendo and publishing companies such as Atari gave Luigi immediate publicity, making him the star and center of attention in many advertisements for the game.[6][7]
Since his debut in 1983, Luigi has been constantly developing. Gameplay differences between him and Mario were first seen in Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels, which have been carried over into future games and have become standard for the character. After spending years as a palette swap of his brother, Luigi has consistently been given his own graphics since Super Mario Kart in 1992 to match his official appearance as Mario's taller, younger brother; though the American release of Super Mario Bros. 2 portrayed him in this way six years earlier. As he developed, Luigi gained more of a personality; it was as early as the DiC cartoons that Luigi was shown to be the more cautious of the two brothers, though it was not until Luigi's Mansion that this was truly and officially established.
In 2013, Luigi was the focus of the Year of Luigi, where in Nintendo released a number of themed games and merchandise and held events to honor the thirtieth anniversary of Luigi's first appearance in Mario Bros.
History
- Main article: History of Luigi
Luigi has had a substantial history since his debut in Mario Bros. due to being a protagonist of the franchise. Like Mario and all other characters, his appearances are not limited to the core series, appearing in many spin-offs, literature, and animation.
General information
Concept and creation
The arcade game Mario Bros. incorporated a multiplayer mode, but due to memory restrictions, the second player character needed to have a sprite identical to the first. The development team thought of differentiating the second character by giving him different colors, but the color palette budget was similarly limited.[8] As a result, Luigi was conceived as a twin of Mario to explain his resemblance and he was made green to recycle the color palette of the Shellcreeper enemy.[8]
Physical description
Compared to Mario, Luigi is slimmer and taller. A pamphlet for Super Mario Bros.: Peach-hime Kyūshutsu Dai Sakusen! gives his height and weight as 158 cm (5 ft. 2 in.) and 62 kg (136 lbs.)[9] The Miis in Wii U version of Mario & Sonic at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games describe Luigi's mustache as "smooth", unlike Mario's "lumpy" mustache. Luigi's sideburn is also different, being a simple round shape while Mario's has an indentation, and his eyes are thinner than Mario's.
Luigi also wears clothes similar to Mario, but his shirt and cap are green instead of red. Layered over the shirt is blue overalls, which, starting with Luigi's Mansion, are a darker blue than Mario's. He also has brown work shoes, again darker than Mario's, with tan bottoms that reach above his ankles. He wears white gloves like Mario. Artwork however sometimes shows Luigi with the same color of blue overalls and brown shoes as Mario. The Luigi Cap is similar to the Mario Cap, being green instead of red and having an "L" replace Mario's signature "M"; the "L" was in italic from Mario Kart 64 to Luigi's Mansion for a few years. In some games, Luigi's cap does play some significance, such as in Super Mario 64 DS, where just like Mario's and Wario's caps, it can be stolen by Klepto and cause him to take extra damage so long as he is not wearing it. However, this does not occur in other games, such as Super Mario 3D Land and New Super Mario Bros. 2 after collecting the maximum number of lives.
The Mario & Luigi series up until Dream Team consistently depicted Luigi with overalls short enough to reveal his red-and-white striped socks, though the Nintendo 3DS remake Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story + Bowser Jr.'s Journey still shows these socks when his shoe falls off at the beginning of the game. Additionally, the green coloring on his clothing had more of a turquoise/teal color scheme.
Mario and Luigi's color preferences are reflected throughout the land in the form of various enemies, such as Koopa Troopas and Cheep Cheeps, who also come in red and green varieties. These foes even reflect the brothers' personalities, with red ones being more aggressive and green ones acting cautious. In fact, Mario and Luigi are not the only known red and green brothers, with similarly color-coded siblings including Cork and Cask, the Red and Green bridge guards, the Armored Harriers, Massif Bros., Elder & Junior Shrooboid and Gigi and Merri. When tattling the younger of the Armored Harriers, Goombella theorizes that it may be some sort of rule that younger brothers must wear green, offering a possible explanation for Luigi's trademark green shirt and cap.
However, Luigi has not always chosen to wear his usual green and blue clothes. Mario Bros. originally dressed Luigi in a black shirt and green overalls, although artwork showed his shirt to be red. Shigeru Miyamoto stated that the green color of clothing for Luigi was inspired by the enemy Shellcreeper.[10] Wrecking Crew gave him a magenta pair of overalls and helmet, seemingly leaving him shirtless. Even Super Mario Bros. gave its Luigi a green shirt and white overalls (although Super Mario Bros. Deluxe replaced this with a less aberrant brown shirt and green overalls, leaving his original colors to Fire Luigi, who usually has an inverse scheme), even though his usual palette and appearance had emerged in artwork. Fire Luigi's palette in Super Mario Bros. uses the color scheme used by Fire Mario. In both Super Mario Adventures and Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga, Luigi wears Princess Peach's dress as a disguise.
Luigi originated as being a palette swap of Mario in his earlier adventures. This applies to Mario Bros., Wrecking Crew, Super Mario Bros., Super Mario Bros. 3, Super Mario World, Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island, and in a few versions of Mario is Missing!. Luigi's first depiction as taller and thinner is in Famicom Grand Prix II: 3D Hot Rally, although Luigi's first unique sprites came in Super Mario Bros. 2, in which his artwork appearance conveniently coincided with the tall Mama's sprite. Nintendo of Japan would not adapt Luigi's artwork differences to his in-game sprite until Super Mario Kart, although Luigi's various models have been unique almost ever since, even in remakes of games where he was originally a palette swap (such as Super Mario All-Stars, Super Mario All-Stars + Super Mario World, Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2, and Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3). However, Luigi's appearance in Super Mario Maker 2's Super Mario Bros. and Super Mario Bros. 3 styles revert to depicting him as a palette swap of Mario - most likely in order to be faithful to his original designs - though in the Super Mario Bros. 3 style, his color scheme is a darker shade of green; on an interesting note, his fire form's colors in both styles are reimagined. In the game's Super Mario World style, Luigi's unique head shape from Super Mario All-Stars + Super Mario World is retained, though his body shape and his animations revert to those in Super Mario World.
Both Mario and Luigi have been described as "cutesy," to the extent that Shigeru Miyamoto considered redesigning them to "become a bit more grown-up" in the GameCube era—for instance, by removing their trademark V sign.[11] However, aside from growing more realistic as graphics have advanced, Luigi and his brother have changed little over the years, and continue to flash the V sign, albeit to a much lesser extent.
