Mario no Daibōken: Difference between revisions

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==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*The [https://twitter.com/kikaim/status/1294964623657992193/photo/1 video's cover art] would later be repurposed and modified to serve as the box art for ''[[All Night Nippon: Super Mario Bros.]]''<ref>{{file link|All Night Nippon Super Mario Bros cover.jpg|Box art of ''All Night Nippon: Super Mario Bros.''}}</ref>
*The art featured on the covers for both the video and the record would later be repurposed and modified to serve as the box art for ''[[All Night Nippon: Super Mario Bros.]]''<ref>[https://twitter.com/kikaim/status/1294964623657992193/photo/1 kikai / マリオが好きなひと on X]</ref>


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 06:58, June 22, 2024

It has been requested that more images be uploaded for this article. Remove this notice only after the additional images have been added. Specific(s): Cover art/scan of the VHS or Betamax box; current image at the top of the article is from the vinyl record, which only features songs that aren't even in the video

Mario no Daibōken promotional single cover, featuring artwork in the style of Super Mario Bros.; the artwork would later be altered for the cover of All Night Nippon: Super Mario Bros.
Single cover

Mario no Daibōken (Japanese: マリオの大冒険, lit: Mario's Great Adventure) is an obscure VHS and Betamax strategy guide released in Japan in 1986 by Pony Canyon for Super Mario Bros. It features tips for various levels, live-action segments starring a Mario mascot costume, and GO GO Mario!!, a lyrical version of the game's Ground Theme. GO GO Mario!! would later be released as a single in Japan.

The video guides the viewer through a quick playthrough of Super Mario Bros., starting in World 1-1, using the Warp Zone in World 1-2 to warp to World 4, and using World 4-2's Warp Zone to warp to World 8 and complete the game.

The video also shows a variety of secrets, such as the aforementioned Warp Zones in World 1-2 and World 4-2, various hidden 1-Up locations, and the infinite 1-Up trick in World 3-1. The video contains a rare instance of Nintendo officially showcasing and endorsing the use of glitches in its games, featuring a segment all about various bugs present in the game.

Mario Mascot Costume from Mario no Daibōken
The Mario mascot costume

All of this is regularly interrupted by live-action segments featuring a Mario mascot costume who can be seen playing the game. Mario introduces new segments and gives commentary, and he plays a prominent role in the GO GO Mario!! music video shown at the end of the VHS.

A vinyl single for this video, also entitled Mario no Daibōken, was released on March 30, 1986, but neither of the two songs featured on the record (Mario no Daibōken and Kuppa Ichizoku Kazoe-uta) were featured in the actual video. The single had an exclusive promotional version titled Mario no Daibōken/GO GO Mario!!, which replaced Kuppa Ichizoku Kazoe-uta with GO GO Mario!!

Trivia

External links

References