- This article is about the kings in Super Mario Bros. 3. For other uses of the term, see King.
Kings | |
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Species | Human |
First appearance | Super Mario Bros. 3 (1988) |
Latest appearance | Nintendo World Championships: NES Edition (2024) |
- “Oh thank heavens! I’m back to my old self again. Thank you so much. Here is a letter from the princess.”
- —Kings, Super Mario Bros. 3
The kings[1] are the monarchs of the various lands of the Mushroom World. Seven of them are featured in Super Mario Bros. 3, and each was turned into a different creature by the Koopalings. The kings are unnamed individually, although The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3 gave some of them unique identities, and The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! even introduced several similar characters and territories. Like Princess Toadstool, they have Toad helpers.
History
Super Mario Bros. 3
In Super Mario Bros. 3, the Koopalings invaded seven kingdoms of the Mushroom World, stealing the royal magic wands and using them to transform their kings into various creatures. With the kings in their vulnerable state, each evil Koopaling then ruled over the world in that king's place, with Boom Boom and Bowser's Minions placed all over the kingdoms. Renowned heroic brothers Mario and Luigi of the Mushroom Kingdom arrived to help them, first starting with Grass Land.
To save a king, the Mario Bros. have to go to his castle, where the Toad pleads the heroes to restore the king by taking the magic wand back from the Koopaling. After that, Mario and Luigi must assault the airship, defeat the Koopaling, and return the king back into his human shape. He thanks the Mario Bros. for saving him, and he delivers a letter from Princess Toadstool enclosed with a "jewel" (or power-up). If the player manages to restore the kings to their human forms while wearing a special suit, then they get different rescue dialog for each different suit. This continues until the brothers reach the forbidden kingdom of Dark Land, where Bowser ended up holding the princess hostage.
In Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3, if the player defeated Bowser before saving the kings, upon selecting the castle, the player is treated to a cutscene where it shows the Koopaling of the respective world invading the castle, snatching the magic wand and using it to transform the king, and then escaping seconds before Mario arrives. In addition, because Princess Toadstool has already been saved beforehand, the king does not give the player a letter from her.
Each king had been transformed into a creature of some sort by the Koopalings:
- Grass Land king – Turned into a dog (a Cobrat in the SNES and Game Boy Advance remakes).
- Desert Land king – Turned into a silkworm (a Hoopster in the SNES and Game Boy Advance remakes).
- Water Land king – Turned into a Spike-like kappa (a Dino Rhino in the SNES and Game Boy Advance remakes).
- Giant Land king – Turned into a dinosaur (Donkey Kong Jr. in the SNES and Game Boy Advance remakes).
- Sky Land king – Turned into a vulture (an Albatoss in the SNES and Game Boy Advance remakes).
- Ice Land king – Turned into a seal (a Monty Mole in the SNES and Game Boy Advance remakes).
- Pipe Land king – Turned into a Piranha Plant (a Yoshi from Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island in the SNES and Game Boy Advance remakes).
The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3
The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3 created personalities for several rulers. Many, if not all, of them also looked different.
- Prince Hugo – the new ruler of Giant Land (likely making him different from the king seen in Super Mario Bros. 3)
- The Sultan – the ruler of a palace that may be in Desert Land
- King Mackerel – the ruler of Mertropolis, a domed underwater city
- Wizard King of the West – the wizard of an unknown location that resembles Sky Land
- King Windbag – the ruler of a domain implied to be Ice Land
- Emperor Ed – the ruler of Sky Land
Super Mario Kodansha manga
- “"スーマリ3には七人も王さまが出てくるからどれがほんものかわからないのよ" ("In Super Mario Bros. 3, there are seven kings, so who knows which one is the real one.")”
- —Princess Peach, Super Mario Kodansha manga
The kings can be seen in the first 4koma volume of the Super Mario Kodansha manga. They appear only in the "7 Kings" (7人の王さま) strip, in which Peach states that one of the seven kings is her father. It is never fully confirmed which king is truly her father, though Peach wishes that the king from Water Land would be him. The kings' transformed states are the same as in Super Mario All-Stars.
Gallery
Human kings
- Grass Land king
- Desert Land king
- Water Land king
- Giant Land king
- Sky Land king
- Ice Land king
- Pipe Land king
Transformed kings
Nintendo Power artwork of the Water Land king
- NES
King of Grass Land
King of Desert Land
King of Water Land
King of Giant Land
King of Sky Land
King of Ice Land
King of Pipe Land
- SNES
- GBA
Names in other languages
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | Ōsama |
King | |
Kokuō | |||
Chinese (traditional) | 國王[4] Guówáng |
King | |
French | roi[?] | king | |
German | König[?] | King | |
Italian | Regnanti del Mondo dei Funghi[5] | Mushroom World's rulers | |
7 Re[6] | 7 Kings | ||
Sovrano[7] | Ruler | ||
Re[8][9] | King | ||
Spanish | Reyes[?] | Kings |
Notes
- If Mario defeats a Koopaling as Frog Mario, Tanooki Mario, or Hammer Mario, the king says one of the following:
- "Oh me, oh my! You've been transformed! Shall I change you back with this wand?" (to Frog Mario)
- "Thank you, kind raccoon. Please tell me your name." (to Tanooki Mario)
- "Hey you! How about lending me your clothes? No dice?! What a drag." (to Hammer Mario)
- The king of Water Land bears a striking resemblance to Mario. Also, the castle's island resembles Japan, with the castle itself placed where Kyoto, Nintendo's headquarters, would be.
- All of the transformed kings are depicted with generic crowns either on or near them, despite the fact that only four of the non-transformed kings wear crowns.
References
- ^ 1990. Super Mario Bros. 3 instruction booklet. Nintendo of America (English). Page 5 and 25.
- ^ 1988. Super Mario Bros. 3 Japanese instruction booklet. Nintendo (Japanese). Page 2 and 24.
- ^ Super Mario Bros. 3 Japanese instruction booklet. Page 2 (Larry's speech balloon).
- ^ 瑪利歐歷史|超級瑪利歐兄弟 35週年|任天堂. Nintendo of HK (Traditional Chinese). Retrieved February 8, 2021.
- ^ Super Mario Bros. 3 | NES | Giochi | Nintendo IT. Nintendo (Italian). Retrieved August 6, 2024.
- ^ Super Mario Bros. 3 booklet. Nintendo (Italian). Page 5.
- ^ 2010. Super Mario All-Stars Limited Edition instruction booklet. Nintendo of Europe (Italian). Page 15.
- ^ Super Mario All-Stars Limited Edition Italian manual. Page 17.
- ^ 2003. Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 instruction booklet. Nintendo of Europe (Italian). Page 106.