Luigi's appearance does, however, tend to lend itself to heavy stylization. The Luigi's Mansion graphical team took it upon themselves to animate every part of Luigi to convey emotion,[12] resulting in such exaggerations to his body as head-expanding screams during boss cutscenes and complete flattenings by fake doors. The Super Smash Bros. series applies Luigi's cowardice to his actions, making most of his attacks look reckless and unwilling and giving him awkward movements, securing his official title as the series' "dreamy, comical poster boy."[13]
In The Super Mario Bros. Movie, Luigi's appearance receives a few changes. He has more detail on his clothing and hair, and his head is more realistic. In addition, his overall buttons are smaller, similar to Mario.
Luigi's appearance has changed quite a bit throughout the Super Smash Bros. series. In the original Super Smash Bros., Luigi's overalls are indigo, with his entire appearance being original. In Super Smash Bros. Melee, Luigi borrows his appearance from Nintendo 64-era artwork, right down to having a tan complexion; Luigi's overalls are now their standard navy blue color, though they receive denim textures and back pockets. In Super Smash Bros. Brawl, Luigi uses his contemporary look, though his overalls have further pronounced textures, while his hair and other clothing receive simple detailing. In Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS / Wii U, Luigi's model is sleeker and more vibrant, while his hair and clothing lose most of their detailing. In Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, Luigi receives simple detailing in his hair and clothing once again, albeit not to the same extent as in Super Smash Bros. Brawl.
Luigi has a total of eight selectable costumes to date in the Super Smash Bros. series, with 4 in Super Smash Bros. and Super Smash Bros. Melee, 6 in Super Smash Bros. Brawl, and 8 in Super Smash Bros. for 3DS / Wii U and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. In Smash 64 and Melee, Luigi had his first three costumes introduced; the first costume consists of green overalls and a white undershirt and cap, which are derived from Fire Luigi's colors; the second costume consists of blue overalls and a cyan undershirt and cap, resembling Mario's appearance on the American boxart for Mario Bros.; lastly, Luigi's third alternate costume consists of red overalls and a pink undershirt and cap, resembling his appearance in Wrecking Crew. In Brawl, Luigi's fourth and fifth alternate costumes were introduced: the former consists of blue overalls and an orange undershirt and cap, resembling Mario's appearance on the boxart for Pinball; the latter consists of dark indigo overalls and a purple undershirt and cap, based off of Waluigi's colors. In 3DS / Wii U, Luigi's sixth and seventh alternate costumes are introduced: the former consists of blue overalls, a dark blue cap, and a garbage green undershirt; the latter consists of teal overalls, and a dull yellow undershirt and cap; neither of these costumes have inspirations.
In Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020, Luigi wears different outfits depending on the sport or activity being played. He can wear a green tank top with white stripes, which, depending on the event, may also have short sleeves, with black shorts, white socks, and green sneakers that are the same ones he wore in Mario Tennis Aces; a green, white, and black wetsuit while barefooted; a karate gi; black swimming trunks with a green stripe while shirtless; or, in certain events, his normal outfit.
Personality
Luigi is portrayed as a frail, clumsy, self-conscious, and timid person who is most afraid of ghosts, but is kind-hearted and heroic. He overcomes his fears and acts like a hero when necessary, such as when someone or his homeland is in danger or needs help. In keeping with his personality-based Power Flower, a sign in Big Boo's Haunt in Super Mario 64 DS describes Luigi as "wispy." In several Super Mario sports titles, the Mario Kart series, and especially the Mario & Luigi series, Luigi is shown to get emotional at times, as he cries easily. Though he showed several instances of cowardice in early non-game media such as The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!, Luigi's Mansion exemplifies his skittishness (aside from a few hints in Paper Mario) and has carried over to almost all of Luigi's subsequent appearances.
A few Paper Mario games portray a bolder Luigi. In Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door, he is more arrogant and boastful while telling long and elaborate stories, which Mario and his partner fall asleep to; his partners claim his stories are heavily embellished. The novelizations of his escapades describe them with even more flowery exaggerations, stating for instance that he played an earth spirit in the Jazzafrazz Town Drama Slam (whereas, according to Hayzee, he played grass on the side of the road,) and that he awoke Cranberry with "a soft call" (which his partners claim is instead a sneeze).
Another recurring element of Luigi's personality is his apparent complex of being overlooked compared to Mario. Although his Superstar status has earned him many fans, including an entire fan club led by Toadia and multiple supporting Toads (one of which claims to be his biggest fan in Super Mario 64 DS), even Bowser and the Koopa Troop have occasional trouble with remembering his name (as seen in Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga), and he appears to be almost unknown in the Beanbean Kingdom. Although Luigi's biggest reactions to his frequent overlookings in the Mario & Luigi series are a few "…"s and face-faults, his inattention was played up for comic relief in Paper Mario, where he complains about being left behind and perpetually trains for that elusive next adventure. Luigi's bio in Mario Party 5 states that he has been gaining popularity in recent years.
Luigi's state of being in the shadow of his brother shows strongly in Super Smash Bros. Brawl. For instance, the North American version of the game implies that his Final Smash in that game, Negative Zone, seemed to have developed because of living in his brother's shadow and represents his negative feelings about being overshadowed by him for this long and the darkest thoughts that developed with time. Despite this, however, the Negative Zone would later be replaced, and Masahiro Sakurai did not intend to play up Luigi's overshadowed status, instead aiming to make him "everyone's favorite man in green."[13] Luigi's state in the shadow of Mario is present in other Super Smash Bros. games, since the original Super Smash Bros. addresses him as the "eternal understudy" when he is unlocked; Super Smash Bros. Melee also refers to him in a similar manner, and his cinematic in the game's Adventure Mode shows him Footstool Jumping on Mario, signifying his jealousy of his brother. In Super Smash Bros. for Wii U, whenever a Palutena's Guidance conversation is activated when fighting against Luigi, Viridi and Palutena are quick to point out Luigi's status as "number two" in relativity to Mario, even though Pit held him in a higher regard. Despite the fact that he is not seen with the same regard as Mario, Luigi is very loyal to him, and his love for his brother pushes him to help him when he's in danger regardless of his fears, including defeating his nemesis, King Boo, multiple times to save Mario.
The Super Smash Bros. series also portrays Luigi more of a coward and buffoon than in his home series, including his awkward attack animations, and in a cutscene in The Subspace Emissary, he acts afraid of Waddle Dees, which are normally harmless.
In Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time, the Star Temple gate (which supposedly knows all) passes Luigi as "unworthy" to enter. It also mentions that Luigi did something either embarrassing or foolish which he has kept a secret ever since. However, in an interview with a localizer Nate Bihldorff, he stated that Luigi had no dark secret, and it was actually a reference to Luigi's constantly living in the shadow of his brother. "The point of the scene," Bihldorff said, "was to build Luigi up 'as a guy who was always living in the shadow of his older brother and that he needs to break out of that mold sometimes. But the way the text was originally phrased, it definitely made him sound like he had some deep dark secret that was awful. I think the powers that be were looking at it like, 'We don't want to paint Luigi as a bad guy here.''"[14] Even the game itself makes a straightforward point that Luigi has a large heart, as proven when he hits the Aurora Block and it grows to a gigantic size, flattening him.
In Luigi's Mansion, when analyzing objects with the Game Boy Horror, Luigi is shown to be concerned about cleanliness, often complaining about the abundance of dust and moth holes in the mansion and saying that it would never pass the white glove test. He also hates animal cruelty and when animals are skinned as hunting trophies, reacting in horror and disgust to the embalmed animal heads and animal pelts scattered in the Safari Room. It is also shown that Mario and Luigi wash their hats differently: Luigi washes his hat by hand and disapproves of Mario washing his in a washing machine, thinking that it is a waste. He is also refined and enjoys art, which is also shown in Mario Superstar Baseball and Mario Super Sluggers, where some of his possible teams' names are the Luigi Gentlemen in the former and the Luigi Knights in the latter.
He is also shown at times to be clumsy. Luigi often trades his jumping skills with slippery traction. He is also accident-prone as evidenced in the Mario & Luigi games and in the ending of New Super Mario Bros. Wii, where he accidentally locked himself out of the hot air balloon that Peach and Mario were on while waving goodbye to the Toads, and also ended up collapsing while trying to enter the hot air balloon, due to it having flown off. Several key art and cutscenes show Luigi being involved in accidents or misfortune such as his getting inked by a Blooper in Mario Kart DS, dropping baseballs in Mario Super Sluggers, getting hit by a Spiny in promotional art, and getting attacked by a Piranha Plant in key art for Super Nintendo World. Luigi's clumsiness also helped set the entire plot of Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam in motion when he accidentally bumps into a bookshelf after he gets startled from a Scaredy-Rat. In Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door, he accidentally bumps one of his partners, Blooey the Blooper, into a volcano while trying to stop evil, burning him to a golden crisp. His clumsiness is particularly emphasized in Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon, which director Bryce Holliday stated was drawn from the 1990 British comedy series Mr. Bean.[15] In contrast, Luigi can be very agile and can do many stunts Mario can not, often jumping higher than Mario and perform special jumping-related abilities such as scuttling.
Luigi's neutral focused expression in Mario Kart 8, read as sneering by internet onlookers, has given rise to an Internet meme in which Luigi is depicted as sour and relentless, seemingly rejoicing when his opponents are sabotaged during races.[16] Dubbed "Luigi's Death Stare", the meme has been acknowledged and embraced by Nintendo as a facet of his character: in one instance, a screenshot of Mario Kart 8 Deluxe showing Luigi being pursued by a Red Shell is humorously described by Nintendo Australia and New Zealand as "Unstoppable force meets immovable object."[17][18]
Speech
Luigi's voice is thinner, deeper and more nasal than Mario's, with a thick Italian accent. When he talks, he often awkwardly and nervously stammers, indicating timidity and a lack of confidence, such as during his recording to promote Year of Luigi.[19] Like Mario, he often refers to himself in the third person. According to Charles Martinet, who voiced Luigi from Mario Kart 64 to Mario + Rabbids Sparks of Hope, the character's voice originated from requests from audiences to speak to him during Mario in Real Time events. Because Luigi did not have a rigged model for the attraction, Martinet devised a voice that he could perform while keeping his face as still as possible (and thus not activating the motion-capture technology used to animate Mario), giving the illusion that Luigi was communicating from offscreen.[20]
Early on in Super Mario history, Luigi did not have any voice acting, due to technical limitations on the NES and SNES. Luigi also didn't receive text dialogue, making him silent like his brother. However, Luigi received voice acting in the 1986 Super Mario anime film, as well as the Amada Anime Mario Series (1987-1989), though he exclusively speaks in Japanese. Luigi first spoke English in The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!, where he spoke with a Brooklyn accent, provided by Danny Wells; Luigi later spoke with the same accent in future DIC Entertainment cartoons, though he is portrayed by Tony Rosato, who provides a higher, yet raspier voice than Wells. Luigi also spoke with this accent in the PC and CD-ROM versions of Mario is Missing!, making this the first game to give him voice acting. Four years later in Mario Kart 64, Luigi received two voice actors: Charles Martinet in overseas versions, and Julien Bardakoff in the Japanese version. The former provides him with a soft voice and strong Italian accent, while the latter provides him with a higher-pitched, less evident accent. Julien Bardakoff reprises his role as Luigi in Mario Party, Mario Party 2, and Mario Kart: Super Circuit. In most games, Charles Martinet voices Luigi, and had portrayed him until his shift to Mario Ambassador in 2023. In more recent games like Luigi's Mansion 3 and Mario Kart Tour, his voice has become raspier, deeper and even more nasal due to Martinet aging.
However, Martinet's portrayal of Luigi has varied. Despite having a unique voice since Mario Kart 64, the first two Super Smash Bros. games have Luigi use higher-pitched versions of Mario's voice clips, with his clip for using Luigi Cyclone being directly taken from the latter. Luigi's Mansion retains his unique voice, though it sounds higher in pitch, and somewhat akin to Mario's. However, all future installments, including recent Super Smash Bros. games, give him his distinct voice that is lower in pitch than Mario's (though like him, he has a considerably deeper voice in contemporary Super Smash Bros. games).
In most modern Super Mario games, Luigi speaks via catchphrases such as "Ho-ho!", "Let's-a go!", "Yahoo!", "Oh yeah!", and "Mamma mia!", as well as "It's-a me, Luigi!", a variation of Mario's famous quote. In the Paper Mario series, Luigi is mostly silent aside from the odd grunt, though he receives text dialogue to represent what he is saying; in the first three games, Luigi speaks English without an accent, though Paper Mario: Color Splash gives him an Italian accent while speaking. In the Mario & Luigi series, Luigi speaks through unintelligible gibberish that only in-game characters can understand.
Two months before the release of Super Mario Bros. Wonder, Charles Martinet retired from voicing characters in the franchise, and Kevin Afghani succeeded him in voicing Mario, Luigi and Wario, with Afghani's take on Luigi being near-identical to Martinet's.
Age
While Luigi was conceived as an identical twin during the development of Mario Bros., Nintendo introduced him simply as Mario's younger brother. In early media, when the franchise was not fully established, Luigi was described as Mario's much younger brother. In the pamphlet for Super Mario Bros.: Peach-hime Kyūshutsu Dai Sakusen!, his age is estimated to be around 23, two years younger than Mario.[9] "Family Album 'The Early Years'" implies that Luigi was born after Mario by several years.
However, Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island and Yoshi Touch & Go[21] describe the brothers as twins. The reissue of the former, Yoshi's Island: Super Mario Advance 3, does not explicitly call them twins, but it notes that Luigi is Mario's younger brother, carried to their parents at the same time.
Many video game sources still refer to Luigi as the younger brother, indicating that Luigi may have been the second born twin. For example, in Super Paper Mario, Luvbi refers to Mario and Luigi as twins at the end of chapter 7-1. Despite the small age difference, Luigi directly refers to Mario as "big bro" in the same game on more than one occasion. Also, while Luigi's Trophy description in Super Smash Bros. Brawl also referred to him as "younger twin brother," Colonel Roy Campbell calls Luigi a "kid brother" to Snake during Snake's Codec conversation in the same game. In the Mario cartoon series, Luigi playfully refers to Mario as his "little big brother," likely due to their height difference. Since Mario is stated to be 26 years old in the Japanese version of Super Smash Bros. Melee and 24 or 25 by Shigeru Miyamoto,[22] then, provided it is correct, Luigi is the same age.
Powers and abilities
Luigi's abilities are usually exactly the same as Mario's, such as in Mario Bros., Super Mario Bros., and Super Mario World so as to not give players advantages over each other. In most instances where one player can choose between the two brothers, however, Luigi is given his own gameplay quirks. This first occurred in Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels, where Luigi can jump higher than Mario but has lower traction and speed. In the American Super Mario Bros. 2, Luigi once again features the highest jump, but comparatively low speed and power. Luigi's high jumps but low traction would return in Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2, which, unlike its original version, allowed players to switch between Mario and Luigi at any time on the map screen. In three-dimensional adventures, such as Super Mario 64 DS, Super Mario Galaxy, and Super Mario Galaxy 2 Luigi is usually faster than Mario (at the cost of poorer acceleration), but retains his classic high jumps and poor traction. In addition, when either carrying a large object on his back, or when left extremely terrified, his jumping abilities are reduced significantly to the extent of appearing inferior to Mario's. This is best demonstrated during the climax of Luigi's Mansion 3 where the two brothers are racing to the top of the hotel to locate Peach. Mario in particular is able to cross large gaps up the stairs with a single bound, while by contrast, Luigi has to hug the wall to cross over to the other side.
As aforementioned, Luigi has a higher top speed, but poorer acceleration than his brother in Super Mario 64 DS, along with poor traction and increased agility. In this game, the two brothers are the fastest in all speeds. Luigi's jumps are perhaps at their strongest in this game; not only can Luigi jump higher than his brother, but he can also scuttle to slow his fall. His backflip has the same effect as being caught in a tornado or stomping a Fly Guy, allowing for a very slow descent. Unlike Mario, however, Luigi cannot Wall Jump in this game. As a result of his agility and lightness, Luigi can walk on water for a short time. Luigi's Power Flower ability is Vanish Luigi, allowing him to disappear for invincibility and the ability to walk through certain obstacles.
In Super Paper Mario, Luigi's specialty is the Spring Jump, which sends him just off the screen to bound over obstacles and damage enemies mid-air. His standard jumps are also higher than any other character's and he has lower traction once more. However, the player can simply press down to stop instantly in this game (due to his Spring Jump).
Electricity is sometimes depicted as Luigi's answer to Mario's fire. In Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga, Luigi is given the ability to harness and release electricity with a technique known as the Thunderhand, alongside his other specialty, the High Jump, to coincide with Mario's Spin Jump. This is referenced in Super Paper Mario with Mr. L's nickname of "The Green Thunder," and in Mario Strikers Charged where Luigi's Mega Strike involves controlling plasma.
Luigi is often associated to ice as a polar opposite to Mario's fire. Ice Luigi's special item in Mario Kart Arcade GP DX is an Ice Ball, and in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS / Wii U, Ice Balls are one of Luigi's custom moves, serving as the second variation for his Fireball. In Mario Golf: Super Rush, Luigi's Special Shot is Ice Flower Freeze, and his Special Dash in Speed Golf is Speed-Skate Dash; both moves involve Luigi taking out an Ice Flower and transforming into his Ice form, while in the latter case, he ice-skates along the course while leaving behind an ice trail (similar to his Ice form from Super Mario Galaxy). Unlockable sports gear in Mario Sports Superstars uses Ice Flowers as Luigi's emblem, referencing his ice abilities.
Aside from this, Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga also depicts him as being good at acting and disguises, as he dressed up as Princess Peach via her extra dress, with his acting being convincing enough that both Fawful and Bowletta ended up tricked into swapping out the real Peach with Luigi. An earlier instance of such was in Super Mario Adventures, which showed Luigi dressing as Peach and a nurse, with both disguises being convincing enough to fool a Big Boo, Bowser, and the Koopalings.
Occasionally, Luigi utilizes tornadoes against his foes. In Super Mario Strikers, Luigi's Super Strike is the Vicious Vortex, which has him surrounded in a green vortex before kicking the Soccer Ball. Luigi's Star Swing in Mario Super Sluggers is the Tornado Swing, which has him swing the ball while it is engulfed in a tornado. In Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, Luigi's down special, Luigi Cyclone, has a vortex appear around him, shared with Dr. Mario's Dr. Tornado.
In addition to actual gameplay differences, Luigi often executes his moves differently than his brother. In Super Mario All-Stars + Super Mario World, Luigi jumps with his legs back and descends with them forward, kneels when sliding, and appears to spit fireballs rather than throwing them. The Super Smash Bros. series and Mario Kart: Double Dash!! give Luigi green fireballs, and in the former games his fireballs levitate. Perhaps most famously, Luigi's jumping animation in Super Mario Bros. 2 is merely his walking animation sped up; although Luigi's "kicking" jumps were momentarily ignored, they returned in the Super Mario Advance series, complete with a high-pitched warbling sound effect in Super Mario Advance 2 and 4. Luigi's aforementioned scuttle from Super Mario 64 DS also involves walking in mid-air, and he "kicks" during his Triple Jump in Super Mario Galaxy and Super Mario Galaxy 2 instead of flipping like Mario.
Luigi has also exhibited many unique traits in various sports and spin-off games, despite usually being a balance character like his brother. In games such as Mario Kart Wii, Luigi has a higher top speed than Mario, but has lower handling and acceleration. In the Mario Golf series, Luigi hits with less power than his brother but features better control, although his shots consistently curve left. Luigi is slightly faster than Mario in Mario Superstar Baseball, and reveals his special pitch and swing (the Tornado Ball and Tornado Swing, respectively) in Mario Super Sluggers. Luigi is shown to be a good breakdancer in Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games; whenever he gets a gold medal, he breakdances like Sonic, and in the events Sychronized Swimming, Figure Skating, and Rhythmic Ribbon, he is shown to be flexible and a good gymnast because of his long legs.
Roles taken
Though Luigi is a heroic character in the Super Mario games, he is usually made as a sidekick to Mario, although in some media and games he is referred to as a partner. In the Mario & Luigi games, he is the cowardly partner to Mario, and is occasionally forced to be brave. He is the hero of a separate adventure the player does not get to play or see in Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door, where he is a coward who changes the story to make himself look more heroic. In Super Paper Mario he was not a sidekick, but rather one of the four heroes, which made him equal to Mario. He was also brainwashed by Nastasia to become a villain, Mr. L, and was later brainwashed again by Dimentio to become Super Dimentio, the final boss. His sidekick role was completely different in Mario is Missing!, Luigi's Mansion and its sequel, where he was the sole main character who had to rescue Mario. He has also taken the role of a doctor, similar to his brother, as shown in Dr. Luigi. Overall, Luigi's role in games is usually the same as Mario's when they appear together.
Relationships
Family
- Main article: Mario and Luigi's family
Mario is Luigi's older but shorter twin brother. Luigi often accompanies him on his adventures, most prominently in the Mario & Luigi series. While there is some sibling rivalry between the two[23], with Luigi sometimes feeling jealous and overshadowed by his brother, he also admires and looks up to him, wishing to be "a great plumber like his brother Mario" in Super Mario RPG, and he is very loyal to him, helping him out whenever he can and fighting by his side against several enemies. As twins, the two share a brotherly bond so strong that when they were babies, it functioned telepathically, as Baby Mario could sense where his brother was after they were separated by Kamek and his minions. The brothers still keep their strong brotherly love and their tight-knit bond in adulthood, as they share a house and frequently help and save each other, both showing to be very protective of each other. In the Mario & Luigi series, they often hug each other when they reunite after getting separated, relieved that the other is alright, and if one of the brothers is defeated and loses consciousness during a battle, the other one will panic and carry his fainted brother on his shoulders while being on the defensive or running away, at the cost of being weighed down and reacting slower when countering with his hammer or dodging with a jump.
While Mario is generally the more heroic and active of the two, Luigi too saved him on multiple occasions, starting with Mario is Missing! and subsequently in games such as Luigi's Mansion and its sequels, fighting his arch-enemy King Boo and facing his fear of ghosts on three different occasions to rescue him, the Toads and Peach, adamantly refusing to escape without saving his brother and his friends first. Mario is shown to be proud of Luigi when he is rescued: in Dark Moon, he calls Luigi "number one" while energically shaking his hand and says, "That's my bro," and in Luigi's Mansion 3, he says "Way to go" both times he is rescued, and when they reunite before the final showdown against King Boo, Mario is so overjoyed to see that Luigi has come to save him once again that he rushes to Luigi and gives him a big hug to thank him.
In Super Mario Odyssey, Luigi shows himself to be very supportive of his brother's decisions when it comes to fashion choices. When talking to Luigi before starting the Balloon World minigame, Luigi will often comment on Mario's current costume, stating that he "looks good" in the outfit he wears, even when some frighten him. When Mario wears Peach's Wedding Dress, his own groom tux, or Bowser's Tuxedo, Luigi will comment with surprise that he didn't know Mario was about to get married, only for him to realize that Mario is only wearing that outfit for fun, then respecting his decision to wear the outfit. Dream Team reveals that Luigi's deepest motivation for persevering through fearsome situations is his love for his brother, shown in his subconscious from Dream's Deep with inner thoughts such as "Big bro in danger!" and "I gotta help my bro!" This is also shown in the Luigi's Mansion series, where despite his fear of ghosts, he persists in searching for Mario.
Just as Luigi shows a strong brotherly love to him, Mario also loves his brother dearly, considering him a special person. In Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story, he willing to give him proper credit for his heroism when it is due, like when they defeated the Shroobs, and declares to Princess Lipid that his brother is worth more than a treasure to him, and in Partners in Time, when the Star Gate badmouths Luigi and causes him to burst out crying, Mario objects in anger and takes his brother's defense, with his baby self even going as far as repeatedly whacking the gate with his hammer, though it turns out that it was only to test Mario and the babies' loyalty to him. Mario and Luigi are often partners in spin-offs and in Mario Superstar Baseball and its sequel Mario Super Sluggers, which have the Chemistry mechanic, they have good chemistry, working well together. Even when they hit each other in the Mario & Luigi series to access new areas or to perform some attacks, they trust each other to do so.
The strong brotherly love between Mario and Luigi is also a prominent part of The Super Mario Bros. Movie. When Luigi was bullied during their childhood, Mario protected him by attacking who was responsible, and he has as a strong admiration of him ever since then, constantly praising him and staying by his side in every step of the way despite not always agreeing with his reckless and risky decisions. As his big brother, Mario has always been very protective of Luigi, protecting him from bullies and dangers, and in turn, Luigi reassures him that he's not a weight to him when he confides in him about his insecurities. Also, Mario often calls Luigi "Lu", a nickname he uses as a show of affection to him. When Bowser indirectly mentions Princess Peach, of whom he's obsessively in love with, and asks him if she would find Mario attractive, he responds by saying that she would if she's a girl with good tastes, indirectly showcasing that he will always support Mario's relationship with Peach if they end up together. While he takes on Bowser to protect the Mushroom Kingdom, Mario self-imposed objective is not to defeat him, but to save his brother, and after Luigi almost falls to his death in the lava and is barely saved by him, Mario is on the verge of tears as he hugs him tight. Even though Luigi isn't as much as a fighter as Mario, he can still be just as protective of him, as seen with how he faces his fears and saves Mario's life by blocking Bowser's Fire Breath with a manhole, giving them enough time to grab the Super Star and defeat him together. After they get separated, they constantly think about each other, with Mario mentioning during his second night in the Mushroom Kingdom that they had never been apart for such a long time, and their website and other media about the movie also refer to them as each other's best friend. Like in the games, they share a bedroom, both in their old apartment in Brooklyn, where they lived with their family, and at the end of the movie, after moving out in a new house in the Mushroom Kingdom.
Although Luigi and Mario generally have positive interactions with each other, some media do show sibling conflict, mostly due to sibling rivalry and how they get competitive with each other. In Mario Power Tennis, when Luigi wins a match, he is congratulated by Mario, though the latter intentionally steps on Luigi's foot and squirms his own foot against it, which leaves Luigi looking confused and uneasy for what happened. Mario and Luigi's heated argument is the central plot for the episode "Oh, Brother!" in The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3, with Mario getting kidnapped and forced to attack him because of a mind-control helmet afterwards, but Luigi saves him after successfully overloading the device and the brothers make up, promising to not get into fights with each other ever again. In a Super Paper Mario adaptation in Super Mario-kun, Mario has pleaded a brainwashed Mr. L to recall the "fond memories" he had with his brother, only for Mr. L to humorously remember the very unpleasant experiences with Mario and get angrier. One of Super Mario Maker 2's title screen animations show Mario cautiously trying to take a key away from Luigi only for the latter to run away with the key, and for Mario to forcefully take the key from Luigi. Performing an action with either the hammer or Hand Powers on the leading brother in Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga before unlocking the map-related skill causes him to get angry and scold the other, and in Partners in Time, after everyone lose consciousness from falling into the Gritzy Caves and Baby Mario smacks Luigi in the head with his hammer to wake him up, he gets enraged and gives him a stern scolding, accidentally making the babies cry, and Mario has a minor argument with his brother after waking up to this scene, reprimanding him for causing the babies to cry, resulting in Luigi bursting into tears as well.
Overall, while Luigi does feel jealous of Mario due to him being in his brother's shadow and their fame inequality, he does not complain much about it and is always available to help him in the times of need, protecting his friends and the Mushroom Kingdom by his side and keeping a very strong and healthy relationship with him.
While they are rarely shown, Mario and Luigi's father and mother are referenced a number of times, though Mama Mario appears in several episodes of The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!, and both of Mario and Luigi's parents make a full appearance in The Super Mario Bros. Movie. Several other relatives are also mentioned or shown in various medias, such as their aunts, uncles (including Uncle Arthur and Uncle Tony from the 2023 film), grandparents, and cousins.
Friends
One of Luigi's closest friends is Yoshi, and the two are often referred to as "The Green Team" when partnered up in spin-offs, although in the Mario Baseball, series their chemistry is only neutral. Their relationship is much closer in the Super Mario World TV Show, which depicted Yoshi as having originally thought Luigi was his mother and still enjoys hearing Luigi tell him bedtime stories, as seen in the episode Mama Luigi. He is also good friends with Toad, although they are not quite as close as Toad is with Mario, and while other Toads are almost unanimous in their praise and adoration of Mario, their opinions on Luigi vary greatly between individuals. Some are unabashed fans of Luigi, with one in Super Mario 64 DS even asserting that "We'll have to call you the Luigi Brothers soon!", while others are disbelieving that Luigi measures up to Mario due to his clumsiness and fearful nature, with one going so far as to call him "The world's most inept and least charismatic brother". Similarly, Luigi's relationship with Starlow is far less cordial than she is with Mario, with her often belittling and mistreating him, but at the same time acknowledging that despite not being as great as Mario, he is still a hero in his own way. As seen in both Dream Team and Paper Jam, she has grown fond of him over time, though she still has the tendency to tease him.
Princess Peach is another one of Luigi's good friends, with him often accompanying Mario on quests to rescue her from Bowser, the two sharing good chemistry in Mario Superstar Baseball, and overall friendly behavior seen between them, occasionally overlapping with hints of romantic attraction as well. Luigi is seen swooning over Peach after she blows a kiss in her Mario Power Tennis victory scene, and in games where Luigi can be substituted for his brother, her interactions with him are the same as they would be with Mario, such as rewarding him with a kiss at the end of most Super Mario platformers, or even being referred to as "special one" by Rosalina in Super Mario Galaxy. Overall, however, the two are portrayed as simple friends, with Daisy serving as Luigi's main love interest, although he has also expressed interest in the unseen Princess Eclair of the Waffle Kingdom. He has also been speculated to have an interest in Rosalina owing to the fact that he and Rosalina are photographed together just as Peach and Mario were pictured together in the image sent by the Mailtoad in Grand Finale Galaxy, and to the fact that he only gives Mario the Green Stars he collected in Battlerock Galaxy if Mario tells Rosalina they are from Luigi.
It has been stated that Luigi has a crush on Daisy, and the attraction appears to be mutual. In Daisy's second appearance in the Super Mario franchise, NES Open Tournament Golf, she served as Luigi's caddy, just as Peach was caddying for Mario, and as her trophy in Super Smash Bros. Melee points out, since that point "some gossips started portraying her as Luigi's answer to Mario's Peach". They are often paired up in spin-off games: they are seen golfing together in Mario Golf Toadstool Tour, are "buddy players" with good chemistry in the Mario Baseball series, they appear together in the Miracle Book pages from Mario Party 6, and in Mario Kart Wii, there is a giant, golden statue on the Daisy Circuit that shows the two holding hands and dancing together, along with another of their respective younger counterparts: Baby Luigi and Baby Daisy. Their team names from the Mario Party series include "Steady Sweeties" and "Tango Tanglers", and when Daisy received her trophy from Luigi in Mario Power Tennis, she says, "Hey, sweetie! I'll take that".
Another one of Luigi's friendships can also be seen with Professor E. Gadd. Although the only interactions between them are not frequent, they work very well together. E. Gadd shows much trust in Luigi, despite Luigi's cowardly nature. Throughout Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon, E. Gadd jokingly holds Luigi in low regards, though he also states to be proud of him for courageously exploring the hostile ghost filled mansions as well as defeating the various Possessor ghosts. Luigi was also devastated to see E. Gadd trapped in a painting in Luigi's Mansion 3, showing that Luigi cares about his well-being, as well as understanding that E. Gadd can help him save the others.
Luigi is shown to get along with his Rabbid counterpart, because they are willing to cooperate in order to defeat the Megabug, and restore order to the Mushroom Kingdom. Group artwork for Mario + Rabbids Kingdom Battle shows the two characters posing together, while their in-game interactions are also friendly. Rabbid Luigi even possesses a few similarities to Luigi, such as being timid and polite in personality, as well as favoring long-ranged over close-quarter combat. In Mario & Sonic at London 2012 Olympic Games, Luigi is shown to be good friends with Miles "Tails" Prower, with them having a special victory animation in the sequels; later on, in Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020, the two sidekicks would not hesitate to team up in order to rescue Mario and Sonic from the Tokyo64.
Enemies/Rivals
Though Bowser's main rivalry is with Mario, he views Luigi as almost as great of a threat as his brother in games such as Super Mario Galaxy and its sequel. At other times, Bowser has trouble even remembering Luigi's name, particularly in the Mario & Luigi series where he often defaults to calling him "Green 'Stache" (although Bowser finally calls Luigi by his real name at the end of Mario & Luigi: Dream Team). Rather than Bowser, Luigi's arch-nemesis is actually King Boo, whom he met and defeated single-handedly in Luigi's Mansion when the ghost king kidnapped Mario. King Boo would later try to get revenge in Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon and Luigi's Mansion 3, and the rivalry can be seen in other series as well, such as the Mario Baseball games, in which Luigi (along with Mario) shares bad chemistry with the Boo king, Super Mario 64 DS, where King Boo (known as Big Boo in the English version) was the one keeping the key locking Luigi away, and the Adventure Tour of Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games, where King Boo selects Luigi to face him in Polatraits due to the latter's fear of ghosts.
Another heated rivalry exists between Luigi and Waluigi, with the two sharing bad chemistry in all the games they appear in together, and acting hostile and rude towards each other, such as Luigi making a gesture at Waluigi to anger him in Mario Tennis, the two scowling at each other in the Mario Party 3 group picture, and Waluigi's vandalism of Luigi's picture in the opening movie of Mario Power Tennis. Waluigi is constantly seen harassing Luigi, whether by humiliating him during the sports competition, following him wherever he goes, or even directly confronting him. The origins of their animosity is unknown, however jealousy may be a factor, as both Luigi and Waluigi have a crush on Princess Daisy, who rejects Waluigi. Luigi himself, while he despises Waluigi, mostly prefers to ignore him and his antics.
Just as Luigi's relationships with Daisy and King Boo nearly mirror Mario's with Peach and Bowser, respectively, his arch-rivalry with Waluigi parallels the one between Mario and Wario. Wario himself does not show as much antagonism towards Luigi as Waluigi, although the two do not get along well and it has been shown that Wario enjoys giving Luigi trouble, such as by tying his shoelaces together[24]. However, Luigi has rescued Wario from Chief Chilly in Super Mario 64 DS, indicating some degree of respect for the two.
In the first two installments of the Mario & Sonic series, Luigi shares a competitive, friendly rivalry with Shadow the Hedgehog similar to his brother is with Sonic the Hedgehog. They competed in Hurdles and raced in Skating races (the latter in which Metal Sonic outpaced them and the opening's epilogue shows them standing side-by-side afterwards).
Profiles and statistics
- Main article: List of Luigi profiles and statistics
Mario Tennis series
Mario Tennis
- Type: All-Around
- Instruction Booklet Bio: His height lets him hit even the balls that look like they're out of reach.
Mario Power Tennis
- Type: All-Around
- Offensive Power Shot: Squeaky Mallet
- Defensive Power Shot: Poltergust Return
- Stats:
- Power: 6/10
- Speed: 7/10
- Reach: 7/10
- Serve: 6/10
- Lunge: 7/10
- Control: 7/10
- Doubles Partner: Mario
- Bio: Luigi has better ball control than his famous sibling and is especially skilled at volleying.
Mario Tennis Open
- Type: All-Around
- Bio: Compared to Mario, he is a bit less powerful, but Luigi is good at ball handling. His specialty is playing up front, at the net.
- Bio 2: Like his brother, Luigi is pretty good at everything. Although not as powerful as Mario, he has greater accuracy and is excellent at coming into the net.
List of appearances
This section is under construction. Therefore, please excuse its informal appearance while it is being worked on. We hope to have it completed as soon as possible.
Portrayals
Luigi has been voiced by the following people: The first live-action portrayal of Luigi was by an unknown actor in an Atari commercial for Mario Bros. from 1983.[6] The following is a list of all of the people who have portrayed Luigi.
- Yū Mizushima - Super Mario Bros.: Peach-hime Kyūshutsu Dai Sakusen!, Super Mario World: Mario to Yoshi no Bōken Land
- Naoki Tatsuta - Amada Anime Series: Super Mario Bros.
- Bob Sorenson - Mario is Missing!
- Danny Wells - The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!
- Tony Rosato - The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3, Super Mario World
- Jørn Rosenville - Live action segments for the Danish dub of The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3
- Julien Bardakoff - Mario Kart 64 (Japanese version only), Mario Party, Mario Party 2, Mario Kart: Super Circuit
- John Leguizamo – Super Mario Bros. film
- Marc Graue - Hotel Mario
- Charles Martinet - Mario in Real Time, Mario Kart 64 (overseas version only)-Mario + Rabbids Sparks of Hope
- Vinny Balbo - Mario Kart 8 Mercedes-Benz GLA commercial
- Charlie Day - The Super Mario Bros. Movie
- Kevin Afghani - Super Mario Bros. Wonder-present
Gallery
- For this subject's image gallery, see Gallery:Luigi.
Quotes
- Main article: List of Luigi quotes
- "Oh, yeah!" - Various games
- "Okey dokey!" - Various games
- "Let's-a go!" - Various games
- "Yay for me!" - Mario Party 9
- "I'm-a Luigi, number one!" - Mario Kart 64
- "Hello...?" - Luigi's Mansion / Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon
- "Come here, doggy." - Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon
- "MARIO!!!" - Luigi's Mansion / Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon
- "You wanna switch, bro?" - Super Mario Galaxy 2
- "Oh yeah, who's number one now? Luigi!" - Mario Kart: Double Dash!!
- "Oh, this look bad." - Mario Power Tennis
- "Thanks, bro!" - Super Mario 3D Land
- "Hey! You know what would look good? A spaceship with MY face on it!" - Fortune Street
- "Yes! Luigi won!" - Mario Party 8
- "Whew! Made it!" - New Super Mario Bros. Wii / New Super Mario Bros. 2 / New Super Mario Bros. U / New Super Luigi U / Super Mario Run
- "Oh, what happened?" - Mario Kart 8 / Mario Kart 8 Deluxe
- "Ha ha ha! I'm the best!" - Mario Party 4 / Mario Party 5
- "Nothing can hurt us...as long as we're together...!" - The Super Mario Bros. Movie
- "Let's take a photo together!" - Super Nintendo World
- "Wowie zowie!" - Luigi's Mansion 3 / Super Mario Bros. Wonder
See also
Voice samples
Mario Kart 64 - "I'm-a Luigi, number one!" (Charles Martinet, 1996) | File info 0:03 |
Super Mario Bros. Wonder - "Let's-a go!· (Kevin Afghani, 2023) | File info 0:01 |
Names in other languages
- Main article: List of Luigi names in other languages
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | ルイージ[?] Ruīji |
Luigi | |
Catalan | Luigi[?] | - | The Super Mario Bros. Movie |
Chinese | 路易吉[?] Lùyìjí |
Luigi | |
Croatian | Luigi[?] | - | |
Dutch | Luigi[?] | - | |
Finnish | Luigi[?] | - | |
French | Luigi[?] | - | |
German | Luigi[?] | - | |
Greek | Λουίτζι[?] Luitzi |
Luigi | |
Hebrew | לואיג'י[?] Luiji |
Luigi | |
Hungarian | Luigi[?] | - | |
Icelandic | Luigi[?] | - | |
Italian | Luigi[?] | - | |
Korean | 루이지[?] Ru'iji |
Luigi | |
Norwegian | Luigi[?] | - | |
Polish | Luigi[?] | - | |
Portuguese | Luigi[?] | - | |
Romanian | Luigi[?] | - | |
Russian | Луиджи[?] Luidzhi |
Luigi | |
Spanish | Luigi[?] | - | |
Swedish | Luigi[?] | - | |
Thai | ลุยจิ[25] Lui-chi |
Luigi | |
Turkish | Luigi[?] | - |
Trivia
- Coincidentally, "Luigi" translates from Italian as "famous warrior," which is ironic or apt given the circumstance. Luigi is often portrayed as being the "lesser brother" and a coward, although he is an iconic video game hero as well.
- The Japanese pronunciation of Luigi (ルイージ, Ruīji) is also comparable to a Japanese word for similar (類似, ruiji) which is pronounced almost identically, save for a shorter "i" sound. This coincidentally matches Luigi having been created as a color swap of Mario.
- A collectable Mario & Wario card mistakenly spells Luigi's name as "Ruigi", due to incorrectly transliterating his Japanese name (Ruīji).[26]
- A similar mistake can also be seen on artwork used in a 1985 Japanese guide for Wrecking Crew, as an "R" is printed on Luigi's overalls.[27]
- In the first page of the Nintendo Power magazine for Luigi's Mansion, Luigi is mistakenly referred to as Mario's older brother.
References
- ^ Brian. Miyamoto says Mario’s full name is “Mario Mario”. Nintendo Everything (September 14, 2015). Retrieved September 14th 2015
- ^ Iwata Asks: New Super Mario Bros. Wii Vol. 1 Ch. 2. Retrieved May 2, 2023.
- ^ 『パックマン』にはじまり『スーパーマリオ』でひとつの完成形に達した“キャラクターの身体機能”「なんでゲームは面白い?」第11回. Retrieved May 2, 2023. (Contains quote from Yokoi found in 「横井軍平ゲーム館」.)
- ^ 『マリオブラザーズ』の元ネタは『ジャウスト』? (その1). Retrieved May 2, 2023. (Addendum quotes an interview with Miyamoto found in 「ゲーム・マエストロ Vol.1」.)
- ^ News article covering interview with Shigeru Miyamoto. Retrieved January 24, 2015.
- ^ a b Commercial for Atari Mario Bros. featuring a live-action Luigi.
- ^ Print ad for Mario Bros.
- ^ a b Rolling Stone (April 8, 2013). Shigeru Miyamoto Shares Nintendo Secrets. Rolling Stone. Retrieved May 13, 2018
- ^ a b Template:Media link
- ^ [1]
- ^ IGN (Accessed on 7-6-09)
- ^ N-Sider (Accessed on 6-28-09)
- ^ a b Smash Bros. DOJO!! (Accessed on 6-28-09)
- ^ Totilo, S. (December 1, 2005). "Gamers Wonder if Nintendo Will Serve More Mustard of Doom". MTV. Accessed July 16, 2022.
- ^ Lien, Tracy (March 15, 2013). Luigi's Mansion: Dark Moon won't just rely on nostalgia to win players, developers say. Polygon. Retrieved October 27, 2023.
- ^ CZbwoi (June 1, 2014). Luigi Ridin' Dirty - Death Stare in Mario Kart 8. YouTube. Retrieved May 14, 2023.
- ^ NintendoAUNZ (May 9, 2017). Unstoppable force meets immovable object. #MarioKart. Twitter. Retrieved May 14, 2023. (Archived May 18, 2020, 23:25:40 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
- ^ NintendoAUNZ (May 9, 2017). Unstoppable force meets immovable object. Facebook. Retrieved May 14, 2023.
- ^ NintendoEverything. (August 22, 2013). "Audio recording from Luigi". YouTube. Accessed October 30, 2022.
- ^ psnmermaid925 (February 8, 2014). luigi. YouTube. Retrieved February 6, 2024.
- ^ The Yoshi Touch & Go instruction booklet states that the Stork is carrying a pair of newborn twins (referring to Mario and Luigi) on page six.
- ^ Griffin, A. (September 30, 2016) Mario is only 24 years old, creator Shigeru Miyamoto says in unearthed interview. Independent. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
- ^ The Super Mario Kart manual (page 21) states that "Mario and Luigi have had a friendly rivalry that goes back to their childhood."
- ^ Wario Land 4 official website (now defunct) (Accessed on 7-3-09)
- ^ November 30, 2022. Thai version of the official trailer for The Super Mario Bros. Movie. YouTube. Retrieved December 9, 2022.
- ^ マリオとワリオ S&Bスナック G-4 メンコ? ルイージ. jp.mercari.com. Retrieved March 3, 2023. (Archived March 3, 2023, 05:47:30 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
- ^ オロチ(Famicom Archivist) (June 9, 2022). 【マリオ無駄知識】 多くの日本人にとって「L」と「R」の違いなど重要ではありません。ファミリーコンピュータマガジン1985年9月号に掲載された『レッキングクルー』の攻略記事には「R」の文字が刻まれたオーバーオール姿のルイージが描かれています。彼は「Ruigi」ではなく「Luigi」なのに!. Twitter. Retrieved March 3, 2023. (Archived June 10, 2022, 03:59:03 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
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